Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Skull found in 1997 in remote Alaska belongs to N.Y. man

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A skull found in 1997 in a remote part of Alaska’s Interior belongs to a New York man whose death was likely caused by a bear mauling, according to the Alaska State Troopers.

Investigat­ors used genetic genealogy to help identify the remains as those of Gary Frank Sotherden, according to a statement Thursday from the troopers.

“Based on the shape, size and locations of tooth penetratio­ns to the skull, it appears the person was a victim of bear predation,” Tim DeSpain, an agency spokespers­on, said in an email Friday.

“It is not known if the bear was the cause of the death.”

Sotherden was reported missing in the late 1970s, DeSpain said. The location in which the skull was found was the general area of Sotherden’s last known whereabout­s, he said.

DeSpain did not provide a hometown for Sotherden but said he was from upstate New York.

In July 1997, a hunter contacted troopers in Fairbanks and reported finding a human skull along the Porcupine River, around 8 miles (13 kilometers) from the Canadian border. Troopers who went to the area did not find any other remains, the agency said, and the skull was sent to the state medical examiner’s office as unidentifi­ed. The suspected cause of death was a bear mauling, according to the troopers’ statement.

DeSpain said “relatively recent successes in the department using genetic genealogy to identify unknown perpetrato­rs and victims” prompted a cold case unit last April to ask the medical examiner’s office to submit bone segments from a number of remains.

“These bone samples then went through various laboratory processes to generate DNA profiles, which were then uploaded into public DNA databases,” he said.

 ?? AP PHOTO/RICK BOWMER, FILE ?? This Aug. 12, 2009, photo shows snow-covered hills in the Porcupine River Tundra in the Yukon Territorie­s, Canada. In July 1997, a hunter contacted troopers in Fairbanks, Alaska, and reported finding a human skull along the Porcupine River, around 8miles (13kilomete­rs) from the Canadian border. Investigat­ors used genetic genealogy to help identify the remains as those of Gary Frank Sotherden, according to a statement Thursday, Feb. 2, 2023, from Alaska state troopers.
AP PHOTO/RICK BOWMER, FILE This Aug. 12, 2009, photo shows snow-covered hills in the Porcupine River Tundra in the Yukon Territorie­s, Canada. In July 1997, a hunter contacted troopers in Fairbanks, Alaska, and reported finding a human skull along the Porcupine River, around 8miles (13kilomete­rs) from the Canadian border. Investigat­ors used genetic genealogy to help identify the remains as those of Gary Frank Sotherden, according to a statement Thursday, Feb. 2, 2023, from Alaska state troopers.

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