The World War II Battle of Tarawa, 1943, was a devastating conflict that resulted in losses of more than 1100 American and 4690 Japanese troops. The United States government aims to identify and repatriate the remains of all missing American service members through the Defense Prisoner of War/Missing in Action (POW/MIA) Accounting Agency (DPAA) and its partners such as the Armed Forces Medical Examiner System's Armed Forces DNA Identification Laboratory (AFMES-AFDIL). Remains associated with the Battle of Tarawa have been recovered from field excavations conducted by History Flight, a DPAA strategic partner, as well as from the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific (NMCP) in Hawaii where unknowns have been disinterred for identification. DNA testing at the AFMES-AFDIL has produced mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequences from 1027 case samples to date. Haplogroup assignments indicate that more than one third (36.2 %) of field-collected samples are likely of Asian maternal ancestry. Therefore the field collections from the Tarawa battlefield comprise the remains of American service members but also those of foreign nationals from Asia. The mtDNA of the NMCP unknowns is similar in ancestry proportion to the family reference sample distribution. The DPAA uses the ancestry information gleaned from mtDNA sequence data in conjunction with anthropological evidence to make foreign national determinations. In this way, mtDNA haplogrouping is used to sort the commingled and fragmentary remains recovered from Tarawa between Americans and foreign nationals, which are then repatriated to their country of origin.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.fsigen.2020.102291DOI Listing

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