Note the following in regards to a notable person recently added to Wikipedia’s Deaths in 2026 site:
Claudio Bordignon, Italian geneticist (*boon)
His surname is an addition to the recent “First and Last 2 Letters in Name Makes a Word” pattern cluster, and so the word “boon”— a timely benefit, blessing. His surname is also an addition to the “Word in Name” pattern cluster , and so providing us with “dig”… and so dig we must!!
There are no other notable persons mentioned on his wiki page, butt this did catch my eye:
performed the first procedure of gene therapy
I feel that his being a geneticist is also meaningful from the inner twin world perspective— proof of which is determined by genetics … namely the new understanding thanks to Research in DNA regarding what Geneticists term as Natural Human Chimera.
On the Gene Therapy wiki page, there are a small handful of notable persons mentioned, butt only two are additions to the “First and Last 2 Letters in Name Makes a Word” pattern cluster:
- Joe Rogan (born August 11, 1967) (*roan)
- Theodor Leber (29 February 1840 – 17 April 1917) (*leer)
- Frieda Lawrence (August 11, 1879 – August 11, 1956) (*lace)
- Nana Akuoko Sarpong (August 11 1938 – 26 March 2026) MP (*sang)
- Captain McGowan (1860s): A renowned American trotter famous for a match race where he trotted 20 miles in under an hour.
- Blue Valentine (1957 Stallion): A cornerstone of ranching and rodeo AQHA bloodlines known for his blue roan color, producing tough, durable working horses.
- Metallic Cat (2005 Stallion): A high-earning AQHA red roan cutting horse and legendary sire.
- Red Man (1935 Stallion): Son of Joe Hancock and a major foundation sire of roan quarter horses.
- Royal Blue Boon: A highly accomplished blue roan cutting mare, recognized as a massive producer in the industry.
- Zippos Mr Good Bar (1984 Stallion): A well-known sire of western pleasure red roan horses.
- All Spice & Hashtags: Modern examples of successful roan performance Quarter Horses
Brindle coloring in horses is extremely rare and most commonly caused by pigment concentrating along Blaschko's lines during fetal development. In two confirmed cases it has been linked to spontaneous chimerism, resulting in an animal with two sets of DNA, with the brindle pattern being an expression of two different sets of equine coat color genes in one horse.
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