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- Surveying Available Sources
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- Pedigree Charts
- Family Group Sheets
- Timelines & Narratives
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- Numbering Systems
- Analyzing Data
- Fraudulent Pedigrees
Computers & Genealogy
Legal Considerations
Etiquette
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Fraudulent Pedigrees

Supplying phony noble ancestries for the newly rich has been a profitable business for centuries. Just as there have been forgeries in the arts and letters, so there have been forgeries in genealogy. An entire issue of the Genealogical Journal (19 [1 and 2] [1991]) was devoted to case studies in fraud. The editor, Gordon L. Remington, addressed the topic at a national conference and proposed the following guidelines to detect genealogical fraud ("Charlemagne or Charlatan: Case Studies in Genealogical Fraud," 1994 Federation of Genealogical Societies/Virginia Genealogical Society Conference):

- Suspicious, inadequate, or no citations.
- The ancestry provided is "too good to be true."
- The reasoning doesn't make sense.