Biologist behind groundbreaking Beothuk DNA study fighting ethics complaint - Action News
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Biologist behind groundbreaking Beothuk DNA study fighting ethics complaint

Steve Carr says he doesn't understand Memorial University's formal complaint about his work, which has the backing, funding and approval of a Mi'kmaq First Nation.

VP at Memorial University lodges complaint about work sanctioned by Miawpukek First Nation

Steve Carr is a biology professor at Memorial University in St. John's. (Memorial University )

The researcher who penned a breakthrough study earlier this year detailing DNA links between Beothuk people and contemporary Indigenous ones is now facing an ethics complaint about it.

The complaint against Steve Carr, a biology professor at Memorial University, comes from the school's office of the vice-president for research.

Carr told CBC he did nothing wrong, and the university has no right to complain since the study wasn't under its jurisdiction. He said he still hasn't been told the specifics of the allegation, lodged with the province's Health Research Ethics Board.

"When somebody tells me what I'm supposed to have done, then I can respond to it," Carr toldNewfoundland Morning."I haven't done anything."

Memorial University declined to comment on the complaint against Carr.

The study made international news in April when Carr released hispaper that traced contemporary mitochondrial DNA back to Newfoundland's Beothuk people.

One living person in Tennessee even proved to be an exact genetic match to Nonosabasut, one of the last remaining Beothuk, who was killed by English settler John Peyton Jr in 1819.

The study was not conducted through Memorial University.Carr's company, Terra Nova Genomics, carried it out in partnership with the Miawpukek First Nation. a Mi'kmaq band on the south coast of Newfoundland.

The First Nation haslong said its members are related to the Beothuk, and enlisted Carr to conduct research to prove the connection.

A waterpainting of a Beothuk woman.
Demasduit is one of the few Beothuk whose likeness is known. (Library and Archives Canada)

Two arguments against complaint

Part of the reason Carr cannot understand the ethics complaint is that the first phase of the project which resulted in April'spaper did not involve any human subjects.

He simply took the few knownDNA profiles of Beothukpeople and ran it against an open-sourcedatabase of geneticsamples known as GenBank.

This type of study is known as a meta-analysis, and Carr said it doesn't require approval from the Health Research Ethics Board.

"Under the ethics rules which we operate on, a meta-analysis is not something that requires ethics approval," he said.

The other reason he can't understand the complaint is that the study was commissioned by the Miawpukek First Nation, which oversees its own research projects independent of provincial authorities.

Dancers at a powwow at the Miawpukek First Nation in Conne River. Miawpukek sanctions scientific research under its own authority. (David Newell/CBC)

Miawpukek Chief Mi'sel Joe has written a letter to Memorial University president Vianne Timmons, saying the study was undertaken under the authority and with the oversight of his band's research department.

"That [study] was at the initiative, complete co-operation and ethics and research approval by the Miawpukek First Nation acting as a sovereign First Nation," Carr told CBC's Newfoundland Morning.

As for how the complaintaffects Carr's work at Memorial University knowing a research colleagueis the one who complained he said so farit has been a struggle.

He said there's been complaints about his research with the Miawpukek First Nation before, but it hasn't stopped his work before and it won't stop things moving forward.

The next phase is to take samples from members of the First Nation and compare it to known Beothuk profiles. Carr said that work is moving forward, with insistence from the chief, regardless of the current complaint.

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador

With files from CBC Newfoundland Morning