SITTING Bull’s great-grandson has been positively identified using a lock of the Native American chief’s hair.
Scientists extracted DNA from the 2in snipping and matched it to author Ernie Lapointe.
2
A lock from Native American chief Sitting Bull, who led the Sioux tribe to victory in the Battle of Little Bighorn in 1876, was used to identify his living great-grandson Credit: NPG/Smithsonian 2
Scientists were able to extract DNA from the hero's 2in snipping and matched it to author Ernie Lapointe Credit: Alamy
Sitting Bull famously led the Sioux tribe to victory in the bloody Battle of Little Bighorn in 1876, destroying US General Custer’s forces.
Ernie, 73, of Rapid City, South Dakota, had long claimed to be a living relative but some historians doubted him.
Professor Eske Willerslev, of Cambridge University, said: “Sitting Bull is my hero, I admire his courage and drive.
“I wrote to Lapointe and explained that I specialised in the analysis of ancient DNA, and I would consider it a great honour if I could be allowed to look into his case.
"We managed to locate sufficient amounts of DNA in Sitting Bull’s hair sample, and compare it to a sample from Ernie and it matched.”
Ancient DNA is difficult to extract as it degrades over time. But the team at Cambridge think the new method could be used to solve old crimes.
Most read in The Sun
WHO'S THAT GIRL Danniella Westbrook stuns in new pic after getting fillers and Botox
FAG END Cost of pack of cigarettes to go up to £13.60 in Rishi's Budget
Exclusive
ABANDON SHEEP Our Yorkshire Farm's Amanda Owen & husband battling to save 21-year marriage
DOUBLE TAKE Woman posts glow up after lip fillers & some can’t believe it’s the same person
SICK-Y MOUSE Couple's saucy theme park T-shirts cause so much fury parents want them banned
HAIR RAISING I wanted to be cool so I got my eyebrows laminated - now I look like Mr Bean
History buff builds 100-metre replica World War One trench in British wood