Well, as someone who has a degree in biochemistry, I can tell you for a fact, there's several Native American DNA markers they just simply do not count as being Native American.. For example, mtDNA haplogroup M is NOT listed as Native American even though they have found it in ancient North American skeleton remains in high frequencies that go back thousands of years, and also in living Native Americans, along with its numerous single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs).. Instead, a geneticist analyzing your genetic makeup will misidentify haplogroup M and it's SNP's as being East African and in some cases Senegambian & Congolese which are all at almost undetectable low frequencies , even though haplogroup M is mainly found in Asia, South Asia, Pacific Islands, and North America at its highest frequencies.. In fact, haplogroup M did not originate in Africa at all.
That makes a lot of sense! I pinned the comment for others to see. I am wonder how long it will take for DNA companies to catch up. Not sure if you saw this video of mine but I covered some of this in my video ruclips.net/video/4G0fTqtqz68/видео.html
Same here bro Im only 100% native American on my ancestry results nothing else she just admit she north African not native American lol I knew it. I also had no black ancestry results which mean us native Americans are truly our own race don't be fooled by these people my brother we 0% sub Saharan AFRICAN and 0%white at the end of thee day I'm also nahua aka indigenous Mexican so it makes sense why in only red indigenous American Mexican I'm also apache my mom is apache and Kickapoo from new mexico Canada
Okay y'all if you are a African American and have a low amount of Native American DNA (North American) that simply means you had at least one (1) full blooded Indian in your ancestry about 300+/- years ago. So it's quite possible your family does... because it actually shows up in your DNA analysis. As you know DNA percentages is cut down by 50% each time it transfers to another family member within your bloodline. So if you subtract 300 years from 2021 you get... 1721. So +/- a few years and your earliest unknown ancestor was born somewhere around 1721. Now do your homework and research the hell out of your ancestry for that connection.
If your family was on the south east States, research is going to be your best bet. They do not test eastern tribes as there aren't any to test. They were pushed west with the Trail of tears. Those who stayed either hid, claimed to be white or were absorbed into the Free people of color. Remember that it was illegal to be affiliated with any tribe so you will not see it. If you are using it for tribal membership, research the tribes regulations and requirements.
Everyone one don't want to be native American so call.some people are just lost or been told lies to there whole life and just seeking for truth.some so call African Americans are indigenous or American Indians or aboriginals. Not all but some.i don't think people had grandmother's born in the 40'50'60'70 will be going around talking about they are native Americans when they are not and to get laughed at and talked about.
@@charlesjohnson4230 not a single afro roamed these lands prior to the slave trade FACTS!. Its obviously a poor attempt to get something for nothing since that reparations check aint gonna get cut ✂😤 The end
According to myheritage DNA video on what percentage means less means that you're closer should I ethnicity please look up my heritage video on what percentage means
I think it's more fascinating that you are 92% African and have so little European. Of all the DNA videos if seen, that is unusual. I would focus more on the story on that then trying to figure out NA ancestry.
I appreciate the feedback. I do focus on my 92% (and above) African on the rest of my videos. Please take some time to watch the additional content on my channel and you’ll catch up. This video I thought was interesting because of the trace ancestry that keeps popping up on my results. Enjoy!
A lot of African Americans don’t realise that those people who looked mixed were mixed with European … People need to learn about passing…. Many mixed Afro Europeans would have preferred to say they were native instead of identifying their European blood… dna doesn’t lie….the Afro diaspora says with African dna in the 90s sufffered less in slavery hence less mixing usually the Gullah
Out of 32 grand parents, 1 had to be a full Native American. 1/32. Add the East Asian and Unassign.. (Parents. 2. Grandparents. 4. Great-Grandparents. 8. 2nd Great-Grandparents. 16. 3rd Great-Grandparents. 32. 4th Great-Grandparents. 64)
But the thing is about North African ancestry it changes depending on who's testing it because usually they have more of a reference panel of north africa than other place
I agree because my latest results on Your DNA portal shows Native American again. Supposedly when the companies update the results, recombination changes the results on and off. So it pops up depending on process, database, etc.
Anne iams 100 percent native yavapai apache do you think we came from africa because I dont and you look smart and native what do you think from the yavapai apache .
@@KinfolkChattingwithEricka is it recombination so weird though? Like through recombination my chromosomes are 50% African while being 100% african. At the same time. Different chromosomes. Recombination is really weird. That's why my results always change too depending on the DNA company. And then also the updates of messed my DNA results up. A few times so I totally get what you're saying there
It was a common thing in the early 1900s to explain away white features as being native American because it was illegal to have a union between black and white.. high cheekbones are not an indicator because some Asians and other races have high cheekbones and not all indigenous people of the Americas fit one phenotype.. an Ojibwe from the great lakes is not going to look the same as a kiowa from the southwest or a zapotec from mexico or and indigenous native of Brazil... So some of these stories have been passed down and assumed to be true .. some of my friends say they are Blackfoot but they have no relatives or ties to southern Canada or Northern Montana where the Blackfoot traditionally lived and they are not a wandering tribe that traveled from Montana to the southeastern states...one of my coworkers took dna tests and the straight hair and light features of his grandmother was a result of having European DNA...he had zero native dna but 22 percent european( irish and scotland)..
That’s absolutely correct. I’ve been saying that for quite some time. It can fall either way. Either there’s actually no Native American ancestry at all, it’s too far back, or the perceived Native American ancestry is actually European. You hit the nail on the head with this comment.
We thought that there was Native American in my family because of my Grandmothers features and my great grandfathers features but turns out they was not 🤷🏽♂️ I know this because I done a dna test and I got 0% Native American
I always wondered what the obsession is with having NA DNA is with the African diaspora? These stories of having NA DNA is not just in the US, but also the Caribbean and Guyana, Suriname and French Guiana. How did this became a story within our families?
@@KinfolkChattingwithEricka Thank you for sharing. However, there is no explanation for the obsession across the African Diaspora. Like you, my family has the same story, and my result is
@@miss2loveley I get what you mean. Might stem from the pain of r*pe in their family lineage or from some fascination with “Pocahontas”. Check out these two videos from my channel if you haven’t already: Why you can’t find Your Native American ancestry in your DNA results ruclips.net/video/4G0fTqtqz68/видео.html Native Americans and the African American Intersection ruclips.net/video/v8QVTF5P3Vw/видео.html
I also was found to be 95% West African 40% Nigerian traces of ( Cameroon Congo, Ghana, Senegal, Mali, and Benin Togo)... 2% Irish, 2% European, 1% Portuguese... Researching i found out the Portuguese were leaders in the slave trade. I found " No" American Indian. Even though my test was female to female( African Ancestry) yet my great great grandfather was of Choctaw heritage so it would not show up for my test. Born in America yet after 400 years i am African America
I live in Wisconsin and i was given a site at the Native Clinic, because Natives also had slaves. Blacks were not permitted and are still fighting to get on their " Rolles"... The " Dawes files" is where you will find descendents of African and Indian. I think for so long in America we wanted to blame only Africa for slavery. When other races also benefited from slavery. My Native friend told me she was made fun of for having African blood in her. I also spoke to the people at African ancestry and was told because my " Native" bloodline came from the " Male" side i would have to have a male directly from that male to get that information. My great grandmothers father was part Choctaw, so he would need a "son", with a "son" and all the way " Male" to my generation
I'm white and according to both ancestry DNA tests I've take (Ancestry and 23andMe), I've got around 3 percent Indigenous North American (from the St. Lawrence River Valley area). This means that I had a third, fourth or fifth great-grandparent who was 100 percent Native American. So if your 2x great-grandfather was 100 percent NA, it very likely would show up in DNA results.
Hopefully you have taken the time to figure out why your DNA results are not what you expected. Also, notice that the “native American” group is mostly restricted to what is now Mexico. The question really becomes who is considered native to what is now the United States.
The public education system and its use of the “Out of Africa” theory (not facts) has done a real number on a lot of people’s ability to do critical thinking when it comes to these subjects. The alternative to the Out of Africa theory is that is that aboriginal civilizations began in other parts of the world or in all parts of the world at relatively similar time frames.
Prophet Noah. Ham, son of Noah.Japheth .(Yafes) son of Ham. Turk, son of Yafes.Turk came to Central Asia with his family and children. years later they crossed from Siberia to Alaska
Your great grandmother she does have a lot of native features. Definitely do an ancestry tree to see where your native ancestry comes from. Regardless if they changed I’d still look into. She has native features. 😊 🤗
Very interesting that you said that. I am doing some DNA research and will continue with tree work as well. I appreciate the feedback! Here is another video about NA ancestry that I made. Why you can’t find Your Native American ancestry in your DNA results ruclips.net/video/4G0fTqtqz68/видео.html
Yes because at some point the DNA matched native then switched to African. So there has to be some relation. It’s proven that the DNA testing isn’t 100 percent accurate that’s why it’s always changing. You can look again tomorrow and the Native percent could show up again. Best way to find roots is through genealogy. I’ll definitely check your other video out. Good luck on your search. 😊
@@emmy5127 You are absolutely right! It pops up and disappears with each update. So many have stated that it is mere noise. 🤷🏿♀️ I appreciate the encouragement and kind words. Thank you so much for supporting and viewing my videos. ✨
Yeah I’m not sure why people would think that being that Native Americans come in all different shades like any other ethnicity. I’m mean the proof is in the pictures. You can look up Native Americans from North America all the way to South America. People mixed all the time and took on different cultures. I mean come on there are Pyramids all over the world from Africa to Central America even in South America to Europe. I mean it’s not rocket science to understand we all originated in Africa. I just think history is so diluted to what other people think it should be as opposed to facts. In the end we all originated from the same planet so we all are connected either way. Don’t be discouraged your clearly on to something. 😊
@@emmy5127 I completely agree. So many are afraid of admitting to having NA ancestry, even if it’s a drop and a lot deny it but secretly watch my videos on the topic because this is the #1 watched video on my channel. It’s funny that my great aunt said that her uncles “looked Mexican”. They were her mom’s (the woman in the pic-my GG) brothers. Has to be something there. 🤔
It don't matter if it's low it's there your elders where right ... Also look at the male it goes up they test the maternal ... males are better to test as well
Hi there. How much Native American did 23andme report you have? I don't believe FTNA is a a very reliable accurate test company, this recent update they took away my Native American dna and only gave me a very small percentage Southeast Asian. 23andme I believe is the most accurate of the testing, ancestrydna is becoming more accurate they also show my Native American as Indigenous North Americus also gedmatch show my Native American on all calculators.
Commit a crime then if dna it’s real - We are retarded wanting to be Indians and we Africans gods are 1000 x greater then Indians - We are humiliating ourselves and following behind mixed race ppls
Native American is not culture its applies to everyone that's born in America. However the term Native is a noun meaning people place or thing and America was so-called named after and Europe squatter. The term Native American didn't arrive until 1970 from a movement called the No Nothings political party formed in 1846 aka Native Americans the first Native Americans and then some how 13 years later it became a culture only pointing to one specific group of people. The term Africa or African is a English term that was first used by the Roman Africans located in the northern part of Africa which is today called modern day Tunisia, however this is not the original name of that continent its the original name is Ethiopia but then later on that whole continent became Africa in the early or late 17th century. So yes we all are Natives American if you're going off the definition of NATIVE.
@@KinfolkChattingwithEricka genealogy/census records are better to research because it shows you where your people begins. Start up your grandmother side first on 1800s census records and then find out whose land they lived on. Now let me mind u there's no Africa listed on any of these census records if her side says Colored or negro more then likely her side was reclassified from Indian, Colored and nergo.
@@KinfolkChattingwithEricka DNA ancestry and others are the colonizers all these websites where created in the 2000s and they didn't go outside this country to create this DNA databass they did it within country collecting DNA samples from foreigners that came over to the Americas in the late 1900s. Now if you send your dna to all these companies you want get back the same results...
Sounds good and I am sure they are right. I have this video coming up that you might enjoy. “Why you can’t find Your Native American ancestry in your DNA results” ruclips.net/video/4G0fTqtqz68/видео.html
So you might be a Eskimo. DNA testing is not very accurate. Check your own bloodline mothers bloodline. fathers bloodline.Check your family tree. I am sure you will get better results
I took both DNA test 23andme and ancestry 23andme.east Asia and Indigenous America1.6%chinese and south east Asia 1.5%broadly Chinese and south east Asia 1.0%indigenous American 0.1% alot of native American comes from Asia people and Siberia and Russia I have that DNA as well. Well as far as Caribbean Jamaica.people need to take a genealogy test you have to dig deeper and a DNA test want really prove nothing
Don’t be deceived, the first Americans were Africans; not native Asians. Lookout for Philip Shock Matthew’s he recently did a show where the top “Brown”, scholars talk about the first 4 migrations of Africans from Africa to America. The show features Dr.Clyde Winters and David Imhotep. So in other words, the showing of North, South and West African DNA prove your American ancestry. The first of these migrations happened over 100,000 years ago. Hopefully that helps.
Yes with these test, any blaq will be linked back to Africa and not American. They only consider Mongoid Native American as "Native Americans". Any other racial group found in Ancient American get label non American.
Slavery was very complex and a lot of female slaves fell in love with their slave master or the slave master hired help it was a common way for them to get their freedom. Rape happen but it wasn't in the way a lot of Americans think
@@sophiawilson8696 stop lying to yourself it was never rape! Legally human beings were other human beings property at that time in the America's and whatever happened to them was okay under the law. Ohhh you can hate them and say all sorts of wickedness you can even walk the streets and protests but you can never beat them it is what it is
Darker skin is an indication of your very African Ancestry. Native Americans weren't as dark skinned as the African people who came with Europeans. The Natives had lighter skin up north and Darker skin Towards the equator. They also were sun tanned by being outside alot.
Well, as someone who has a degree in biochemistry, I can tell you for a fact, there's several Native American DNA markers they just simply do not count as being Native American.. For example, mtDNA haplogroup M is NOT listed as Native American even though they have found it in ancient North American skeleton remains in high frequencies that go back thousands of years, and also in living Native Americans, along with its numerous single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs).. Instead, a geneticist analyzing your genetic makeup will misidentify haplogroup M and it's SNP's as being East African and in some cases Senegambian & Congolese which are all at almost undetectable low frequencies , even though haplogroup M is mainly found in Asia, South Asia, Pacific Islands, and North America at its highest frequencies.. In fact, haplogroup M did not originate in Africa at all.
That makes a lot of sense! I pinned the comment for others to see. I am wonder how long it will take for DNA companies to catch up. Not sure if you saw this video of mine but I covered some of this in my video ruclips.net/video/4G0fTqtqz68/видео.html
I’m C1
I am 100% Native American. (San Carlos Apache Tribe) & (Pascua Yaqui Tribe) y belong to the TOHONO O’ODHAM NATION.
Very nice!
My Native American results have since changed to North African 🤷🏿♀️
Same here bro Im only 100% native American on my ancestry results nothing else she just admit she north African not native American lol I knew it. I also had no black ancestry results which mean us native Americans are truly our own race don't be fooled by these people my brother we 0% sub Saharan AFRICAN and 0%white at the end of thee day I'm also nahua aka indigenous Mexican so it makes sense why in only red indigenous American Mexican I'm also apache my mom is apache and Kickapoo from new mexico Canada
@@KinfolkChattingwithEricka that’s because you’re North African🤷🏽♀️
There no such thing of 100 Native America NOT ANYMORE! Please put the results up if you can prove it.
@@sophiawilson8696 yes there is. They usually live in south/Central America! Do your research
Okay y'all if you are a African American and have a low amount of Native American DNA (North American) that simply means you had at least one (1) full blooded Indian in your ancestry about 300+/- years ago. So it's quite possible your family does... because it actually shows up in your DNA analysis.
As you know DNA percentages is cut down by 50% each time it transfers to another family member within your bloodline. So if you subtract 300 years from 2021 you get... 1721. So +/- a few years and your earliest unknown ancestor was born somewhere around 1721.
Now do your homework and research the hell out of your ancestry for that connection.
Very true. My Native American has since turned into North African. Thanks for the feedback.
@@KinfolkChattingwithEricka no problem. Good luck!
If your family was on the south east States, research is going to be your best bet. They do not test eastern tribes as there aren't any to test. They were pushed west with the Trail of tears. Those who stayed either hid, claimed to be white or were absorbed into the Free people of color. Remember that it was illegal to be affiliated with any tribe so you will not see it.
If you are using it for tribal membership, research the tribes regulations and requirements.
Why not from the birth year? Why 2021?
What do you mean by DNA % cut by %50? If my Mum has 20% French DNA that means I could inherit between 0 and 20% French DNA from her.
Y’all want to be Native American so bad it’s pitiful.
Everyone one don't want to be native American so call.some people are just lost or been told lies to there whole life and just seeking for truth.some so call African Americans are indigenous or American Indians or aboriginals. Not all but some.i don't think people had grandmother's born in the 40'50'60'70 will be going around talking about they are native Americans when they are not and to get laughed at and talked about.
The old pictures and paintings they look like the real brown people .the one's you call African American.you will never look like the real ones
@@charlesjohnson4230 not a single afro roamed these lands prior to the slave trade FACTS!. Its obviously a poor attempt to get something for nothing since that reparations check aint gonna get cut ✂😤 The end
So true it’s embarrassing 👀 yet natives keep Africans as slaves too
According to myheritage DNA video on what percentage means less means that you're closer should I ethnicity please look up my heritage video on what percentage means
I will check it out. Thanks 🙏🏿
I have so info i want to discuss on this test
I think it's more fascinating that you are 92% African and have so little European. Of all the DNA videos if seen, that is unusual. I would focus more on the story on that then trying to figure out NA ancestry.
I appreciate the feedback. I do focus on my 92% (and above) African on the rest of my videos. Please take some time to watch the additional content on my channel and you’ll catch up. This video I thought was interesting because of the trace ancestry that keeps popping up on my results. Enjoy!
I agreed 1000%
@@KinfolkChattingwithEricka Very good Sis
A lot of African Americans don’t realise that those people who looked mixed were mixed with European …
People need to learn about passing…. Many mixed Afro Europeans would have preferred to say they were native instead of identifying their European blood… dna doesn’t lie….the Afro diaspora says with African dna in the 90s sufffered less in slavery hence less mixing usually the Gullah
My family is Gullah/Geechee. I agree with you on that NA part too.
Out of 32 grand parents, 1 had to be a full Native American. 1/32. Add the East Asian and Unassign.. (Parents. 2. Grandparents. 4. Great-Grandparents. 8. 2nd Great-Grandparents. 16. 3rd Great-Grandparents. 32. 4th Great-Grandparents. 64)
Good stuff! Thanks for the breakdown! 👍🏿
Alot of so call African Americans are indigenous people ask aboriginal not all but some.
But the thing is about North African ancestry it changes depending on who's testing it because usually they have more of a reference panel of north africa than other place
I agree because my latest results on Your DNA portal shows Native American again. Supposedly when the companies update the results, recombination changes the results on and off. So it pops up depending on process, database, etc.
Anne iams 100 percent native yavapai apache do you think we came from africa because I dont and you look smart and native what do you think from the yavapai apache .
@@KinfolkChattingwithEricka is it recombination so weird though? Like through recombination my chromosomes are 50% African while being 100% african. At the same time. Different chromosomes. Recombination is really weird. That's why my results always change too depending on the DNA company. And then also the updates of messed my DNA results up. A few times so I totally get what you're saying there
@@divestedkonservativekarame4269 I agree 😁
You should try genomelink free analysis to see if it still doesn’t show up.
Never heard of it but will definitely check it out! Thank you 🙏🏿
It was a common thing in the early 1900s to explain away white features as being native American because it was illegal to have a union between black and white.. high cheekbones are not an indicator because some Asians and other races have high cheekbones and not all indigenous people of the Americas fit one phenotype.. an Ojibwe from the great lakes is not going to look the same as a kiowa from the southwest or a zapotec from mexico or and indigenous native of Brazil... So some of these stories have been passed down and assumed to be true .. some of my friends say they are Blackfoot but they have no relatives or ties to southern Canada or Northern Montana where the Blackfoot traditionally lived and they are not a wandering tribe that traveled from Montana to the southeastern states...one of my coworkers took dna tests and the straight hair and light features of his grandmother was a result of having European DNA...he had zero native dna but 22 percent european( irish and scotland)..
That’s absolutely correct. I’ve been saying that for quite some time. It can fall either way. Either there’s actually no Native American ancestry at all, it’s too far back, or the perceived Native American ancestry is actually European. You hit the nail on the head with this comment.
does 23 and Me only test AUTOSOMAL DNA or do they do all 3 tests?
customercare.23andme.com/hc/en-us/articles/202908000-Different-Ancestry-Information-by-Sex
The Native American could also be less than 7 centimorgans, which the major DNA Testing companies won't report. But you can see it using GEDmatch.
I agree! I have seen it on there.
We thought that there was Native American in my family because of my Grandmothers features and my great grandfathers features but turns out they was not 🤷🏽♂️ I know this because I done a dna test and I got 0% Native American
It might be too distant to detect or European DNA🤷🏿♀️
@@KinfolkChattingwithEricka Or maybe it was just a myth, I think it was but my grandmother looked extremely Native American either way lol
@@ΑΛΕΞΑΝΔΡΟΣ-ξ5μ 😁
Sometimes it is there, but you don't inherit any of the DNA directly.
I always wondered what the obsession is with having NA DNA is with the African diaspora? These stories of having NA DNA is not just in the US, but also the Caribbean and Guyana, Suriname and French Guiana. How did this became a story within our families?
slate.com/news-and-politics/2015/10/cherokee-blood-why-do-so-many-americans-believe-they-have-cherokee-ancestry.html
@@KinfolkChattingwithEricka Thank you for sharing. However, there is no explanation for the obsession across the African Diaspora. Like you, my family has the same story, and my result is
@@miss2loveley I get what you mean. Might stem from the pain of r*pe in their family lineage or from some fascination with “Pocahontas”.
Check out these two videos from my channel if you haven’t already:
Why you can’t find Your Native American ancestry in your DNA results
ruclips.net/video/4G0fTqtqz68/видео.html
Native Americans and the African American Intersection
ruclips.net/video/v8QVTF5P3Vw/видео.html
I also was found to be 95% West African 40% Nigerian traces of ( Cameroon Congo, Ghana, Senegal, Mali, and Benin Togo)... 2% Irish, 2% European, 1% Portuguese... Researching i found out the Portuguese were leaders in the slave trade. I found " No" American Indian. Even though my test was female to female( African Ancestry) yet my great great grandfather was of Choctaw heritage so it would not show up for my test. Born in America yet after 400 years i am African America
We are similar DNA-wise. They don't have many Native American samples in their databases. I am hopeful that the accuracy will improve in the future.
I live in Wisconsin and i was given a site at the Native Clinic, because Natives also had slaves. Blacks were not permitted and are still fighting to get on their " Rolles"... The " Dawes files" is where you will find descendents of African and Indian. I think for so long in America we wanted to blame only Africa for slavery. When other races also benefited from slavery. My Native friend told me she was made fun of for having African blood in her. I also spoke to the people at African ancestry and was told because my " Native" bloodline came from the " Male" side i would have to have a male directly from that male to get that information. My great grandmothers father was part Choctaw, so he would need a "son", with a "son" and all the way " Male" to my generation
Do you have a male relative on that line to test?
I'm white and according to both ancestry DNA tests I've take (Ancestry and 23andMe), I've got around 3 percent Indigenous North American (from the St. Lawrence River Valley area). This means that I had a third, fourth or fifth great-grandparent who was 100 percent Native American. So if your 2x great-grandfather was 100 percent NA, it very likely would show up in DNA results.
She was not Choctaw Indian because it would show in your dna…lmfao
Ancestry gave me 20 percent native american. Which one of my ancestors was full native american?
Check the Ethnicity Inheritance feature on Ancestry. It breaks it down by parent.
Comanche Lakota Sioux, Cree Apache, Kiowa and Cherokee all make 7.5% Of my DNA ✊🏾
✊🏿
Thank You
@@littlecrow7193 YW!
New here thank you for sharing
Great to have you! YW
Hopefully you have taken the time to figure out why your DNA results are not what you expected. Also, notice that the “native American” group is mostly restricted to what is now Mexico. The question really becomes who is considered native to what is now the United States.
That's so true. 23andme has now classified that same percentage of DNA as North African.
She does not look classically Native to me.
Mexicans are Native Americans.
The public education system and its use of the “Out of Africa” theory (not facts) has done a real number on a lot of people’s ability to do critical thinking when it comes to these subjects. The alternative to the Out of Africa theory is that is that aboriginal civilizations began in other parts of the world or in all parts of the world at relatively similar time frames.
The thing I’ve come understand about the DNA percentages everyone is calling out is that your smallest percentage is what you began as.
The genes codes for African or Asian is GG maybe test are crossing it over in Africa DNA regions
That’s really cool to know!
Prophet Noah. Ham, son of Noah.Japheth .(Yafes) son of Ham. Turk, son of Yafes.Turk came to Central Asia with his family and children. years later they crossed from Siberia to Alaska
Thanks for that history. Makes it clearer.
Your great grandmother she does have a lot of native features. Definitely do an ancestry tree to see where your native ancestry comes from. Regardless if they changed I’d still look into. She has native features. 😊 🤗
Very interesting that you said that. I am doing some DNA research and will continue with tree work as well. I appreciate the feedback! Here is another video about NA ancestry that I made.
Why you can’t find Your Native American ancestry in your DNA results
ruclips.net/video/4G0fTqtqz68/видео.html
Yes because at some point the DNA matched native then switched to African. So there has to be some relation. It’s proven that the DNA testing isn’t 100 percent accurate that’s why it’s always changing. You can look again tomorrow and the Native percent could show up again. Best way to find roots is through genealogy. I’ll definitely check your other video out. Good luck on your search. 😊
@@emmy5127 You are absolutely right! It pops up and disappears with each update. So many have stated that it is mere noise. 🤷🏿♀️
I appreciate the encouragement and kind words. Thank you so much for supporting and viewing my videos. ✨
Yeah I’m not sure why people would think that being that Native Americans come in all different shades like any other ethnicity. I’m mean the proof is in the pictures. You can look up Native Americans from North America all the way to South America. People mixed all the time and took on different cultures. I mean come on there are Pyramids all over the world from Africa to Central America even in South America to Europe. I mean it’s not rocket science to understand we all originated in Africa. I just think history is so diluted to what other people think it should be as opposed to facts. In the end we all originated from the same planet so we all are connected either way. Don’t be discouraged your clearly on to something. 😊
@@emmy5127 I completely agree. So many are afraid of admitting to having NA ancestry, even if it’s a drop and a lot deny it but secretly watch my videos on the topic because this is the #1 watched video on my channel.
It’s funny that my great aunt said that her uncles “looked Mexican”. They were her mom’s (the woman in the pic-my GG) brothers. Has to be something there. 🤔
You have amazing results almost 100% sub Saharan African
Yes I do! Thanks so much 🙏🏿
It don't matter if it's low it's there your elders where right ... Also look at the male it goes up they test the maternal
... males are better to test as well
It has changed on 23andme and FTDNA to North African.
@@KinfolkChattingwithEricka woow no way that's rare
@@ramonajones494 I know. My great aunt had North Africa before. Might be due to the Arab Slave Trade. Not sure why it changed after all these years.
Now my mother them people said they were 100% native and ao look it but curious to see great uncle results one of the last elders
@@ramonajones494 Yes get him tested and see.
Hi there. How much Native American did 23andme report you have? I don't believe FTNA is a a very reliable accurate test company, this recent update they took away my Native American dna and only gave me a very small percentage Southeast Asian. 23andme I believe is the most accurate of the testing, ancestrydna is becoming more accurate they also show my Native American as Indigenous North Americus also gedmatch show my Native American on all calculators.
0.1% is what I have on 23andme and FTDNA
Sometimes it's very difficult to discover exactly how much Native American you are. Not all Native Americans are forthcoming with providing DNA.
@@helenes52 I’m glad this now is changing and a lot of people are submitting their DNA. Nearly 50%
They're not testing your regions either love❤
GENEALOGY IS THE KEY SPIT CANT TELL YOU WHAT LAND YOUR FROM
Ok 👌🏿
Commit a crime then if dna it’s real
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We are retarded wanting to be Indians and we Africans gods are 1000 x greater then Indians
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We are humiliating ourselves and following behind mixed race ppls
Native American is not culture its applies to everyone that's born in America. However the term Native is a noun meaning people place or thing and America was so-called named after and Europe squatter. The term Native American didn't arrive until 1970 from a movement called the No Nothings political party formed in 1846 aka Native Americans the first Native Americans and then some how 13 years later it became a culture only pointing to one specific group of people. The term Africa or African is a English term that was first used by the Roman Africans located in the northern part of Africa which is today called modern day Tunisia, however this is not the original name of that continent its the original name is Ethiopia but then later on that whole continent became Africa in the early or late 17th century. So yes we all are Natives American if you're going off the definition of NATIVE.
Such a great breakdown. It helps put a lot of the terminology into context. Thank you 🙏🏿
@@KinfolkChattingwithEricka genealogy/census records are better to research because it shows you where your people begins. Start up your grandmother side first on 1800s census records and then find out whose land they lived on. Now let me mind u there's no Africa listed on any of these census records if her side says Colored or negro more then likely her side was reclassified from Indian, Colored and nergo.
@@KinfolkChattingwithEricka DNA ancestry and others are the colonizers all these websites where created in the 2000s and they didn't go outside this country to create this DNA databass they did it within country collecting DNA samples from foreigners that came over to the Americas in the late 1900s. Now if you send your dna to all these companies you want get back the same results...
my great grand parents claim black foot that's the end of story i believe them more then the people on this post !
Sounds good and I am sure they are right. I have this video coming up that you might enjoy. “Why you can’t find Your Native American ancestry in your DNA results”
ruclips.net/video/4G0fTqtqz68/видео.html
You rather be a Indian then a African god that civilized the world ?🤣
@@KinfolkChattingwithEricka the original native American's were Africans i do believe that and some did mixed with the Asians "
@@themadblackking4687 Interesting 🤔
@@themadblackking4687 the original natives are not African, they are Native American
So you might be a Eskimo. DNA testing is not very accurate. Check your own bloodline mothers bloodline. fathers bloodline.Check your family tree. I am sure you will get better results
That's a good observation. The bering strait land bridge theory has me wondering.
Don't believe the hype
yo,,yA AFRO
I took both DNA test 23andme and ancestry 23andme.east Asia and Indigenous America1.6%chinese and south east Asia 1.5%broadly Chinese and south east Asia 1.0%indigenous American 0.1% alot of native American comes from Asia people and Siberia and Russia I have that DNA as well. Well as far as Caribbean Jamaica.people need to take a genealogy test you have to dig deeper and a DNA test want really prove nothing
Nice results!
I keep seeing that Russia in my DNA results here and there so that makes sense.
Don’t be deceived, the first Americans were Africans; not native Asians. Lookout for Philip Shock Matthew’s he recently did a show where the top “Brown”, scholars talk about the first 4 migrations of Africans from Africa to America. The show features Dr.Clyde Winters and David Imhotep. So in other words, the showing of North, South and West African DNA prove your American ancestry. The first of these migrations happened over 100,000 years ago. Hopefully that helps.
Thank you. Sheds light on the results.
False stop spreading fake pseudo science that actively contributes to indigenous erasure.
Go to Hell.
Yes with these test, any blaq will be linked back to Africa and not American. They only consider Mongoid Native American as "Native Americans". Any other racial group found in Ancient American get label non American.
😆
So much misinformation in this video
So please share the real information. 🙏🏿
$5 blood
🤔
That’s a stupid test
😱
Slavery was very complex and a lot of female slaves fell in love with their slave master or the slave master hired help it was a common way for them to get their freedom. Rape happen but it wasn't in the way a lot of Americans think
It is indeed complex.
Fall in love? You mean RAPE, this crap narrative push the love bull crap. It was RAPE!
@@sophiawilson8696 stop lying to yourself it was never rape! Legally human beings were other human beings property at that time in the America's and whatever happened to them was okay under the law. Ohhh you can hate them and say all sorts of wickedness you can even walk the streets and protests but you can never beat them it is what it is
@@criticalthinking2018 What? I have no comment!
In a word rape not love they had of as things good that the did as they liked. Stop the world of bull sh#£.
Darker skin is an indication of your very African Ancestry. Native Americans weren't as dark skinned as the African people who came with Europeans. The Natives had lighter skin up north and Darker skin Towards the equator. They also were sun tanned by being outside alot.
I agree.
She looks African and European mixed.
That’s is what we are seeing in the results of one of her daughters. Also a sprinkle of native American.
It says Southeast Asian.
They vary…