de2a75ea99144d175a1708df37b7569dd6cc23ac dschmelt Tue Jul 7 15:46:02 2020 -0700 Fixing type refs #25644 diff --git src/hg/htdocs/goldenPath/newsarch.html src/hg/htdocs/goldenPath/newsarch.html index 4c6772c..9c3e93b 100755 --- src/hg/htdocs/goldenPath/newsarch.html +++ src/hg/htdocs/goldenPath/newsarch.html @@ -68,31 +68,31 @@
  • Microdeletions shows sequence deletions found among thousands of SARS-CoV-2 genomes deposited in the GISAID database (Global Initiative on Sharing All Influenza Data).
  • Human CoV shows an alignment between SARS-CoV-2 and six other human-infecting coronaviruses, including SARS-CoV-1 and MERS.
  • We would also like to thank the many people involved in this research and publication including the researchers Irwin Jungreis at MIT, Brianna Sierra Chrisman at Stanford, and UCSC staff members Max Haeussler, Hiram Clawson, and Daniel Schmelter.

    The 20th Anniversary of UCSC Publishing the first Human Genome

    July 7, 2020 marks the 20th anniversary of UCSC publishing the first-ever human Genome -on the Internet in 2020. This was the first time that the code for human life was +on the Internet in 2000. This was the first time that the code for human life was replicated and spread through computers instead of through biological means. We are lucky to have some of the original publishers still with us at the Genome Browser. Thank you, David Haussler and Jim Kent for your incredible effort pushing forward the field of human genomics and open-source data sharing.

    For a timeline and pictures, please visit the Genomics Institute's article on the anniversary as well as this short video commemorating the occasion: