Reviewing YOUR DNA results - Adam and Eve's Haplogroup? - Professional Genealogist Reacts

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  • Опубликовано: 28 авг 2024
  • In this video I review DNA and genealogy questions submitted by YOU!
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Комментарии • 74

  • @Nik-py5qj
    @Nik-py5qj 2 года назад +30

    I think people don't realize that a lot of our ancestors were already very mixed people no matter what country or continent they come from.

    • @yannitoob7525
      @yannitoob7525 Год назад

      facts

    • @gaylecheung3087
      @gaylecheung3087 Год назад

      I’m 100% Chinese made in Canada ♥️🇨🇦🌏🎄

    • @gaylecheung3087
      @gaylecheung3087 Год назад

      I’m 100% Chinese made in Canada ♥️🇨🇦🌏🎄and Haplogroup D

  • @msartlit
    @msartlit 2 года назад +4

    Thanks for commenting on my DNA!

  • @357Dejavu
    @357Dejavu 2 года назад +21

    We recently found out that my grandfather was adopted through 23 & me, then again through ancestry. He was not aware of this in life but it was then confirmed in a journal from my grandfathers aunt. It’s funny to find out that my second cousins that I grew up with are not related to me biologically.

  • @msartlit
    @msartlit 2 года назад +7

    Re: French Canadians and Iberian DNA. If the person asking can trace the tree back to A woman named Jeanne Grelon they would find her husband listed as Pierre DaSilva dit le Portugais. There are many variations of this man's name but this he was originally Pedro da Silva from Portugal. He is considered the first postman in Canada. Since his children were born in French Canada in the 1600's it's likely that he would have thousands of descendants who identify as French Canadian but have traces of Iberian DNA.

  • @honeyjazz4147
    @honeyjazz4147 2 года назад +5

    I'm African American Ancestrydna says I have 1% Indigenous America, 23andme says around 2%, I know for sure I have Native American ancestry, my grandmother looked very Native American and I always was told it was Cherokee, I confirmed it from finding many cousin matches who are members of the Cherokee nation, I found one cousin match with 23 % Native American, it's very difficult to find Native American when you do research particularly African Americans because because a tall brick wall stops at 1870 and Native Americans would not report they were Native American after the removal for fear of being removed and sent out west, many of my Native American cousin matches are living in Oklahoma where they were moved from Georgia.

  • @PierreMullin
    @PierreMullin 2 года назад +11

    The Iberian may be from French settlers from southern France, which bordered on Spain, or as in my case, I found that one of my ancestors (surname=Rodrigues) was actually a Portuguese man (Rodriguez) who came to New France in colonial times and who's descendants were thoroughly assimilated into French-Canadian society.

  • @ettinakitten5047
    @ettinakitten5047 2 года назад +2

    Autosomal refers specifically to chromosomes 1-22, excluding the sex chromosomes.

  • @sr2291
    @sr2291 2 года назад +3

    I found some of my grandfather and grandmothers haplogroups based on their direct descendants in 23andme. I used obituaries and trees on AncestryDNA to find out who the descendants are. The grandparents all had large families.

  • @Nancy-mi3xe
    @Nancy-mi3xe 2 года назад +2

    Nancy
    I have been researching my father's paternal side since I was 12,( I'm 70 now) with almost no progress. I have written to all the most likely DNA cousins at two different sites to try to find out more about my family, as all our elders have passed. My father has passed, so I asked my uncle to take a Y-chromosome test, which he did. I had hoped it would point me in a direction, but it turns out that haplogroup G2 M-377, or G2b M-377 is one for which science has not been able to pinpoint origin., and is found all over a wide range of countries. We are Eastern European Jews. My uncle is the last male in that line, so time counts here. The test my uncle took was a 37 marker test. How would having him take a 111 marker test help in finding family? I have searched every family members names in all the various spelling permutations, at every website available, but can not find anything on my paternal great grandfather"s family, except the births of several children, who then vanish from all records. I'm at a standstill. Would spending for the additional Y chromosome test help and how? I appreciate any help. Thanks.

  • @bundgaard
    @bundgaard 2 года назад +2

    For a second I thought you were going to say "Yes, I am cute!" 😅

  • @Roadglide911
    @Roadglide911 2 года назад +1

    I’d like to see an in depth study of the YDNA A Haplogroup.

  • @ruthking7884
    @ruthking7884 2 года назад +7

    Well that Germanic may not have been in Germany for many generations. My great grandparents (maternal) were born in Hesse and Saxony (Germany)....my mother who is 90 took a DNA test with me....she expected to be 50% Germanic Her father was Scottish and she got 50% even Scotland from her dad, But she was only 36% Germanic, 7% Baltic and 7% Eastern European and Russian....I got 14% Germanic and none of the Baltic or Eastern European and Russian
    ....as we have discovered, her grandmother was born in Saxony but her grandmother's father...mom's great grandfather listed himself simply as Prussian, but no birthplace, but was just called German on immigration records...turns out investigation revealed her great grandfather was raised by a German neighbour from infancy who moved to Hesse with him when his parents died. Turns out his parents were from Latvia and Poland....so yes my great grandfather was from Hesse but his parents were not.

  • @Chainsnroses
    @Chainsnroses 2 года назад +3

    My european ancestry is very much concentrated in the british isles im
    26% swedish and danish
    23% english
    20% irish
    13% germanic europe
    12% Welsh
    4% scottish
    2% french
    Watching your videos has answered all my questions

    • @gubjorggisladottir3525
      @gubjorggisladottir3525 Год назад +2

      according to your comment... 41% of your ancestry was not concentrated in the British isles at all! Swedish and Danish are North-European. Also Germanic and French are just Western European! LOL I am 100% North European I do not think of me as from the British isles at all... even though ca 50% of our gene pool is from there 30 generations ago.

  • @thatguykev856
    @thatguykev856 2 года назад +2

    Do you know anything about the Haplogroup L4b2b???

  • @sabirsal
    @sabirsal 2 года назад +1

    If the French Canadians ancestors are from the south of France then yes, Iberian indestructible is fairly common. Northern Spain and Southern France share boundaries and affinities with Basques and Andorra. Same with Catalonia and France. There’s been hundreds of years of population flow from both sides of the border and Pyrenees mts.

  • @kathyb5246
    @kathyb5246 2 года назад +3

    I actually completed dna testing with National Geographic. That program is no longer active. NG provided my haplogroup as l3f1b1 and indicated that I am closely related to the Luhya people of Kenya. Africa-Am was my secondary ethnic group.

  • @infinityaxeman
    @infinityaxeman 2 года назад

    I posted an enquiery 2 months ago, love the work. I hope you get to it soon

  • @lynmasters667
    @lynmasters667 Год назад

    I appreciate your passion, Jarrett, and the idea of the website is a great one. However there are aspects that I find hard to use and I am constantly bombarded with marketing. I'll probably abandon my involvement. It's a shame.

  • @LindaSchreiber
    @LindaSchreiber 2 года назад +1

    I agree with you about the German question. But I wish you had mentioned that the mere fact that the other side was Dutch/UK, here in the 1600s, that they were essentially Colonial ancestors....
    With those on one side, and newer immigrants on the other, the odds are that it's very likely that there would be a SERIOUS TON of US matches from that side, and far less for the more recent line.
    NPE is, I think, the *least* likely for the difference in the number of matches. Unless I misunderstood, that was not a good read.
    You may have headed the poster in a wrong direction....
    "Colonial Ancestor" is not 'Ashkenazi" by any manner of means. But the number of matches can be phenomenal.

    • @msartlit
      @msartlit 2 года назад

      We always thought my mothers family was pretty well 50-50 ancient UK and Dutch. Through research we found a couple of lines which came from England but had a few generations previous had come from Holland, before that Germany and before that France...

  • @high_dee_beebee1760
    @high_dee_beebee1760 2 года назад +3

    With all the ancient DNA testing being done, when do you think Ancestry & the like will start incorporating it into their comparison model?

    • @ettinakitten5047
      @ettinakitten5047 2 года назад +2

      It'd be so cool if you could see what % of DNA you share with Ötzi!

    • @monember2722
      @monember2722 Год назад

      I wondernwhat evil geniuses are really doing with your donated DNA? What are they looking for?

  • @donaldchimp7758
    @donaldchimp7758 2 года назад +2

    Hey I’m Guyanese. Born Canadian, parents are both from Guyana. I’m getting my results soon from AncestryDNA and think my ancestry traces back to Afghanistan not India like people think. Have you ever heard of the West Indies having Afghans or other ethnic groups migrate there besides Indian and African people?

  • @tysonl.taylor-gerstner1558
    @tysonl.taylor-gerstner1558 2 года назад +1

    Parts of Western Germany, Northern/Northeastern France, Switzerland are included in England Western Euorpe. Also, my university choir director has a last name that is spelled in a Dutch way but his dad declares Germany as where the family came from. What does that mean? Probably the border.

  • @lindacarroll6896
    @lindacarroll6896 2 года назад +1

    What do you know about the Daughters of Eve Project they did a number of years ago?

  • @Okamikurainya
    @Okamikurainya 2 года назад

    What I think the person asking about Biblical Adam and Eve may have meant was, assuming that Adam and Eve are the most distant ancestors of the family in the bible, what Haplogroup would they be? Not that they're the ancestors of all humanity, but rather tracing from the most recent canonical names given in the bible as a direct descendant and working your way back up.

    • @bigscarysteve
      @bigscarysteve Год назад +2

      Adam and Eve are the ancestors of all humanity. You refer vaguely to "the family in the Bible." That would be the Israelites, who are descended from Abraham and Sarah. But most Christians aren't descended from Abraham and Sarah, as Christianity grew by conversion, and that only in the last 2000 years. For all humanity, there is another bottleneck--Noah would be the most recent father of us all because everybody else died in the flood. It's not quite as simple for our mothers--the most recent would be the wives of Shem, Ham, and Japheth.

  • @gubjorggisladottir3525
    @gubjorggisladottir3525 Год назад

    It is like how seldom that Iceland is colored up in these genealogy files... is when Norway is colored also with the same color.
    Why would that be? Because 70% of Y-DNA in Iceland comes from Norway and we do not know if there has been any marked changes in the DNA to infer if these genes are Norwegian or purely Icelandic. We know that our gene pool is much smaller today than during the first years and decades of people living here... but I do not know if any permanent changes have occurred in the "Icelandic DNA". We do know that 30% of the Y-DNA came from Britain and 70% of the MtDNA. 30% MtDNA is from Norway. During the last 2-3 generations we have been getting both "foreign" Y-DNA into our gene pool, and also MtDNA. The Icelandic people have been working at keeping our gene pool as large as possible during those 10 centuries (30 generations) we have lived here. Because of DeCode we do have Islendingabok.is to look up in. Most (older) people find the genealogy charts there a bit frustrating... only being able to look at our own "from-tree" i.e. our parents, their parents and so on. Yes we can also look up how we are related to any living person... (most of us are related in 6th or 7th generation - we call that no relation at all.) I know that another firm than Friðriks Skúlasonar had also collected a large database of the Icelandic ancestry and the owners were frustrated over not being able to sell the database to Decode... While FRISK actually sold them the online programming solution not the genealogy itself. They just used what they knew were as correct as possible to gather. Today most of these files and original Manuscript have been digitalished (taken pictures of) and are available to look up in and read online. I.e. is skjalasafn.is/

  • @goblin3784
    @goblin3784 2 года назад +1

    what is the purpose of the gedmatch admixture calculators?

  • @nyxjones5797
    @nyxjones5797 Год назад +1

    The haplogroup of Adam and Eve is the same as the one of Mickey Mouse 😀

  • @cefcat5733
    @cefcat5733 2 года назад +2

    Is it possible, after more DNA testing, to eventually find an older Eve and an older Adam(the earliest surviving common ancestor... if I understood correctly)? Where on Earth are older Adams and Eves found? Are they in populated areas, remote areas or islands? If your bones are older looking in form, than those of 'modern man' then do you possibly have an older Adam or Eve survivor ? 🤔😐🤔 Thanks. Happy Valentine's Day ya'll. 💞

    • @williamallan7915
      @williamallan7915 2 года назад +1

      FTDNA, are of the out of Africa some 60,000 years ago

    • @cefcat5733
      @cefcat5733 2 года назад

      @@williamallan7915 So we will have to wait and see. That's pretty old. Maybe survivors with older surviving ancestors, will see DNA testing in a different light, than all of us ancestor hunters and gatherers. 🤔😅

    • @williamallan7915
      @williamallan7915 2 года назад

      @@cefcat5733 in FTDNA, there are two English men with {A} from Africa at 60,000 years

    • @TheDanEdwards
      @TheDanEdwards 2 года назад

      "after more DNA testing, to eventually find an older Eve and an older Adam" - disregarding the terms "Adam" and "Eve" (which should never have been used), the answer to your question is yes. If all the extant Y chromosomes were fully sequenced it is possible we could discover there is an older branching point than A00 in the clade of modern human Y.
      Where such a person lived most certainly would be Africa but where in Africa is a tough question. The A00 branching point in the clade is a couple of hundred thousand years back, which is near the generally accepted origins of when anatomically modern humans isolated from the rest of the genus Homo. If a much deeper (in time) branching of the human Y is discovered it would push back into perhaps the most recent common ancestor of modern humans and Neanderthals, but I suspect we'll never discover such thing.
      As for our mitochondria - the MRCA of all extant human mitochondria is much closer in time to us than that of the Y chromosome. To discover a much deeper branching of the mitochondria is unlikely but perhaps some skeleton will be discovered that could provide a clue to a deeper division in modern humans.

  • @cefcat5733
    @cefcat5733 2 года назад +1

    Ancient dna at New Grange..RUclips. What would you say about that video? Talks about elites etc. and people in Ireland coming originally from Spain and other places to the South. Does that old dna show up as Irish in modern Irish people or show the supposed original home, Spanish (Iberian), French for these Northern Europeans? Are we heading to the dna testing of dust to dust, finding dna particles in locations of ancient civilizations in a hand of dust? If dogs can follow a 'scent' will we be able to do this as well by examining cells?

  • @jamesvejvoda2659
    @jamesvejvoda2659 2 года назад

    Hi Jared. Are there any other ethnic groups that trace Indigenous American readings could be mistaken for? (Especially considering your comment downplaying Gedmatch results.) Possibly Easter European? How could any European admixture mistake another group for Indigenous?

  • @billbergendahl2911
    @billbergendahl2911 Год назад

    My Ancestry DNA result shows that I am two percent Levant. Could that mean Jewish? A few years ago I did the My Heritage DNA Test and it showed a significant amount of Iberian ancestry.

  • @lindacarroll6896
    @lindacarroll6896 2 года назад +2

    Actually, Noah and wife would be our common ancestors. But, Genesis says that Adam's sons married from "The Family of Man."

    • @TheDanEdwards
      @TheDanEdwards 2 года назад +1

      "Noah and wife would be our common ancestors." - not real history. There are many reasons to come to that conclusion, but in the field of genetics it is quite clear that the extant Y chromosomes did not come from one male (Noah) circa 5k years ago.

    • @greenLimeila
      @greenLimeila 2 года назад

      @@TheDanEdwards I'm pretty sure that's why they said "would be" and not "are"

    • @williamallan7915
      @williamallan7915 2 года назад

      what about the out of Africa 60 k years ago

    • @bigscarysteve
      @bigscarysteve Год назад +1

      Noah would be our most recent common father, but his wife would not be our most common mother in this case. This is determined by one's father's father's father and so on. The other line would be one's mother's mother's mother and so on. Our most recent mothers at that point would be the wives of Shem, Ham, and Japheth. To get back to a single common mother, I think Eve might actually be it.

    • @bigscarysteve
      @bigscarysteve Год назад +1

      @@TheDanEdwards May the Lord rebuke you.

  • @mariannerichard1321
    @mariannerichard1321 2 года назад +1

    I'm French Canadian from Québec and have tested a few of my family members. Members of First Nations are more commonly found in the 17th century, my own were born in 1625, 1627 and 1649 and they give me about 1,5% DNA. As for South European DNA being French, yes, my accounts have between 30 and 45% of anything South European. Iberian, Italian, Malta, Basque, Greek, Sardinia, you name it. It's never consistant from one test to the next, or even one update to the next.

  • @rachelstrahan2486
    @rachelstrahan2486 2 года назад

    👍

  • @soraya.e5482
    @soraya.e5482 2 года назад

    Why are the traits of 23 n me saying I have pale skin and straight to wavy hair is it because of lack of people in their database?

  • @jeffstansell5273
    @jeffstansell5273 2 года назад

    I have a question for, I put my DNA on Gedmatch is their away to move it back to ancestry?

    • @briarelyse5136
      @briarelyse5136 2 года назад +1

      If you downloaded your DNA profile from ancestry and uploaded it to Gedmatch, it will still be on ancestry, just sign into your ancestry profile.

  • @TheDanEdwards
    @TheDanEdwards 2 года назад

    One of the most confusing sets of terms every to be used in the field of physical anthropology/genetics is "Y-chromosome Adam" and "mitochondrial Eve". The use of the formal (at least in English if not the original Hebrew) names "Adam" and "Eve" reifies the certainly-wrong idea that the Genesis couple were real people.

  • @DreaOnzagle
    @DreaOnzagle 2 года назад

    Fascinating fact about Iberians often having trace amounts of Sephardic Jewish ancestry! That certainly might explain some of the results I'm seeing in my DNA admixture.

  • @mattyoung9710
    @mattyoung9710 2 года назад +1

    My family tree

  • @melissakingofusa
    @melissakingofusa 2 года назад

    Why is my Gedmatch different than Ancestry/ Ftdna?

  • @gregsurrell598
    @gregsurrell598 2 года назад +1

    Unless you're of Metis from Manitoba, French Canadians did not marry First Nation people. That is a myth from fiction writers. I'm of French Canadian ancestry & have no Indian DNA.

    • @goblin3784
      @goblin3784 2 года назад +1

      i believe scots and english people also married and they identify under the "Metis" label also from Manitoba they spoke Bungee a creole dialect/language formed from scottish fur traders and native indigenous languages it is a potentially extinct language

    • @msartlit
      @msartlit 2 года назад

      My DNA showed

    • @katherinegilks3880
      @katherinegilks3880 2 года назад

      Most French Canadians do not have Indigenous ancestry, but many do, even east of Ruperts Land. The difference is that an ancestor or two from the 1600s does not make one Indigenous or Métis. That is the issue and the “myth”- the legal definition. There are a lot of people who are both French Canadian and Indigenous (but not Métis - they are instead affiliated with a specific Indigenous nation). Non-Indigenous French Canadians and the Métis are indeed cousins and would be related through distant ancestors in the fur trade.

    • @bigscarysteve
      @bigscarysteve Год назад

      There's a similar myth with African-Americans. Many say that they have Native American ancestry. Unless their ancestors lived in Oklahoma before the Civil War, that's not very likely.

  • @JOSEPHMEILAK3478
    @JOSEPHMEILAK3478 2 года назад +1

    In DNA right have u ever heard this my Birthdate is 3 days when Christ rose ok he was Cruzified 34ad ok at 3 pm Friday not 33 ad the date is 34ad and I was born April the 3rd 1978 and I got stigmata holes in my hands ok my biological niece my put a dna test right showed her fathers DNA and her mother is biological real sister both from same parants and I got a test and wrote I want both sides male female I got 100 percent only the DNA of my mum not my father never heard of that my niece my sisters cousin all got both sides

  • @cefcat5733
    @cefcat5733 2 года назад

    Uff! I recently found out that my Great Great Grandfather had another wife before my Grandfather's Mother. Old country or new? 😐 I also found out that my son's Great Grandparents lived 4-6 miles from here after getting a new, great, job assignment. We never heard anything about them living here. Those old folks and their kids hid everything and we blast it all over the world. What is going on with society?

    • @bigscarysteve
      @bigscarysteve Год назад

      People don't have shame any more. On the other hand, four generations ago, being married more than once was probably due to a first spouse dying, rather than divorce. There's no shame in being widowed and remarrying.

  •  2 года назад +6

    Fairy tales characters doesn't have haplgroups.

  • @quantjonna293
    @quantjonna293 2 года назад

    Parental event lol.

    • @katherinegilks3880
      @katherinegilks3880 2 года назад +1

      It isn’t really all that funny. It usually wasn’t from cuckoldry. Usually it was because of adoption or second marriages, when the stepparent was mistaken for the biological one. Plenty of men married women who got pregnant before the wedding knowing full well the child was not theirs biologically, but the child was considered legally theirs and they were perfectly fine with that. Couples often adopted children whose mothers died in childbirth and those children considered their adoptive parents to be their parents (even if they knew they had different bio parents). If anything, you’re laughing at people who were raped, orphaned, died tragically, or wanted to avoid the stigma of infertility. It is not funny.