PATERNAL HAPLOGROUPS: A Brief Overview of Family Tree DNA y-DNA

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  • Опубликовано: 27 июл 2024
  • Ever wonder how you can trace the origin of your y-DNA (paternal) haplogroups? This video walks you through the origin of your father's y-DNA using FamilyTree DNA.
    Next learn about MATERNAL Haplogroups 👉🏼 • MATERNAL HAPLOGROUPS: ...
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Комментарии • 304

  • @mariacapaldi5062
    @mariacapaldi5062 4 года назад +3

    Hi Andy what a great explanation!👍👍👍

  • @jmanwarren
    @jmanwarren 2 года назад +2

    I have found your tutorials very helpful. My question is that I see Haplogroups listed in my One to Many DNA comparison on Gedmatch and some of the matches show a Haplogroup (either for Y or Mt.) What is the Haplogroup listed? Is it my Haplogroup or theirs? and what does it mean? For example, kit XYZ123 may list Haplogroup H2a2b2 under Mt. What does that mean for me and for my relation to this individual?

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  Год назад +1

      It is their haplogroup that they have manually inputted. It doesn't really matter for what GEDmatch provides.

  • @cathyc6725
    @cathyc6725 4 года назад +2

    Do you know how many markers 23 & Me tests? One of my male cousins tested at FTDNA with the least expensive Y test a couple of years ago just to see how he might fit into the Cline surname project. Hen one of my half-brother’s sons tested at 23 & Me. When I asked the surname project manager about their results said they were related but distantly. They are 3rd cousins 1x removed. I would think their Y DNA would be the same and the difference is due to the 23 & Me testing more markers. Is that a correct conclusion?

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  4 года назад +1

      The Y test at FTDNA (STR) is not comparable to the test at 23adnMe (SNP). THey are different things.

  • @ExploringUmbria
    @ExploringUmbria 3 года назад +4

    I am still confused about African-American male haplogroups. I am awaiting my Y/111 test results and I suspect that my Y haplogroup is going to be R1b1a2 (R-M269). But my question is if I descend from a European male grandfather, and then there is an African Y-haplogroup in the line subsequently, is the trace inconclusive or what? I am using the test to prove possible paternity of my GGGF by a European father from England. Also, if there was a African haplogroup Y introduced into the lineage after the European grandparent, will I still get European DNA matches from my Y test or only be able to get them from my autosomal test?

    • @ChannieChauni
      @ChannieChauni 2 года назад

      My Boyfriend has two relatives in R-M269 of Y-haplogroup.

  • @ezekiel37projectmessianicb90
    @ezekiel37projectmessianicb90 4 года назад +2

    This is a really good question. A lot of study on the Y-Chromosome in the Jewish Cohanim can be traced back to a single man. This example has redefined other levels of testing. I am reading through some DNA pairs and seeing how pairs are connected to haplogroups. It is kind of tricky, but it is eye opening because once the method is clearly understood, scientifically we can determine how everyone on the earth is related. Our current progression from Object Oriented Computer Programming to Artificial Intelligence can figure out how everyone on the face of the planet is connected or related, in theory.

    • @benjamind3448
      @benjamind3448 3 года назад

      y dna Haplogroup I1 would have most likely been the Haplogroup of Jacob. This is a bit of secret, hidden history.

    • @OliveMule
      @OliveMule Год назад

      PROPAGANDA

    • @aaronjennings8385
      @aaronjennings8385 Год назад

      Mine is r-m269 from Egyptian Pharoah Akhenaten, the original Kohen of Judaism.

  • @YosemiteFour
    @YosemiteFour 3 года назад +2

    Which GedMatch DNA app should I use to find out which side of the family a match is on (mom's or dad's)? Newbie. Great videos BTW.

    • @user-jr4kc6lu9q
      @user-jr4kc6lu9q 7 месяцев назад

      You need to have one of your parents test also, or to have a known relative (aunt, uncle, 1st cousin, 2nd cousin) test, to know how you are related to a match autosomally, if you find that both you and they match the same person on the same DNA segment.

  • @rkdazet
    @rkdazet 2 года назад +1

    So I'm researching my mother's Dietrich family who emigrated east first to Hungary, then the Odessa area on the Black Sea and finally to the Dakota Territory. My first cousin has tested to STR-111 and the big Y on Family Tree DNA. We are haplogroup E-M35. We match with families who emigrated directly to North America in Berks County, PA. So the common ancestor would probably have lived in the early 1700s or even before somewhere in Germany, probably the Rhineland (we don't have documentation or family origins). Recently I have an at-DNA match on Ancestry DNA who is a descendant of one of the Berks County Dietrich families. I have 29 cm over one segment shared DNA with this match. She also shares DNA with 3 of my siblings and with 8 other DNA matches (all have more than 20 cm in common). My question is, could this be a false positive match? Is it possible to have about 30 cm in common from an ancestor from so long ago? Looking that the tree of this match I see no other common surnames or possible more recent relatives. I know of no recent relatives in Pennsylvania and I see no direct connect to Mom's North Dakota family. It would seem if the this is a real match it would have to have come from ancestors before they emigrated out of Germany. What do you think? Thanks for all your work and the great video tutorials!

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  2 года назад +3

      Highly unlikely that it is a false positive, especially with so many other matches sharing.

  • @ASMM1981EGY
    @ASMM1981EGY 2 года назад

    Awesome videos. Thanks a lot from EGYPT

  • @reneosbaldomoralesjacobo8413
    @reneosbaldomoralesjacobo8413 2 года назад +1

    Muy interesante, me dan ganas de hacerme esa prueba.

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  2 года назад +1

      Si desea construir su árbol genealógico, entonces tome las pruebas.

  • @josesolans2475
    @josesolans2475 3 года назад

    It is interesting I should come across this channel.
    Because I took paternal Ydna test long ago and it turned out my haplogroup was the letter I .
    However, I am of Cuban descent living in the US.
    According to readings I have done on the subject, most Cuban males who have European male ancestors have Haplogroup R1b.
    Haplogroup I is more frequently found in males from Northern Europe, specifically Scandinavia and Germany.
    As far as I know I don't have any ancestors from those areas.

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  3 года назад

      Cuba is a mix of races. It's as easily possible to have a haplogroup from Scandinavia as other locations. Remember, y-DNA groups are from many generations ago.

    • @anyone3128
      @anyone3128 2 года назад

      England was invaded by the Vikings so not all the DNA of English peoples would be native Celtic DNA.

  • @patriotsongs
    @patriotsongs Год назад

    I had my cousin's YDNA, 111 markers, done at FTDNA. He has 8 matches, but the haplogroups are not the same for all. Three are R-FTA81025, three are R-M269, and two are R-FGC57612. What exactly does this mean? Is there a place I can plug these in and get answers? Also, those with the same haplogroup don't all show the same ancestor, and since some of the trees don't even show that ancestor, I'm not sure where they came from.
    Help!

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  Год назад

      If you go onto the haplotree on FTDNA, you will probably find that all of these are within the same branch.

  • @Ilexbi3
    @Ilexbi3 2 года назад +1

    So, I have a Y haplogroup of B-M109 but when I run the raw data. I keep being connected to tribes of people with E1b1a haplogroup. Can you explain how that happens please?

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  2 года назад +1

      E is a descendant of B. There might be very few B kits, and the E kits are the closest related (still extremely distant, tens of thousands of years to a common ancestor.)

    • @eagle.vision4790
      @eagle.vision4790 Год назад

      @llexbi3 Me too bro what's your email I want to share a few things about Haplogroup B

  • @mohamedel7206
    @mohamedel7206 3 года назад +1

    Hey man, i participated with the National Genographic Project in 2017-2018 and my Y-DNA Haplogroup was "e-cts1411" it is derived from "e-m81" if i am correct and i am a boy from the northern part of Morocco, i am a native berber/amazigh.
    Do you have any more information about my haplogroup; e-cts1411? From what i understand it is an old lineage...

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  3 года назад

      The information I would get would be found on Google. I bet you've tried that already.

    • @moroccanflower9119
      @moroccanflower9119 3 года назад

      @Mohamed El which city?

    • @ayahadam8299
      @ayahadam8299 3 года назад

      i thought most amazigh were european and arab you have african lineage

  • @KristinaUSA-x5n
    @KristinaUSA-x5n 3 года назад

    On 23 and Me, my dad's paternal haplogroup is R-Z282, but it does not correspond to FTDNA haplogroups or when I Google it.

  • @agnaldodomacilio6582
    @agnaldodomacilio6582 3 года назад

    Hello, I did both Y and mtda DNA tests through FamilyTreeDNA. My paternal Haplogroup is (R-M269) and the maternal is (L3e2b-T152C!). I would like to know if there's any indication that R-M269 has any possible connection with Jewish ancestry? I ask because another test with MyHeritage gave and estimate 10% plus DNA of Sephardic Jewish from Northern Africa. However, none of these migration maps seem to have passed through that region. Even tough my maternal line seem to be mainly African and my paternal Caucasian. My main ancestries are Portuguese, African and Latin American natives peoples (on both sides) and others. European minorities.

    • @agnaldodomacilio6582
      @agnaldodomacilio6582 3 года назад

      Thank you so much for your help!

    • @Anonymouse166
      @Anonymouse166 2 года назад

      Interesting, me too I am R-M269 and I am Palestinian. and did show some Ashkenazi Jewish in my recent DNA. It was explained to me that it’s possible some of R-M269 may have stayed behind around Turkey and never went to Western Europe and later traveled to Palestine. 🤔

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  Год назад

      The best way to resolve this is to ignore the haplogroups and focus on building your family tree using DNA matching. Only then will you know the answers you seek.

  • @rjmurphyo0
    @rjmurphyo0 3 года назад +2

    Mine is R-A212. It says I share a common ancestor with Niall of the nine hostages.

  • @MajorGrandpa
    @MajorGrandpa 4 года назад

    My paternal Haplogroup group per 23andMe & FamilyTreeDNA Y-67 says paternal haplogroup "R-CTS9219." I know that this is an extension or drill down from R1b --- but beyond that, I have no clue what to do with this number. Can you help?

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  4 года назад +1

      You can find it on the Haplotree on FTDNA, but for most practical purposes there is not much use for it from an individual sense.

    • @nyetzdyec3391
      @nyetzdyec3391 4 года назад

      @Cory Stophlet
      If you're having problems knowing WHERE to look for your paternal ancestors, then finding places where people with R-CTS9219 live/lived. Of course, for the most part, we only know where they *currently* live, but you can generally extrapolate that where they are currently clustered is likely also where they *used* to live, at least for a few hundred years. Note, of course, that you can rule out the Americas, due to colonization.
      From there, then you can try to hunt down documentation.
      I found THIS page which happens to give a migration pattern for your pattern R-CTS9219...
      genographic.nationalgeographic.com/results/infographic/100850955fe9658cc65c9263484cb8e1c5894a

    • @hannibalbarca4372
      @hannibalbarca4372 4 года назад

      R-CTS9219 is known as R-CTS1450 is a subclade of R1b-U106 The Germanic branch (S21/U106) of R1b:
      www.eupedia.com/europe/Haplogroup_R1b_Y-DNA.shtml#S21-U106
      on Yfull (Y chromosome phylogenetic haplotree),you are here :
      www.yfull.com/tree/R-CTS1450/

  • @shaunsteele6926
    @shaunsteele6926 10 месяцев назад +2

    I took the "Big Y" test on FTDNA, but it still left me just as confused as before. I recently discovered my 3rd great grandfather (born 1850) was adopted, so my "real" surname is not what I thought it was. I wish I could figure out who his biological father was, but it seems like an exercise in futility.

    • @luminol
      @luminol 4 месяца назад

      It is solvable because I have a similar story. Contact me and I’ll tell you how to solve. My Grandfather was adopted so I had to figure it out. It took awhile but I solved.

  • @moth7457
    @moth7457 Год назад

    Would you please post a link to the MIGRATION MAP behind you? Is it interactive?

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  Год назад

      It's not interactive. It's available using a Google search for paternal haplogroup migration maps.

  • @seanmcguire7974
    @seanmcguire7974 4 года назад +1

    Is that basically all it does? Can you trace something more recent? Like 10-20 generations with a y test?

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  4 года назад +1

      That is basically all it does. Yes a Y-test (with STR) can trace more recent paternal ancestors, but STR does not equal haplogroup.

  • @healmyroots
    @healmyroots 3 года назад

    Does the family tree DNA y 37 test show haplogroup?

    • @pistonwristpin1
      @pistonwristpin1 3 года назад

      I had a Y-111 test done, to only get a “presumed,” RM269 haplo group, if thats any indication. The Big Y is the definitive it seems.

  • @laurajane9486
    @laurajane9486 2 года назад

    Can you explain why I would be haplogroup H5 in Ancestry DNA, but Haplogroup R through CRI Genetics?

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  2 года назад

      They are testing different segments of your DNA. Why My Results Are Different At Each DNA Company? ruclips.net/video/mlAq-R1XCes/видео.html

  • @backpackingonline
    @backpackingonline 3 года назад +1

    The ISOGG phylotree has much more information.
    I want to know the more recent haplogroup designation on the phylotree.
    It it scots, finns, etal?

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  2 года назад

      Sadly, this not my field of expertise. I would refer you to ISOGG, 23andMe, and FamilyTreeDNA reference material.
      FYI: I'm more focused on building my family tree by figuring out how all my autosomal DNA matches fit into my family tree. Once I do that, then I'll explore Y-DNA more fully.

    • @gingercameronfordcrouch7057
      @gingercameronfordcrouch7057 2 года назад

      @@FamilyHistoryFanatics I would love to figure all my matches out too but there are 5000 matches from 23&me and I am going to do an ancestry dna too omg. Quite overwhelming atm! I have no one to fill in a paternal haplo group on my dads side closet we have are male cousins not sure how that works if it even does. 23 says get a brother or dad unfortunately there isn't any of those to do dnas I never had any brothers from my dad he was a causality of Vietnam and his brothers died young too. Grandfather died in 1985 so all we have are my aunts my dads sisters son's my cousins. I am an only child as far as I know. Not sure they give true paternal haplo groups for my paternal side. I suppose my son would carry some of theirs but it be mixed with his dads family haplo groups.

  • @umarmars47
    @umarmars47 4 года назад +6

    So I have done Y DNA test on FTdna & uploaded on Y-FULL, mine was J-Y254439 (derives from J-M47 from J2).
    I need to know any culture/race/country that are similar to my haplogroup so I can narrow down where my ancestors come from...

    • @umarmars47
      @umarmars47 4 года назад

      I bought one of the SNPs and I'm in the J2A (M410). Should I buy SNP pack or Y-111 if I want to find surname & which region I'm from??

    • @parisan9985
      @parisan9985 3 года назад

      Berape banyak Y dna J2 ko? J2 ni kebanyakan Timur Tengah bahagian negara2 Sham dgn Gunung Kaukasus. Mungkin ayah kau ada susur galur dari sana ke?

    • @umarmars47
      @umarmars47 3 года назад +1

      @@parisan9985 saya dah ambil test pun dan saya keturunan orang arab yaman, results saya sama dengan seorang arab yang bernama "al haddad". Jadi kita dah berbual dan saya nak ambil Big-Y test untuk pastikan.

    • @ahmedameen7281
      @ahmedameen7281 3 года назад +2

      @@umarmars47
      saya berasal dari yemen dan saya mempunyai j2a yang sama dengan anda. adakah anda dari keluarga al haddad?

    • @umarmars47
      @umarmars47 3 года назад

      @@ahmedameen7281 Hi, at first saya fikir begitu. Tapi keluarga Ba Alawi termasuk Al Haddad sebenarnya Haplogroup G!
      Saya guna Yfull untuk cari matches yang lain... Kebanyakan semua asal Iraq walaupun beranak dari negara lain. Saya dari Singapura dan match saya paling dekat adalah orang Lubnan/Lebanon!! Tapi dia tidak dapat dihubungi, leceh.
      Ini emel saya; s9605450e@gmail.com

  • @zhiyuanwang6194
    @zhiyuanwang6194 2 года назад

    I am a Chinese Muslim,My paternal ancestors came from Central Asia. My paternal haplogroup is Q-M378-Y2209.

  • @liberoAquila
    @liberoAquila 4 года назад

    How do you test for subclades?

  • @FreedomBiafra
    @FreedomBiafra 7 месяцев назад

    My DNA test says that my paternal haplotype is G-L660 and that my paternal DNA is most commonly found in Sardinia. Will this be my actual paternal lineage?

  • @Maggie-Gardener-Maker
    @Maggie-Gardener-Maker 4 года назад

    I was told I don't have paternal haplogroup group because I am female. My maternal haplogroup is H2a1. My father died a long time ago and all his brothers and sisters are dead. How could I get my father's haplo group? I did not have a brother so can't get Paternal haplogroup info that way. Is there any other way to get my father's haplogroup?

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  4 года назад +1

      Any direct male descendant from your common paternal ancestor will have the Y haplogroup. So in your case, you may need to go find 2nd cousins or 3rd cousins to discover your Y haplogroup.

    • @Maggie-Gardener-Maker
      @Maggie-Gardener-Maker 4 года назад

      @@FamilyHistoryFanatics Thank you!

  • @nyetzdyec3391
    @nyetzdyec3391 4 года назад +7

    There are three kinds of test for DNA for the purpose of genealogical research.
    Y-DNA, mt-DNA, and autosomal DNA.
    I'll post some messages briefly describing each as replies to this post.

    • @nyetzdyec3391
      @nyetzdyec3391 4 года назад +4

      Y-DNA:
      Y-DNA is only possessed by males. (BUT, Ladies, keep reading!)
      It's passed down basically unchanged, except for slight unfrrquent changes which MAY happen.
      On the other hand, it may be passed down completely unchanged for multiple generations.
      For this reason, Y-DNA testing is able to go WAY back in time/generations to find people who share a common paternal ancestor with you.
      LADIES - any male relative descended from your father or his father (or even HIS father!) should still have the same Y-DNA, so as long as there are no "non paternal events", like adoptions or "momma's baby, daddy's MAYbe", then there is no reason you can't get a brother, paternal uncle, or paternal-line cousin, to provide the cheek swab for you to do your test/research.

    • @nyetzdyec3391
      @nyetzdyec3391 4 года назад +3

      MT-DNA:
      Mitochondrial DNA is passed down ONLY by the mother, unchanged by the father's contributions, and mostly (but not totally) unchanged by time.
      It changes, yes, but INCREDIBLY slowly. You should have no trouble (other than the usual troubles of records, etc.) connecting with tenth, fifteenth, even twentieth cousins!
      The mother's (and her mother's, and her mother's, and her mother's, and so on!) mt-DNA is passed down to BOTH her sons and daughters, so both males and females are able to take this test using their own cheek swab samples.

    • @nyetzdyec3391
      @nyetzdyec3391 4 года назад +5

      Autosomal DNA
      Autosomal DNA tests can be taken by anyone, much like mt-DNA tests.
      Autosomal DNA looks at basically ALL of the DNA passed down by BOTH of your parents (very UNlike Y-DNA and mt-DNA)
      Autosomal DNA changes RADICALLY at every generation, BECAUSE it looks at both sides' contributions.
      For example, your autosomal DNA is only, at MOST, half-the-same as your mother's, and half your father's.
      FURTHER, DNA undergoes a process called "recombination", AND you get the occasional "mutations", minor (usually) random little changes here and there...
      In recombination, gene 1 from dad might "meet" gene 2 from mom, then become something else entirely.
      An analogy would be melting copper and tin together... you don't have copper or tin anymore, you get bronze instead.
      Another analogy would be like a soup or stew compared to its original ingredients. Some parts are recognizably the same, visually, while others (like the spices) are not.
      For this reason, autosomal DNA tests can't "take you back in time/generations" as far as either Y-DNA or mt-DNA, in order to help you connect with your cousins to compare lineages/notes and see where you share a common ancestor.
      Because it IS a test of blended DNA from both sides of your tree, THIS is the kind of test which generally yields the results of A% this, B% that, C% the other (ancestral heritage) and so on.
      Another advantage of this particular test is that, because it DOES change so much from one generation to the next, the testing agencies have gotten QUITE good at pinpointing how many generations back in time you have to look in order to find the common ancestor.

    • @nyetzdyec3391
      @nyetzdyec3391 3 года назад

      @RUclips Channel Thanks! Hope it helped!

    • @nyetzdyec3391
      @nyetzdyec3391 3 года назад

      @rgb Brown "...autosomal DNA tests, which really are the most important ones..."
      Most important depends entirely on your purpose.
      One thing that I wanted to do was try to get more on my direct paternal line.
      For me, autosomal testing is already at its limit... about 5th cousins. I'm looking for older branches to try to tie them together, and perhaps even work back up their line, then down to mine... "doing an end-run" around the "brick wall".

  • @fullyoulist
    @fullyoulist 2 года назад

    Is it possible that there is someone with the Y-DNA G haplogroup, and he claims to be a descendant of the male line to a man with the J haplogroup?

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  2 года назад

      It's always possible that people can claim different haplogroups. The question is what do the results show?

  • @marisolquintanilla3228
    @marisolquintanilla3228 2 года назад

    My father's haplogroup is RL2, can you explain this? Thank you

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  2 года назад

      I can't tell you much more about that Haplogroup. Check out the resources from the website that said that is your haplogroup. Otherwise, do a Google Search to find out more. I focus on generalities on this channel.

  • @teresasardinas5642
    @teresasardinas5642 2 года назад

    My paternal Haplogroup is R-4010. I was told that it is an Irish DNA; however, my paternal surname is Fuentes. What can you tell me about this Haplogroup? Thank you.

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  2 года назад

      I can't tell you much more about that Haplogroup. Check out the resources from the website that said that is your haplogroup. Otherwise, do a Google Search to find out more. I focus on generalities on this channel.

    • @teresasardinas5642
      @teresasardinas5642 2 года назад

      @@FamilyHistoryFanatics Thank you so much.

  • @abswiter1
    @abswiter1 4 года назад

    Please I would like to know how we can determine the Y-haplogroup from the values of 12 markers?

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  4 года назад

      You can't. Haplogroups are determined by SNPs. The FTDNA test looks at STR markers which are not the same thing as SNPs.

    • @abswiter1
      @abswiter1 4 года назад

      @@FamilyHistoryFanatics
      Thanks for replying.
      But some internet sites show us our haplogroups by introducing only markers's values.
      How it does work??

    • @elvinmeyer4984
      @elvinmeyer4984 3 года назад +2

      @@FamilyHistoryFanaticsi dont hink ur map is correct Basal P* is found at its highest rate among members of the Aeta (or Agta), a people indigenous to Luzon, in The Philippines. Luzon is also the only location where P*, P1* and rare P2 are now found together along with significant levels of K2b1 Even though P1* is now more common among individuals in Eastern Siberia and Central Asia, the above distributions tend to suggest that P* (P295) emerged in South East Asia

  • @mugan5347
    @mugan5347 3 года назад

    What would be the best company for just searching my Paternal Haplogroup (Y DNA)

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  3 года назад

      Depends on your criteria for best - most accurate, cheapest, quickest, most useful for matching with others, etc.

    • @mugan5347
      @mugan5347 3 года назад

      @@FamilyHistoryFanatics I want to know what Haplogroup I belong to.

    • @TonysMusic1974
      @TonysMusic1974 3 года назад

      @@mugan5347 23 and Me gives you that info with their basic DNA test.

  • @dogevb370
    @dogevb370 4 года назад

    im paternal haplogroup R-CTS4296. is that rare?
    I found out on a 23&me test and it said 1 in 2800 23&me customers have it.

    • @hannibalbarca4372
      @hannibalbarca4372 4 года назад

      R-CTS4296 is a subclade of The Atlantic Celtic branch (L21) : www.eupedia.com/europe/Haplogroup_R1b_Y-DNA.shtml#L21
      on Yfull,you are here : www.yfull.com/tree/R-CTS4296/

  • @kbcbcjs
    @kbcbcjs 3 года назад +1

    Sir, what is the journey of haplogroup R2O2 ?

    • @benjamind3448
      @benjamind3448 3 года назад +2

      R2A originated in the Caucasus, in countries like Armenia and Georgia. I belong to R2a1a

    • @disorderedenthropy
      @disorderedenthropy 2 года назад +1

      R2 originated in the Central Asia, south of the Steppe. It clearly shows on the map this guy is using. I’m an R2a myself.

  • @bossschmutzfink9865
    @bossschmutzfink9865 3 года назад +1

    Is there a way for me to find my y-Haplogroup with myheritage raw data?

    • @eljost512
      @eljost512 3 года назад

      Try morley y DNA im E-V13 i knew It by morley.

    • @bossschmutzfink9865
      @bossschmutzfink9865 3 года назад

      @@eljost512 found it out, Apparently I’m I2-M423. Thanks I used Morley and cladefinder.yseq.net

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  3 года назад

      NO. They test autosomal DNA not y-DNA

    • @bossschmutzfink9865
      @bossschmutzfink9865 3 года назад

      @@FamilyHistoryFanatics and what do you think about those prediction tools?

  • @debrarajkowski2239
    @debrarajkowski2239 Год назад

    Should I bother my 90 year old father to get a y dna test cuz he’s the last male in his fathers line? Is it very important to know?

  • @Yasmin-pi5pr
    @Yasmin-pi5pr 2 года назад

    Awesome video! Is there a Haplotree for the femenine line? How is it call?

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  2 года назад +2

      Here's the part two of this series ruclips.net/video/09GsPp-iIJM/видео.html

    • @Yasmin-pi5pr
      @Yasmin-pi5pr 2 года назад

      @@FamilyHistoryFanatics oh Thanks!! I hadn't noticed

  • @NOYB700
    @NOYB700 2 года назад

    I just found out that my dad’s haplogroup is C-P92 and I’m not sure how and where to research, if I’m looking at the migration map correctly, I’m showing the group migrated from Saudi Arabia? My dad is African American from the state of GA lol. I’m confused. I’m new to Y-dna. Help? lol

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  2 года назад

      Knowing your haplogroup is great, but you're putting the cart before the horse and expecting to get somewhere.
      You have to start genetic genealogy research with traditional genealogy research. Which means building your family tree. (My wife's beginner video helps there ruclips.net/video/Fx2Tff-R-yI/видео.html).
      Then, link that family tree to your DNA results and start identifying all of your autosomal DNA matches in Ancestry, MyHeritage, Family Tree DNA, and on GEDmatch. (You can transfer DNA into the final three in that list for little or not cost ruclips.net/video/g84YAqzR17U/видео.html).
      Once you've done that, you have enough to tackle the YDNA question. There isn't any other way to figure it out until you lay the foundation.

  • @alibmahmood1525
    @alibmahmood1525 2 года назад +1

    Is the haplogroup gpf4202 the same haplogroup gpf3359... I, E, they have same father

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  2 года назад

      The gpf indicates that they are from the segment of the haplogroup tree. The y-DNA can vary slighting in offspring and still be direct descendants of the same ancestors.
      You would have to find each on the FTDNA haplotree and follow them up to the nearest common haplogroup.

  • @FABIO_MARTINSS
    @FABIO_MARTINSS 5 месяцев назад

    My paternal haplogroup is I m253. My father has been tested too and his is the same Obvously ( unless I was a bastard 😂). The strange thing is that my paternal grandfather came to Brazil from Portugal, Galícia . 70% of the men in Portugal are positive for R1b, but there are 5% I1 positive in.... Galícia. The only explanation for that is the suebic invasion in 409 DC, but that was long time ago. He got 14% german autossomal DNA, unexplained by genealogical research. My mother got 97% european autossomal DNA ( 50% German, 25 % italian, some east europe etc) but her haplogrup is A😮

  • @nevillekelly1465
    @nevillekelly1465 Год назад

    I made a post yesterday but it is not appearing, why????

  • @Bob-Horse
    @Bob-Horse 3 года назад

    If I share the same haplogroup through an ancient common ancestor with someone, does that mean we are related?

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  2 года назад

      yes and no.
      You could be so far distantly related it's not discoverable in a genealogical time frame. ruclips.net/video/OcgDYF_VcOA/видео.html

  • @skeptic781
    @skeptic781 Год назад +1

    R-CTS241 (subclade of R-L21 of R1b) Northern Irish father

  • @jo100
    @jo100 Год назад +1

    My Paternal Haplogroup is E-M4451

  • @pistonwristpin1
    @pistonwristpin1 3 года назад

    I have a hurdle: I can match 16 paternal SNPs, and 8 microsatellite loci of my dna fingerprint (21 STRs), with an ancient Egyptian who lived about 1700BC. If that isn’t enough my child looks just like his gold death mask, and extremely freaks me out as a parent.
    Seems plausible to me this ancient person is my direct paternal great grandfather. I get my surname from the descendants of Rollo the Walker, but my Y chromosome comes from the House of Anjou. Paternally I’m 49% Danish Viking and 49% Merovingian noble DNA. I got the full gamut of tests at FTDNA. My Big Y says my Y chromosome originated in the north fertile crescent 25,000 years ago. What gives?
    My dad and his dad were Mormons and did grand dad’s family tree. The church said we were descendants of Joseph of Arimathea.
    Can ya help? I think I’m lost in it all.

    • @thalmoragent9344
      @thalmoragent9344 3 года назад +2

      Well, possibly that one of the women in the family may have, well... "lied" about a kid somewhere on the tree. If you feel what is documented in name and such is different from what the DNA says, could be a case of infidelity in the tree..
      That or you really are just part of a wider family that had a lot of branches further back than you though, and some member was a product of some other diverse situation, making it all seem wierd despite being documented as otherwise.

    • @khaias7822
      @khaias7822 Год назад

      @@thalmoragent9344 Or maybe she was raped. No need to assume infidelity

  • @indostuffs
    @indostuffs 2 года назад +2

    Mine is Y-DNA K2* (K-M526), Indonesian.

  • @margueriteknowlton7074
    @margueriteknowlton7074 2 года назад

    I only have my fathers ashes- some of his bones from when he died can I get this tested?

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  2 года назад

      The ashes will not have his DNA in them. Sorry.

    • @shaunsteele6926
      @shaunsteele6926 10 месяцев назад

      the bones might contain some DNA... but unless you're a forensic scientist or in the FBI/CIA you probably won't have access to the technology to do this lol

  • @jayay5881
    @jayay5881 3 года назад

    Any idea what jm267 is ?

    • @michaeldukes4108
      @michaeldukes4108 3 года назад +1

      You’d have to do some more research but off the top of my head, I’m pretty sure J is a Middle Eastern haplogroup.

  • @lovelymusicnow4404
    @lovelymusicnow4404 2 года назад

    Does anyone know what haplogroup r-a299 is?

  • @thatguykev856
    @thatguykev856 3 года назад +2

    What does it mean if my paternal Haplogroup is I-Y7219?

    • @abrown198528
      @abrown198528 3 года назад

      Not sure but my fathers Paternal Haplogroup is I1 23andme and CRIGENETICS both said that's Northern europe

    • @benjamind3448
      @benjamind3448 3 года назад

      Your ancestry originated around Bosnia

    • @militod6588
      @militod6588 3 года назад

      @@benjamind3448 From *Serbs not from bosnia u are even Serb

    • @benjamind3448
      @benjamind3448 2 года назад

      @anis azil It is a haplogroup in high concentration in Bosnia.

    • @benjamind3448
      @benjamind3448 2 года назад

      @anis azil Bosnia is the reservoir of this subclade.

  • @vojkocecenski299
    @vojkocecenski299 2 года назад

    Can you share wiyh me migration of J1 haplo group? Thanks

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  2 года назад

      www.nature.com/articles/s41598-021-85883-2

    • @abumishalkhalidadwan3543
      @abumishalkhalidadwan3543 2 года назад

      Do your ancestors originate from the Middle East because the j1 hoplogroup is from the Middle East, especially Jordan, Saudi Arabia and Yemen? I am a j1 hologroup. I am from Jordan

  • @eljost512
    @eljost512 3 года назад

    Hello I know that I'm E-V13, E-L250 according to Ymorley. But i don t know nothing about the subclade. Anyone has information about E-L250? I'm from Spain. New info according to yseq predictor it gives me E-V13+ but not E-L540.

    • @salf.1462
      @salf.1462 3 года назад

      Most likely north africa

    • @isaac163
      @isaac163 2 года назад

      Hi, I have been reading a bit about E Y-DNA (I am also E-V22 also from Spain, Andalucia) and it seems it is originally from Africa but is also highly represented in south Europe. If I remember well, E-V13 has a great representation in the Balkans so probably your subclade came originally from there and spread to other areas of the mediterrean sea. Mine (E-V22) is highly present in the Levant and Egypt though. I hope it helps! Saludos!

    • @eljost512
      @eljost512 2 года назад

      @@isaac163 Me alegra de contar con otro español sí me estuve informando y parece ser de origen balcánico con raíces del norte de África (el padre de mi linaje sería E-L618 cuyos descedientes llegaron a Europa en algún momento del neolítico apareciendo por primera vez un E-V13 en la edad del bronce). Como migración histórica o como llegó pues ni idea el haplogrupo solo puede asociarse a nivel regional para determinar cómo llegó tendría que profundizar más en mi linaje soy E-V13+ es lo único que se.

    • @eljost512
      @eljost512 2 года назад

      @@salf.1462 E-V13 is an european haplogroup with Northeast African origin (E-L618), its the majority of E in Europe. If someone in the modern North Africa has a copy of it, its sure that his ancestor came in a recent migration like ancient Greeks or Roman times.

    • @eljost512
      @eljost512 2 года назад

      @@isaac163 El E-V22 me suena que lo llevaron los fenicios también aunque igual tu antepasado era algún auxiliar romano con orígenes levantinos... a saber realmente

  • @Zombie.793
    @Zombie.793 3 года назад

    Can a male trace his mother's paternal line? e.g I want to find out about my mothers dad's ancestry

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  3 года назад

      yes and no. They have to use autosomal DNA testing but you're limited to your 5th great-grandparents with this DNA. There are no tests for that line like y-DNA or mt-DNA.

  • @michaelmichael8314
    @michaelmichael8314 Месяц назад

    I'm from Ireland. Parents are from Ireland, grandparents are from Ireland, great grandparents are from Ireland.
    etc. My autosomal DNA is 92% Irish, 5% Sweden&Denmark, and 3% Scotland. However, my paternal haplogroup is E-M191. How the hell did they happen? 😂

  • @TonysMusic1974
    @TonysMusic1974 2 года назад

    Why does 23 and Me have my haplogroup different than my father's? Both start with "J" though.

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  2 года назад

      Fathers and sons can be in the same primary branch (J) and differing letters thereafter due to the mutation's that happen on the Y segment.

    • @TonysMusic1974
      @TonysMusic1974 2 года назад

      @@FamilyHistoryFanatics thanks, I'm glad the mutation didn't happen in earlier generations because I was able to use the paternal haplogroup to confirm who my dad's birth father is 👍🏻

  • @MrSpellblade
    @MrSpellblade 2 года назад

    I have G-L30. Very few people have that in 2022. Other people that had G: Stalin, Scarface Al Capone, and Georgians, Ötzi

  • @lisamasty9115
    @lisamasty9115 3 года назад

    I got my brothers Ydna done, and the mapping only has one leg as J-M172 . Is there more add on's needed to map other legs of the journey?

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  Год назад

      Not really. Y-DNA isn't that valuable of a tool for genetic genealogy unless you have a more specific question such as "Is this man really my grandfather."

  • @obabas80
    @obabas80 2 года назад

    I am of Greek ancestry and my paternal haplogroup is I-L22. What does this mean?

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  2 года назад +1

      This page should give you the background information you need. www.familytreedna.com/groups/i-1d/about/results

    • @obabas80
      @obabas80 2 года назад

      @@FamilyHistoryFanatics thank you! Very interesting. If it’s apparently a subclade of Germanic origin, perhaps there was a raiding Goth in my family tree somewhere lol. It is not common in Greeks. Thanks again!

    • @shaunsteele6926
      @shaunsteele6926 10 месяцев назад

      @@obabas80 there were a few Celtic invasions of the Baltics in the last 2,000 years, which may explain why you have a "Germanic" Y haplogroup

    • @obabas80
      @obabas80 10 месяцев назад

      @@shaunsteele6926 yeah there were definitely a few "Germanic" invasions. I'm from the island of Crete, so I have a hunch that maybe that Y haplogroup was brought over to us from the Venetians, who themselves saw significantly more "mingling" with up north. That's my hunch at least based on family history. Europe is a beautiful place!

  • @amosmoses4953
    @amosmoses4953 2 года назад

    can you tell exactly what y-111 dna would mean?

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  2 года назад

      A 111/111 match indicates a very close or immediate relationship. Most exact matches are 3rd cousins or closer,

  • @billybugh4774
    @billybugh4774 3 года назад +2

    R-cst241. What do we know?

    • @skeptic781
      @skeptic781 Год назад +1

      R-CTS241 is the same as me. It is most commonly found in Scotland, Ireland, Northern England and Wales

    • @billybugh4774
      @billybugh4774 Год назад

      @@skeptic781 interesting, my 4th grandfather traveled here to the US from antrim Ireland.

    • @skeptic781
      @skeptic781 Год назад +1

      @@billybugh4774 Cool! My dad is from Northern Ireland, where Antrim is in

    • @billybugh4774
      @billybugh4774 Год назад

      @skeptic781 awesome! That's cool. I wish I knew more. I know it was a working class town wasn't it?

    • @billybugh4774
      @billybugh4774 Год назад

      Or county *

  • @Elohim7774
    @Elohim7774 2 года назад

    what kit do i buy that will give me the true chromosomes of my fathers lineage please respond and is it on amazon

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  2 года назад

      It's likely not on Amazon. And "True" Chromosomes of your father's lineage are challenging to answer. Actual chromosomes will be found by all the DNA tests because they read the genetic code and convert it into a RAW DNA file. That file is an accurate representation of the chromosomes.
      HOWEVER, what you can do with that data depends on whether a platform has other DNA matches that share DNA with your father. If they do, you can trace your lineage (to an extent). If not, you will be stuck until others share your lineage test.
      Finally, based on your question, I'm not sure if your father is alive or deceased. If deceased, the type of testing is very different than if he was alive.

  • @chrisjoy439
    @chrisjoy439 3 года назад

    My Paternal haplougroup is R-Z156 and my maternal haplougroup is J1b1a

  • @seanmcguire7974
    @seanmcguire7974 4 года назад

    And how do tell how you're related to someone?

  • @2ndChanceCrafting
    @2ndChanceCrafting 4 года назад

    Should I test my brother past 37 markers? Our fathers is n-m231. I am wondering if we can get more info from testing more markers?

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  4 года назад +1

      Only if you have matches that are GD 0 or 1.

    • @2ndChanceCrafting
      @2ndChanceCrafting 4 года назад

      @@FamilyHistoryFanatics _ tragically my brother passed away Dec 29th. His son would have the same y dna?

    • @YummYakitori
      @YummYakitori 4 года назад

      2nd Chance Crafting
      Hi, I’m also Haplogroup N-M231 (which by the way is the defining mutation for Haplogroup N and not your terminal haplogroup, you can do deeper Y-DNA testing to determine your terminal branch of N). What is your ethnic background btw?

    • @YummYakitori
      @YummYakitori 4 года назад

      2nd Chance Crafting
      Yes his son would have the same Y-DNA

    • @2ndChanceCrafting
      @2ndChanceCrafting 4 года назад

      @@YummYakitori - my fathers father came from Sweden then it goes back to Finland in the 1700's.

  • @tiffanyanne3522
    @tiffanyanne3522 3 года назад

    Are there any specific traits associated with these mutations? Like does one haplogroup cause better eyesight?

  • @abrown198528
    @abrown198528 4 года назад

    Interestingly my fathers Paternal group is Haplogroup I1 which is Northern Europe

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  3 года назад

      That is not so unusual the more we have learned about history. Haplogroups keep on popping up in places where they were not expected. Ghengis Khan's haplogroup is spread all over Europe, Middle East and Asia. It wouldn't shock me to find some examples of it in Africa.

    • @benjamind3448
      @benjamind3448 3 года назад

      I1 is the haplogroup associated with Jacob and the lost tribes of Israel.

    • @abrown198528
      @abrown198528 3 года назад +1

      @@benjamind3448 please provide proof of your statement.my father tested with 23andme AND CRIgenetics and BOTH said his paternal Haplogroup is I1 and that it's representativeof Northern Europe. In addition, he has significant DNA from Northwestern Europe, including Scotland and Ireland. I also found many European Ancestors who we are both related to from my Grandfather side of the family.

    • @benjamind3448
      @benjamind3448 3 года назад +1

      It is the haplogroup of the Vikings, who belong to the lost tribes of Israel.

    • @abrown198528
      @abrown198528 3 года назад

      @@benjamind3448 oh I see. Thank you it does say ties to the Vikings

  • @therealmcgoy4968
    @therealmcgoy4968 Год назад

    FamilyTreeDNA just gave I-M253. Sadly it doesn’t go further than that.

  • @emanueleinfantino2922
    @emanueleinfantino2922 3 года назад +1

    R1b-L23 Sicily

  • @ComradeHellas
    @ComradeHellas 3 года назад

    Mt-DNA: T
    Y-DNA: G-Z6211

  • @manuelocampo7285
    @manuelocampo7285 Год назад

    Q-BZ1717 Paternal
    A2j Maternal

  • @emborisk9823
    @emborisk9823 3 года назад

    If the KhoiKhoi are 300k years old and you say that Haplogroup A was East Africa around 70k then what Haplogoup is KhoiKhoi. Is Haplogoup A the olderst Haplogroup.

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  3 года назад

      From what I've read, scientists are still not in agreement in the KhoiKhoi research. So, it remains to be seen as to what happened to them genetically.

  • @dianalynn6899
    @dianalynn6899 4 года назад

    Must one be male to be tested for paternal haplogroup dna?

    • @bluebird1694
      @bluebird1694 4 года назад

      Yes because women don't carry y-chromosomes.

    • @dianalynn6899
      @dianalynn6899 4 года назад

      @@bluebird1694 thank you. I thought so. Darn.

    • @jum5238
      @jum5238 4 года назад +1

      @@dianalynn6899 there is the mtDNA test for maternal lines, though men get it (but don't pass it down)

    • @dianalynn6899
      @dianalynn6899 4 года назад

      @@jum5238 thank you very much.

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  4 года назад +2

      We have a MtDNA video coming or in the next few days. Stay tuned

  • @leewitte4700
    @leewitte4700 4 года назад +1

    I don't see this map option. Did Ancestry do away with it?

    • @youpenter
      @youpenter 4 года назад +3

      Lee Witte , it’s from FTDNA, not AncestryDNA.

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  4 года назад +2

      Thanks Randall for the day response.

    • @MajorGrandpa
      @MajorGrandpa 4 года назад +1

      @@youpenter Ancestry does not provide a Y-DNA haplogroup report but it is possible to get a haplogroup assignment from the raw data. I have mine from 23andMe and FamilyTreeDNA.

    • @leewitte4700
      @leewitte4700 4 года назад +1

      Thanks for the clairification.

  • @juliettewilson4589
    @juliettewilson4589 3 года назад

    how do you find it on ancestrydna??? help

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  3 года назад +1

      AncestryDNA uses autosomal testing, so you won't discover your haplogroup with this company. Sorry.

  • @user-ss3ic4tf4g
    @user-ss3ic4tf4g Год назад

    E V13 member with curly hair,mother Africa.

  • @jaffasoft8976
    @jaffasoft8976 2 месяца назад

    My Y states 275000 years plus male linage back to Eastern Africa.

  • @macariusyang
    @macariusyang 3 года назад

    Do you interested to find the lost tribes of israel with your DNA knowledge?

  • @augustoataide8788
    @augustoataide8788 3 года назад

    My name is Agamenon Ataide. I am of the Brazil. My DNA Y is L-M20

  • @diellibetim
    @diellibetim 2 года назад

    Mine is E-V13 Albanian, Europe 😀

  • @zhanzhara991
    @zhanzhara991 2 года назад

    Ydna I-L1287 here

  • @catheadoff
    @catheadoff Год назад

    My y-DNA is R

  • @AdultThirdCultureKid1971
    @AdultThirdCultureKid1971 3 года назад

    I know my maternal DNA haplogroup.

  • @rtod4
    @rtod4 3 года назад

    I'll take you up on your offer to ask questions 😁
    I have a maternal haplogroup of R1b1b, described by 23&me as ancient Irish, Welsh, Brit.
    How long ago did R1b1b first show up, and where?
    My paternal haplogroup is R-z92 from NE Poland.
    When did haplogroup R-z92 first show up, and where?
    I'm not quite sure how to figure that out.
    Also, I assume that maternal haplogroup R1b1b is the same population as paternal haplogroup R1b1b?
    Thanks!

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  3 года назад

      I would go to Google and look up those specific haplogroups.

    • @rtod4
      @rtod4 3 года назад

      @@FamilyHistoryFanatics I have looked but not really sure what to look for.
      Thanks for the timely response.

  • @kzaalook
    @kzaalook Год назад

    How they did not cross the Mediterranean, but the Indian ocean :-((!

  • @ilija1101
    @ilija1101 3 года назад +13

    I thing science made mistake,simply different haplogroups have different ancestors,there were more Adams,not only one

  • @johnrogan9420
    @johnrogan9420 3 года назад

    Most British Isles people are R-S660...80 percent!

  • @xanshen9011
    @xanshen9011 2 года назад

    Haplogroup P1 makes european men nervous lol

  • @agm2841
    @agm2841 2 года назад

    So where is r-df101 from?

  • @YankoMartic
    @YankoMartic Год назад

    Im R1a1

  • @mrnorthphilly9562
    @mrnorthphilly9562 4 года назад

    E-Z5994

  • @alexanderp4260
    @alexanderp4260 3 года назад

    This all basically assumes archeology still backs up the out of Africa theory

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  3 года назад

      Archeology does back up the out of Africa theory. It was archeology that was the instigator for the out of Africa theory.

    • @alexanderp4260
      @alexanderp4260 3 года назад

      @@FamilyHistoryFanatics well initially yes, but not anymore

    • @SimpleMinded221
      @SimpleMinded221 2 года назад

      @@alexanderp4260 You do realize if you don't believe in the out of Africa theory, you also cant believe in the current format on haplogroups and how they mutated in its current state.
      Y DNA haplogroup A represents the oldest branch of the Y-chromosome phylogeny. Like haplogroup B, it only appears in Africa, with the highest frequency among the hunter-gatherer groups in Ethiopia and Sudan [58,61]. A3b1 is a Khoisan exclusive haplogroup.
      The oldest extant human maternal lineages include mitochondrial haplogroups L0d and L0k found in the southern African click-speaking forager peoples broadly classified as Khoesan. Profiling these early mitochondrial lineages allows for better understanding of modern human evolution. In this study, we profile 77 new early-diverged complete mitochondrial genomes and sub-classify another 105 L0d/L0k individuals from southern Africa. We use this data to refine basal phylogenetic divergence, coalescence times and Khoesan prehistory. Our results confirm L0d as the earliest diverged lineage (∼172 kya, 95%CI: 149-199 kya), followed by L0k (∼159 kya, 95%CI: 136-183 kya) and a new lineage we name L0g (∼94 kya, 95%CI: 72-116 kya). We identify two new L0d1 subclades we name L0d1d and L0d1c4/L0d1e, and estimate L0d2 and L0d1 divergence at ∼93 kya (95%CI:76-112 kya). We concur the earliest emerging L0d1’2 sublineage L0d1b (∼49 kya, 95%CI:37-58 kya) is widely distributed across southern Africa. Concomitantly, we find the most recent sublineage L0d2a (∼17 kya, 95%CI:10-27 kya) to be equally common
      So what are you talking about ? People like you are clearly biased.

  • @aaronjennings8385
    @aaronjennings8385 Год назад

    Rm269 here. Same as Pharoah Akhenaten. The original Jew.

  • @thelee926
    @thelee926 3 года назад

    N1a3

  • @johnrogan9420
    @johnrogan9420 3 года назад

    R-S660...L lineage...east Kenya to Yemen and Suadi Arabia.. To Lake B. In Siberia...horseman... Zebra like creatures...

  • @lovelyday6500
    @lovelyday6500 Год назад

    E1b1b

  • @johnrogan9420
    @johnrogan9420 3 года назад

    Migration... Your place of residence now does not tell the full migration story.

  • @sasapapapote
    @sasapapapote 4 года назад

    I'm brazilian jew. My Y-DNA is R-m173. How many jews we have with my haplogroup? My haplogroup is common in jewish people? Best,

    • @hassan333wa
      @hassan333wa 4 года назад

      Ur not Jew by ethnic background
      But rather ur an aryan

    • @hannibalbarca4372
      @hannibalbarca4372 4 года назад

      R-M173 mutation is equivalent to R1 haplogroup,the "father" of R1a & R1b,you have to test a more deeper subclade.

    • @sasapapapote
      @sasapapapote 4 года назад

      @@hannibalbarca4372 yes. I ordered now in Family Tree the Y-DNA 111. So, i will know if my Y-DNA is R1a or R1b, etc...

    • @sasapapapote
      @sasapapapote 4 года назад

      @@hannibalbarca4372 my maternal full haplogroup is X3a (mostly found in Druze people, South Spain, South Portugal and North Africa). I think its indicates my jewish maternal origins.

    • @kehr2019
      @kehr2019 3 года назад +1

      Augusto Sorry your ancestors were most likely coverts the real Y Haplogroup for Jews and Israelites is J1 and J2 I have a video on my channel or you can search it up. Y Haplogroup R is European

  • @alanheadrick7997
    @alanheadrick7997 4 года назад

    No paternal. I am guessing its the same for maternal.

    • @MajorGrandpa
      @MajorGrandpa 4 года назад

      You will have a Paternal and a different Maternal HaploGroup. 23andMe, MyHeritage and FamilyTree DNA results include your Paternal & Maternal HaploGroups. 23andMe drills down deeper into the Paternal HaploGroup identity. FamilyTreeDNA Y-DNA test can drill down/refine that Paternal Group significantly; however, you have to pay more to get those results.

    • @alanheadrick7997
      @alanheadrick7997 4 года назад

      @@MajorGrandpa Sorry, this was reference to my daughter in law. Hers is C1a and so far none of her matches are C1a.

    • @FamilyHistoryFanatics
      @FamilyHistoryFanatics  4 года назад +1

      The vast majority of your matches will not be the same haplogroup as you.

    • @nyetzdyec3391
      @nyetzdyec3391 4 года назад

      @@FamilyHistoryFanatics This comment : "The vast majority of your matches will not be the same haplogroup as you."...
      ONLY applies to people taking autosomal DNA tests.
      In the case of either mt-DNA or y-DNA tests, then ALL of your matches should be the SAME as you.