How to determine what DNA came from each parent - Reviewing YOUR DNA Professional Genealogist Reacts

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  • Опубликовано: 2 янв 2022
  • In this video I review DNA and genealogy questions submitted by YOU!
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Комментарии • 70

  • @MandeeTheGreat
    @MandeeTheGreat 2 года назад +14

    My question was the last one you answered, about my Jewish ancestors. I just wanted to say thank you! After watching this I went and set the genetic matches search on MyHeritage to only show matches with Ashkenazi Jewish Ancestry, then I went through the top matches trees. I was able to see a few surnames that kept repeating, Grossman and Gottlieb. Then I went over to 23&me and ancestry and searched the surnames as well. I was able to find 5 100% Ashkenazi Jewish 4th Cousin's with the surname Grossman. This will really help my search!!

  • @adevans20
    @adevans20 2 года назад +19

    Yay! You answered my question! I was the question about the brick walls in my family tree. Let me clarify some things. My maternal great-grandmother (my mom’s, dad’s mom) was living on a reservation in southwest Louisiana (near the Lake Charles area). She claimed to be Native American but no one in my family can remember which tribe. We think she was culturally Native American and not genetically. We don’t know how she ended up living on the reservation, she probably had some enslaved ancestors. She looked to have more than half African ancestry (based on phenotype). My hints on Ancestry show her marriage and later census records but nothing before that. My mom’s DNA on AncestryDNA has no Native American DNA. It was a bit unclear on the links but I have about 85% African DNA and 15% European. My mom results show about 87% African and 13% European DNA. That great-grandmother may be a brick wall we can’t get past unless we find a living ancestor who has more answers lol. Thank you for all of the advice. I will try to match up my European cousins trees with my own and see where it takes me. I have aunts, uncles and cousins who have tested on both sides of my family, so that’s great, thank you. Also, I’ll look into those property and court records to try to get past those other brick walls. I absolutely love your videos. Thank you for your passion for genealogy and helping people with their genealogy journeys.

    • @rlace356
      @rlace356 2 года назад +1

      @adevans20 I agree it makes sense that your ancestor could be 100% Native American culturally but 0% genetically. Our lives, our options and our choices are as likely to be shaped by our culture as our DNA.
      Best wishes for a successful hunt! And perhaps check out Family Search which has growing African American branches.

  • @shelleymonson8750
    @shelleymonson8750 2 года назад +15

    Regarding the Roman invasion of Britain - the Roman army in Britain was largely NOT Italian. For example, there is a grave of a Roman soldier who married a British girl and settled down, and he was from Syria!

  • @krcmaine
    @krcmaine 2 года назад +23

    I see DNA results as more human migratory history...not cultural heritage.
    Learning about where my Acadian ancesters came from in France (Aigre Village) and because that area is the southwestern side, my Grandmother has traces of Spanish and Maltese DNA...it's fascinating!

    • @jessicasmith4146
      @jessicasmith4146 2 года назад

      Hi! Fellow Acadian here ☺️ with the last update on Ancestry both my parents got a small percentage of Basque. Very interesting! Can’t wait for more updates on ancestry 😄

    • @bgd73
      @bgd73 2 года назад

      I am acadian too. I am currently in the mt dna test for the x maternal haplogroup. it is really funny to get through this. my last name is ancient basque to begin with known as irish/scot/welsh.. so adding native and acadian, 100% italian etc etc.. it is just funny to decipher. A full loop of dna that once interacted.. only 1500 years later in a america LOL. america is like ancient love that was there all along.. until they meet again.

    • @rustyarmendariz1584
      @rustyarmendariz1584 2 года назад

      Awesome! I'm mexican & spanish & cajun french with possible acadian descent. Hello sister!

    • @Jordi_Llopis_i_Torregrosa96
      @Jordi_Llopis_i_Torregrosa96 2 года назад

      @@rustyarmendariz1584 You're Basque too!!! Armendariz is a Basque surname

  • @HowWeGotHere
    @HowWeGotHere 2 года назад

    Loving these Videos great job Jarret

  • @Richard-zm6pt
    @Richard-zm6pt 2 года назад +1

    I love these videos, Jarrett.

  • @CocoAmande
    @CocoAmande 2 года назад +1

    We got DNA kits for Christmas. My results haven’t come back yet but my mum and sisters have. My dad was predominantly English/Irish. Mum half Chinese and Indian. She came in at 50% Chinese exactly central South Asia, northern India. Weirdly she is 29% Irish. No English blood which was shocking. She had 1% burusho, which was a lovely surprise. Now my dad was always just English/British so my sister can tell what came from what parent. I’ve not received mine yet but I’m fascinated.. my sister is 22% Chinese which is her biggest % in dna. What did surprise me was mums 14% central South Asia came in at 14% but nothing came on the report for my sister. Loving the videos, just discovered it xx

  • @ArcGG
    @ArcGG 2 года назад +4

    hope you had a great new year!
    glad to see a new video

  • @trentthompsonpiano
    @trentthompsonpiano 2 года назад

    My post was the one with quite a few questions. Including what dna comes from each parent.Thank you for reviewing it 😃

  • @Hiforest
    @Hiforest 2 года назад +3

    I'm a little jealous of everyone's interesting dna results- I'm Scottish and my results confirm this. From where before that? Not a clue! I get excited whenever I get an update notification and hope one day my DNA gives a clue as to where my ancestors were before here.

    • @briarelyse5136
      @briarelyse5136 2 года назад

      Might have to look at surname origin, history of migrations in different areas of Scotland etc. Everyone thought our Montgomery ancestors were Scottish but I couldn't find them, after I got an Irish result on ancestry I found they were from Northern Ireland.
      Some of my ancestors from Shetland are originally from the borders, which was discovered using surname research, genealogy and DNA testing.

    • @FerrerThess
      @FerrerThess 2 года назад

      If you are 100% Scottish there is probably a lot of Celt in you. Those were travelers, there is a History there.
      I get 18% Scottish and I have no clue where it comes from. I am kind of sure it comes from my dad's side, but even then I can go back several generations in some branches and find 0 relations to Scotland (although I'd love to find it). 18% is such a big number it seems odd not to find anything.

    • @Hiforest
      @Hiforest 2 года назад

      @@FerrerThess I was 98% Scottish when I first got my results with 1% Irish and 1% Welsh (so 100% celtic). My percentages of Irish and Welsh have increased slightly since then - my ancestors could be the picts, they were early Scottish settlers and not much is known about their origins.

  • @rlace356
    @rlace356 2 года назад

    Thank you for sharing your knowledge...and reminding us that our DNA is not necessarily reflective of our ethnicity or culture.

  • @franciscoprazzio225prazzio
    @franciscoprazzio225prazzio 2 года назад +1

    It is a blessing to have Native American ancestry. I have Native American ancestry Cherokee Shawnee, and Powhatan.

  • @honeyjazz4147
    @honeyjazz4147 2 года назад +3

    On Myheritage it reports my Native American ancestry as Chinese & Vietnamese, on Ancestrydna and 23andme it's show clearly.

  • @julilla1
    @julilla1 2 года назад +8

    The question about the Native American ancestry was interesting to me. I think if they know which tribe in particular their female ancestor came from, they can look up how tribal status was determined at that time. Their ancestor might have been black, but living in the tribal community and would have been seen as a member of that group of Native Americans, even without having a blood line there.

    • @adevans20
      @adevans20 2 года назад

      Thank you! That was my question he addressed, and I think you’re exactly correct. We think she was culturally Native American with Black ancestry. I just posted a long reply to the video clarifying some stuff I left out.

    • @alishagates4727
      @alishagates4727 2 года назад +1

      That is good to know. I have a fifth great grandmother that was a member of the Cherokee tribe, but I have no Nat. American DNA. I do have 1% African, however, and through DNA matches I have traced that back to her (all of my matches with African DNA are related to me through her). Thanks for your comment. Actually, really helpful!

  • @wendykelly8551
    @wendykelly8551 2 года назад +3

    Hello, looking forward to our uk 1921 census becoming available to us 6th January 2022 .. which will be our last one now untill 2052, because 1931 census got burned in a fire so doesn't exist and 1941 was never done because of the WW2 .. however, there was a 1939 census done in September of that year few week's into WW2 to take stock of everyone where they are but that is available now, kind of doesnt give childrens names just that there is a minor living there .... maybe they'd release all that when the 100 year up, but you know what adults lived there...nice video as always x

  • @sylviabargas3340
    @sylviabargas3340 Год назад

    With respect to determining what DNA came from each parent, Ancestry is now doing it for us, and WITHOUT our parents having tested. They're apparently able to do DNA Phasing just using our matches. So in addition to our own ethnicity breakdown, they now give us a breakdown of the half that came from "Parent 1" and the half that came from "Parent 2". It's up to us to figure out which of these is our mother and which is our father. That's easy to do as long as your parents are from different populations (eg, one is Polish and the other is Irish). But if your parents are BOTH Polish or BOTH Irish, you're out of luck.

  • @Chevycaprice-yr8dy
    @Chevycaprice-yr8dy 2 года назад

    cool video

  • @koobie83
    @koobie83 2 года назад +9

    I have a German great great grandparents and I get 0% Germanic Europe 😂 my other cousins who relate to the same ancestor do. I just pick up all this random Balkan, greek, south Italian and Magyar!

    • @tallthinwavy3
      @tallthinwavy3 2 года назад

      Maybe on the next update. Tried other DNA tests like 23andMe?

    • @briarelyse5136
      @briarelyse5136 2 года назад

      Same with my French and Norwegian, my results were 0% French, but I know I did inherit some DNA from my French ancestors as I matched with their other descendants. I assume it's being read as either from the UK or the 4% Germanic Europe.
      I got 20% Norwegian, which is high, but I guess It includes DNA I would have inherited from my Shetland ancestors as well as great great grandad.

    • @denisenilsson1366
      @denisenilsson1366 2 года назад +1

      Milkman? 😉😂😉😂

    • @zeeqq105
      @zeeqq105 2 года назад

      @@denisenilsson1366 it’s possible! I just found out 6 of my grandmothers 8 children aren’t my grandfathers children. We actually had a family reunion with this name and the jokes on them. None of them are this last name😂😂😂😂😂. Only the two girls. All kinds of skeletons have come out. Good thing is my grandmother is still alive to answer questions. But I have a feeling she’s going to pretend she’s senile. 😂😂😂

  • @Chaotic_Pixie
    @Chaotic_Pixie 2 года назад +6

    The redditor who posted about hitting a brick wall in their family in the 1880s seems to be predominately of African descent with some European and has mentioned relatives with fully European ancestry. Assuming the poster is an XX, maybe they could get their brother or father and a maternal uncle or grandfather to test if they're lucky to have such relatives and they're still alive. Unfortunately, statistically speaking, European DNA in someone who is black with deep roots in the US, its going to to show up on the Y DNA.
    Also, sharecropping in the 1880s, the first census where former enslaved peoples were counted... chances are they were sharecropping in the vicinity of where they were enslaved. I would look for white former slave owners with the same or similar surname in the area/ look at the family trees of those European-only distant cousins and look for surnames that match white land owners in... say, a 50 mile radius of where they were farming in the 1880s. Sadly, the odds are actually pretty high that they were sharecropping on the same land or land adjacent to where they had been enslaved. Most black Americans whose ancestry in the Americas dates back to 1800s really struggle to trace past 1880 unless they can find news articles, family journals, or are "lucky" (I use that term loosely) enough to share a surname with the former enslavers and then you might be able to use slave schedules and make educated guesses about whether an unnamed hash mark in a ledger refers to your ancestors.
    Its just a really sad, unfortunate truth of the American past.
    As for the claimed Native American history... that's a really common claim amongst black American families... usually the source of the the claims is to hide white ancestry and more white leaning features in a more palatable story. If it weren't, I think we'd expect to be seeing some French ancestry since much of the European heritage found in First Nations and Native American populations is thanks to French fur traders and of course, we'd expect to see Native American/First Nations DNA.

  • @louiseryan3902
    @louiseryan3902 2 года назад

    Hi long time viewer first time poster.... I'm from Ireland (property born there and everything) dna shows 98% Irish (Munster) as expected with trace scot Wales and Sweden... always been a paper trail girl myself and have had reasonable success with tracking actual ancestry but how do you find their stories ... mainly not finding out they existed but who they were? Happy to share ancestry infp

  • @Richard-zm6pt
    @Richard-zm6pt 2 года назад +3

    Regarding Native American. I have a tiny trace of Native American that was picked up by 23&Me years ago. At that time, there was also an equal trace of African. Over the years, the African trace has disappeared from my admixture report; however, the Native American has persisted. It is exactly half what my father shows. We share one segment on the same chromosome, and he has an extra segment on another. This trace is also detected by tools at Gedmatch. No other company has detected it. I calculated that it would probably come from 500 years ago, so at the time of European settlement, which would be reasonable. I like to think about a long-ago Native American ancestor, and I think there is reason to think it's real.

  • @leehallam9365
    @leehallam9365 2 года назад +1

    I notice Finland popping up randomly in the My Herritage results for one of these sets of results. I have 7% Finland from them too, never shows up with other companies, and I have nothing in my facility tree that points to a connection. I wonder if they have a bias in their methods that assigns people to Finland, don't get me wrong a GG Grandfather from Finland would be exciting, but I just don't think it is likely, and the other companies agree.

  • @debjordan4399
    @debjordan4399 2 года назад

    My parents are both gone, I have recently found they were 10th cousins. I have found many matches that trace back to my parents ancestors. I have known one cousin for years who is a close cousin on my dad's side and a little more distant cousin on my mom's side, not from the same ancestor that my parents share. There are a number of DNA matches that don't have good trees to figure out how we are related. Many of them triangulate with other matches that I know the connection.

  • @noyc1394
    @noyc1394 2 года назад

    My boyfriend paternal line is German but he didn’t get Germanic gene because he inherits more English/Irish on his dad more and his mom is all English. But his cousins matches are coming through a lot of German relatives from dad side.

  • @jacquelinejimenez5670
    @jacquelinejimenez5670 2 года назад

    Is there a way to find out what kind indigenous Indian of Mexico u are from. I have Ancestry and Family Search.

  • @googleone505
    @googleone505 2 года назад

    Can I contact the host directly? I can t figure something out. I can go on your show.

  • @gabak1292
    @gabak1292 2 года назад

    Actually only to live in a special area does not leave a genetic fingerprint. It just means a bunch of people, you are descendet from, lived in that area a long time ago

  • @phillipmoore9012
    @phillipmoore9012 2 года назад

    On Ancestry you can't examine the DNA, but you can do shared matches clustering. I named color-coded clusters first by each grandparent's parents using shared matches starting with known and DNA-confirmed 2nd-cousins. On one line I used a half 1st-cousin. Then I named eight color-coded clusters for great-grandparent's parents using shared matches with known and DNA-confirmed 3rd-cousins. The process continues, as a DNA match is confidently connected through genealogy, their shared matches are added to the cluster. It's not 100% as a shared match may match a cousin a different way than you do, but I have about 30-thousand matches clustered. Of course, you need to have the known 2nd- and 3rd-cousins already on your genealogy just to get started.

  • @ettinakitten5047
    @ettinakitten5047 2 года назад

    I used 23andme instead, but it registered my Belgian ancestry as "French & German" so I'd expect Netherlands to be German as well.

  • @Himeko-wv7fu
    @Himeko-wv7fu 2 года назад

    Do you think you can explain: If I'm 75% West African, how can my closest genetic match be from Bantu-South Africa/Kenya/Zimbabwe?

  • @googleone505
    @googleone505 2 года назад

    Is it possible to have mtdna that is a dead end? It got inherited but they died out because they were a rare hominid? Isnt lucid dreaming an ancient characteristic?

  • @debcotham489
    @debcotham489 2 года назад

    Does 23AndMe have a white paper for Canadian/Great Lake Tribes?

    • @GeneaVlogger
      @GeneaVlogger  2 года назад +1

      Sort of - I'm not sure if they have anything specifically about Canadian/Great Lake Tribes but they list the numbers for the Americas population group here (last page) - permalinks.23andme.com/pdf/23-16_ancestry_composition.pdf

    • @debcotham489
      @debcotham489 2 года назад

      @@GeneaVlogger Thank you for the information!

  • @Blessings.429
    @Blessings.429 2 года назад +1

    Mum has half of grandma then on top grandma has from her parents. So if it’s say British. Your got your DNA 1/2, 1/4 1/8 should this work by adding all together =98% this is what I would have thought. So I really am confused. So how to answer this, if you can understand what I am saying?. This old brain sometimes has me at a brick wall. PS waiting for DNA results

  • @julianamagg3177
    @julianamagg3177 2 года назад

    Oh my dog! There is no app! There is a geneology page where you can trace your tree and you can trace how you are related to someone. And mostly all full blooded Icelanders are related in the 8th line (have no idea what the English word used is). You sometimes see 9th or 10th but usually only when there is a close foreign ancestor

  • @lynnpayne9519
    @lynnpayne9519 2 года назад

    Some of what I believed was French ancestry turned out to be Icelandic! I guess some French went to Iceland.

  • @sassoy3370
    @sassoy3370 2 года назад +3

    First

  • @micheleyarnes2398
    @micheleyarnes2398 2 года назад

    I have no German in my family and I know back to my 3rd great grandparents on both side and I get 45 % Germanic Europe. My family is Slavic on both sides.

    • @Justmemie
      @Justmemie 2 года назад

      Im half slovak and i get 6% germanic europe on ancestry dna with the new update that i can attribute to that side (the other 3 to my danish grandparent). So it's not entirely uncommon if you're a west slav. Especially if you're a czech.

  • @jin8339
    @jin8339 2 года назад

    Does 23 and me has white papers ?

    • @GeneaVlogger
      @GeneaVlogger  2 года назад +1

      Yes - research.23andme.com/publications/

    • @jin8339
      @jin8339 2 года назад

      @@GeneaVlogger Thank you ! 😊

  • @starletfawn8719
    @starletfawn8719 2 года назад +1

    My mother is over 60% English and all my known family is UK I've just got my DNA test results and I'm apparently 0% English....? Don't think these estimates are too accurate.

    • @silviac4408
      @silviac4408 2 года назад +1

      Same here, but with German for me. I dont really think these are all that accurate except for immediate family like parents. Once you get into grandparents...not sure how accurate. Had a grandfather of German decent...nothing showed up for me except from one of dna companies (not Ancestry company) picked it up

    • @starletfawn8719
      @starletfawn8719 2 года назад +1

      @@silviac4408 I think they are fairly acute at matching your DNA to other family members. However the estimated heritage doesn't seem accurate at all even for siblings and parent/children.

    • @silviac4408
      @silviac4408 2 года назад

      @@starletfawn8719 I think they're accurate at saying whether you are related to someone, but not on the dna percentages. My dna shifts dramatically depending on what dna company I used. One said I was 34% Italian and the other said 6% Italian. One dna company said i was 2% Spanish and the other 43% Spanish. Only one company which is the one that picked up on my German said I was 3% Mongolian. I know for a fact through my family genealogy that I am about 3% Mongolian. These other companies including Ancestry never picked it up. I had one say I was 2% Ashkenazi Jewish and another say 3% Pakistani . So, I am all over the place with these tests, apparently and none agree...😆

  • @minnaerd4412
    @minnaerd4412 2 года назад +2

    There is NO 100 % GERMAN by DNA!Look at the Ancestry-Whitepaper: Germans regularly are a DNA-mix of 6 european groups. (Ok, my hubby has 83 % germanic DNA, must be because of his dutch ancestry…….)

    • @Chaotic_Pixie
      @Chaotic_Pixie 2 года назад +2

      Ancestry lists it as French/Germany or Germanic DNA for a reason. No need to get salty. We are well aware of the fact that political borders are not cultural or DNA borders.
      Sincerely, the ethnically Germanic Lass with a French surname.

    • @TheDanEdwards
      @TheDanEdwards 2 года назад

      ​@@Chaotic_Pixie "We are well aware of the fact that political borders are not cultural or DNA borders. " - "we"?? Well, you are aware, but I suspect the majority of customers who take these tests are not.

  • @mattyoung9710
    @mattyoung9710 2 года назад

    help my family tree