Emmimarie Jones knew her daughter had been conceived without a father; in 1956, she almost convinced the world she was right.
On November 6 1955, a story appeared on the front page of the Sunday Pictorial that was to double the newspaperââ¬â¢s circulation in a single day. Sporting the headline, ââ¬ÅDoctors now say it doesnââ¬â¢t always need a man to make a babyââ¬Â, the tabloid shouted that virgin births were no myth, and that there was a scientist who could prove it. The rare biological process which would enable this to happen was known as parthenogenesis, the paper informed its readers.
But the Pictorialââ¬â¢s editors didnââ¬â¢t stop there. Halfway down the page appeared three words, in bold block capitals: ââ¬ÅFind The Caseââ¬Â. Sensationally, the paper was inviting women to come forward if they believed their daughters were the result of a virgin birth. If any womanââ¬â¢s case was proved correct, by a panel of leading doctors, she and her daughter were set to make medical ââ¬â indeed, human ââ¬â history. For the next year, the search for a virgin mother would grip the nation, and the world. The paperââ¬â¢s circulation figures, meanwhile, grew to an unprecedented six million.
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Fascinating story. I tend to agree with this comment:
The story about the ââ¬Åpartial parthenogenesisââ¬Â, sounds most likely to be a case of the offspring (labeled as FD) being the product of an absorbed or vanishing twin (aka chimera) which results in a single person with 2 different DNA profiles among different tissues/organs. One such case is fully documented in the New England Journal of Medicine.
What are your thoughts?