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Researchers announced on May 6–7, 2026 that DNA recovered from human remains associated with the ill-fated 1845 Franklin expedition has yielded matches to living descendants, identifying four more crew members.
Analyses published in Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports and Polar Record matched mitochondrial and Y-chromosome material from bone and tooth samples to relatives, naming William Orren, David Young and John Bridgens — all from HMS Erebus — and Harry Peglar from HMS Terror.
Peglar is the first Terror crew member to be definitively identified by DNA; his remains were found about 200 km from the ship.
The work, led by anthropologists including Douglas Stenton and Robert Park, drew on about 50 samples from at least 23 individuals recovered at Nunavut sites and used genealogical leads supplied by amateur researchers and DNA donors.
The identifications build on prior DNA successes that have named other crew and help map where survivors died after the ships became icebound off King William Island in 1846 and the final overland trek in 1848.








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