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References & Further Reading 1. On ABO Blood Group Inheritance (Mendelian Genetics) Source: Dean, L. (2005). Blood Groups and Red Cell Antigens. National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI). Chapter 5: The ABO blood group. Key Concept: Explains the Genotype vs. Phenotype mechanism (AA/AO, BB/BO, OO) and how A and B genes are co-dominant while O is recessive. 2. On the "Impossible" Child (Parent A + Parent B = Child O) Source: Stanford School of Medicine (The Tech Interactive). "Ask a Geneticist: Can 2 parents with A and B blood types have an O child?" Key Concept: Validates the scenario where heterozygous parents (AO and BO) have a 25% chance of producing an O (OO) child. 3. On Rh Factor Inheritance (The +/- Mystery) Source: The American Red Cross. "A Guide to the Rh Factor and Your Pregnancy." Source: Moise, K. J. (2008). "Management of Rhesus Alloimmunization in Pregnancy." Obstetrics & Gynecology. Key Concept: Explains how Rh-positive is a dominant trait and Rh-negative is recessive. It details how two Rh-positive parents (heterozygous) can produce an Rh-negative child. 4. On the Bombay Phenotype (The "Hidden" Blood Type) Source: Bhende, Y. M., Deshpande, C. K., Bhatia, H. M., et al. (1952). "A 'new' blood group character related to the ABO system." The Lancet. Key Concept: The original discovery paper of the Bombay Blood Group. Source: Dean, L. (2005). Blood Groups and Red Cell Antigens. Chapter 6: The Hh blood group. Key Concept: Explains the lack of the "H antigen" (the scaffold mentioned in the video) which causes Type B or A genes to be masked as Type O in standard tests. 5. On General Genetics & Paternity Testing Source: MedlinePlus (National Library of Medicine). "How is blood type determined?" Key Concept: General overview of the ABO gene located on chromosome 9 and the RHD gene on chromosome 1.