AncestryDNA | Why Is My Native American Ancestry Not Showing Up? | Ancestry

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  • Опубликовано: 14 окт 2024

Комментарии • 3,5 тыс.

  • @dragonroise
    @dragonroise 8 лет назад +1172

    Everyone likes to claim being Cherokee.. Forgetting there are several other tribes.

    • @bingramtube
      @bingramtube 8 лет назад +15

      So true, all my 'okie' Ancestors claim Cherokee. A point brought up to me in 1965 by my 100% Pomo friend "Ducky"

    • @msaijay1153
      @msaijay1153 8 лет назад +5

      +Bobby Ingram what tribe should people from Oklahoma think they descend from?

    • @shikaem8971
      @shikaem8971 8 лет назад +30

      lol true...the Cherokee werent even a large tribe to start with so how did all these people come from from this small tribe. Ancestry DNA showed me as 33% Native American(Mexica). My great grandmother on my moms side was full blood raramuri or muki ( female.) They are still around. Sadly probably one of the last generations of full blood Raramuri.

    • @borimirtheboring
      @borimirtheboring 8 лет назад +12

      Look up comedian Charlie Hill talking about Generikees

    • @shikaem8971
      @shikaem8971 8 лет назад +8

      Bianca Toni My Great Grandmother was Raramuri and I was fortunate enough to have her around 16 years of my life.

  • @vociferonheraldofthewinter2284
    @vociferonheraldofthewinter2284 8 лет назад +188

    A few months ago I wrote to a lady here on YT about the misunderstandings that can happen when discussing family lore. I specifically used an example in my own family where we thought that we were Dutch. Turns out that we are Pennsylvania Dutch - IE: German.
    Well, I just got my own DNA test back yesterday and found another funny. My great grandmother was told to be Irish-Indian. Turns out that she was Indian. Just not 'Native American' Indian. Yeah. Her ancestry was from India. (A little bit of research into the East India Trading Company and how many Indian brides were actually brought back to England, and it makes sense.)
    We've got to realize that we're playing a giant game of 'telephone' that spans hundreds of years. Throw in speculation, unregistered adoptions, the occasional cuckold or rape and nobody really knows who their ancestors were.

    • @AncestryUS
      @AncestryUS  8 лет назад +13

      What a crazy discovery, Pepper. Thanks for sharing. (Crista)

    • @Find_Amelia_Island
      @Find_Amelia_Island 8 лет назад +9

      think of the dna from each of your grands like a window with four panes in it. Each grand gives you one of their four panes which is 25% of their old window, and is 25% of your new window. These 4 panes, each from a different window, now make your own unique window. You do not get the 3 leftover panes of a grand's window, you only get one pane of it. The rest of their window might go to some other relative or to noone, including you.

    • @kellog1242
      @kellog1242 8 лет назад +12

      +Samuel Poe it doesnt work like that. you get half of random dna from your parents each and it recombines together in yours. so the distribution can be random in mixed people

    • @tritosac
      @tritosac 8 лет назад +8

      I recently took an ancestry DNA test that revealed I am 19% native american. My dad always told me my grandfather was Yaqui from Mexico. If I am not a full 25% native american is it still possible that my grandfather was 100% native american? Thanks for the video.

    • @AncestryUS
      @AncestryUS  8 лет назад +6

      It is possible, yes.

  • @WendyWinchester
    @WendyWinchester Год назад +45

    When I got my DNA results back from you guys I was crushed because I was always very proud of my Nipmuc heritage and there was none of it on the results. I felt like a part of my identity had been ripped away. Now I know that's not necessarily true. Thank you so much for this video.

    • @KenteauPla
      @KenteauPla 9 месяцев назад +1

      My grandpa was half france, my DNA says 9%, one of my cousin say 14%, my other cousin say 0%

    • @American-Afrikan
      @American-Afrikan 6 месяцев назад

      Why not be proud of who you really are than ?? 😆😆

    • @sherisworld8552
      @sherisworld8552 5 месяцев назад

      dna tests like this arent an exact science. Also, Natives came over here from the other side. Most importantly, you are compared to others who have taken the test. As more natives take the test the more accurate it will become.

    • @katiejon17
      @katiejon17 4 месяца назад +1

      My mother’s lineage has always been passed down by verbal history. Names, and specific locations. My ancestry didn’t mention any native (it was a different company), yet most of my relatives on my mother’s side are still in this specific area... and my great grandmother, grandmother, maternal aunt, mother, and myself are all dark. These tests aren’t getting it all right.

  • @cherylrdyer
    @cherylrdyer 6 лет назад +14

    I actually used Ancestry DNA to check mine. My Grandfather told me his mother was full blooded Cherokee. No one ever talked about it, which was normal in those days. Names were changed. The only reason he told me was because I was talking about native blood on my mother's side. He was my paternal grandfather. It seemed to me that I should have have more than showed up and needless to say I was a bit stunned that I only had two blood lines which was European and only 8% Indigenous American. I'm sure there's more but this video does explain a lot.

  • @CUTEASZNIKA
    @CUTEASZNIKA 5 лет назад +142

    As a black American, we were also told that our great great grandmother was full blooded Native American. My sister did the dna test and she came back with 3% Native American ancestry. I don’t think there’s anything with acknowledging it or being proud of it because, it’s a part of us. However, we are even more excited about our majority african ancestry that we’ve always identified with.

    • @Datacorrupter234
      @Datacorrupter234 3 года назад +7

      white/native here and proud! -edit i did an ancestry test im not native at all only white

    • @user-jt1jv8vl9r
      @user-jt1jv8vl9r 3 года назад +23

      I don’t think it matters what make up you are you should be proud of your ancestors whose struggles have allowed you to be alive today.

    • @cshel5580
      @cshel5580 3 года назад +17

      Have you ever wondered if native americans are researching if they african ancestors ? lol 😂

    • @robertchavis490
      @robertchavis490 3 года назад +7

      im happy that you ID with your Black family ancestral ties as you should,

    • @johnnyfountano5498
      @johnnyfountano5498 3 года назад +30

      If your sister was 3% and the test did not evaluate the 23rd chrome your sister could really be 8%. That would make your mother 16 to 20%. Your grandmother 32 to 40% and your great grandmother 70 to 90% Native American which is considered full blood. So your parents and grandparent was not lying when they said a great grandparent was of Native American heritage.

  • @nancyfisher2128
    @nancyfisher2128 2 года назад +69

    Thank you so much for explaining this situation with Native American DNA. A funny and perplexing situation I have run across in researching my husbands's DNA and genealogy is this: My first husband, whom I married in 1967, in NY, was obviously Caucasian (white skin, redish hair, blue eyes). He has three children by a previous marriage. Two of his children were fair, but the third had much darker coloring, black hair, and brown eyes. My husband had a picture of his Greatgrandmother which had been passed down through his family which showed an American Indian woman, which explained the different coloring that showed up in his son. Husband died in 1994. I didn't even date for 23 years, during which time I moved to SC.. In 2017 I found myself drawn to another man. He was an African-American who also claimed that his Grandmother was Native American. He was lighter skin than his other relatives and had even been given the nick name "Red" in his college years. He also had a photo of his Grandmother.....THE EXACT SAME PHOTO THAT HUSBAND #1 HAD!!!

    • @glendamcdaniel7287
      @glendamcdaniel7287 2 года назад +19

      Wow, what are the odds of that happening. Such a small world.

    • @giovannistrong75
      @giovannistrong75 Год назад +7

      WOW, THAT'S SURPRISELY RARE THAT THIS WOULD HAPPEN AGAIN. THEY WERE RELATIVES AND DIDN'T EVEN KNOW AT ALL. I'M ADOPTED AND I DID THIS TEST TO FIND OUT ABOUT MY HISTORY ON BOTH SIDES OF MY FAMILY. MOTHER AND FATHER'S SIDE. I'M EXCITED TO FIND OUT. I ALSO GOT TO KNOW MORE ABOUT HEALTH TRAITS.

    • @shawnahall7246
      @shawnahall7246 Год назад +3

      That is just out of this world crazy

    • @jesus.christis.lord.foreve899
      @jesus.christis.lord.foreve899 Год назад +4

      Comments like yours
      This one
      is a big reason I like to read the comments
      : )

    • @gangstergrannn6987
      @gangstergrannn6987 Год назад +3

      You can have blond hair,etc and still be a native,some of my cousins are

  • @j.j.225
    @j.j.225 6 лет назад +195

    My father’s grandmother was supposedly “Native American”, and looking at the one picture of her we have, we definitely believed that to be true. Turns out, according to our DNA, she was partially black. I see where the confusion exists.
    But my mom’s DNA actually had Native American in it, and yet we thought she had none. So you never really know, lol.

    • @stephanieleigh62
      @stephanieleigh62 4 года назад +18

      Then I was studying Mexico and alot of them found Native American, Spain, African and even Chinese. So its very interesting.

    • @jadanrian4203
      @jadanrian4203 3 года назад +21

      The white side of my family always thought one of their people was native, when i got ancestry I found out it was a Portuguese woman with high cheek bones💀I think a lot of the white people got confused like this

    • @jahbrodie0357
      @jahbrodie0357 3 года назад +10

      Yo J.J how's it going..so look..u do understand that they call that Asian race of people that crossed the Barron str8 and migrated to North America , American Indians correct, but they fail to mention that the copper colored races were already here before that migration...2nd if u look at all the pics created after the European Renaissance, all AI become Spanish looking or Spanish Asian mixed...find pics before that era and there u will find the truth.. even literature written describes the people of this land just like the bible describes Jesus and the descriptions definitely doesn't match that of European educating that we've all been taught!!

    • @AmandaFromWisconsin
      @AmandaFromWisconsin 2 года назад +6

      @@jahbrodie0357 *Bering Strait

    • @tantig5923
      @tantig5923 2 года назад +3

      Exacto!!🇯🇲🇧🇿

  • @YoungLegend07
    @YoungLegend07 6 лет назад +142

    I took a ancestry DNA test. It came out to 76% Native American. My parents were both born in Mexico.

    • @merciegonzalez2310
      @merciegonzalez2310 5 лет назад +61

      YoungLegend07 because we’re Aztec and Aztecs are Native American

    • @amalia1_
      @amalia1_ 5 лет назад +31

      mercie Gonzalez we’re descendants of Aztecs , not actual Aztecs

    • @darcandelaria
      @darcandelaria 4 года назад +7

      What part of Mexico? I got 41% I'm Mexican also.

    • @squanto7795
      @squanto7795 4 года назад +6

      Oaxaca?

    • @larrya5897
      @larrya5897 4 года назад +32

      Depends where because not all Mexicans are aztecs

  • @deedeewinfrey3181
    @deedeewinfrey3181 5 лет назад +420

    If I had a nickel for every time someone told me they were part Cherokee....I would be rich.

    • @mr.coffee5220
      @mr.coffee5220 4 года назад +7

      Nah dude, you be wealthy.

    • @thomasgomez7516
      @thomasgomez7516 4 года назад +6

      or have a shitload of nickels

    • @melaninqueen2413
      @melaninqueen2413 3 года назад +3

      Me too, but really... I have Native ancestry. So that one nickel you won't see! Lol

    • @stikupartist3698
      @stikupartist3698 3 года назад +15

      And they're always the palest John Smiths you ever seen claiming to be related to tanto.

    • @siksika4603
      @siksika4603 3 года назад +3

      @@stikupartist3698 Or someone who is clearly African.

  • @vincentklima6534
    @vincentklima6534 5 лет назад +44

    I’m half Mexican and when I took the ancestry dna test it said I was 17% Native American with a lot of French and spanish ancestry which makes sense I wasn’t surprised at all

    • @ettinakitten5047
      @ettinakitten5047 2 года назад +6

      Yeah, Mexicans are most often Native/Spanish mixed, sometimes with African or other European as well.

    • @aliciaarroyo6
      @aliciaarroyo6 Год назад +1

      Sounds a lot like mine. I was around 20% native with French and Spanish.

    • @Lukedalegendz
      @Lukedalegendz 6 месяцев назад

      @@ettinakitten5047 mixed more like force mix

  • @stikupartist3698
    @stikupartist3698 3 года назад +20

    I'm 41% European, 41% African and 18% indigenous Puerto rican. 18 different ethnicities in all. 🇵🇷 🇵🇷 🇵🇷 🇵🇷 🇵🇷

    • @user-jt1jv8vl9r
      @user-jt1jv8vl9r 3 года назад +1

      Wow, that’s amazing and (for me anyway) fascinating. 🙂

  • @MrsShocoTaco
    @MrsShocoTaco 5 лет назад +77

    My siblings and I were always told our paternal grandmother was 100% Muskogee ,and she looked the part. I got my dna results last week. We're IRISH !!! Straight out of Belfast!!😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣

    • @ade910
      @ade910 3 года назад +8

      Trust me, she didn't look the part. Having black hair is quite common in Europe.

    • @rachelmiller9280
      @rachelmiller9280 3 года назад

      LOL...you're too funny!

    • @MrsShocoTaco
      @MrsShocoTaco 3 года назад +2

      @@ade910 When I say she looked the part, I mean straight out of the history books, not just black hair.

    • @starlamoon286
      @starlamoon286 3 года назад +1

      Nothing wrong with that lol DNA don't lie!

    • @MrsShocoTaco
      @MrsShocoTaco 3 года назад +5

      @@starlamoon286 My siblings refuse to believe it even after one of them also took the test and came out Irish lol some ppl

  • @jinh817
    @jinh817 7 лет назад +282

    Most people asking this question are Anglos with white skin, blonde hair, blue eyes and own a dream catcher.

    • @barbaro267
      @barbaro267 6 лет назад +9

      Yes, people who look the same as everyone around them might want to think that a part of them is unique. How is that weird to you?

    • @fitnessfocused
      @fitnessfocused 6 лет назад +5

      😅

    • @nenaj1
      @nenaj1 6 лет назад +25

      Black Americans too lol

    • @roimatamassold4730
      @roimatamassold4730 5 лет назад

      Lol

    • @RapOvrDos
      @RapOvrDos 5 лет назад +3

      JD no such thing as a black person black is an adjective not a noun

  • @orionjaguar
    @orionjaguar 8 лет назад +444

    Most white Americans just do not have any Native American ancestry. The vast majority of families have not been here long enough for the ancestor to be so far back as to be undetectable. Second, it's unlikely that it would be a male ancestor, because it was most often white men and Native women, as it was considered a fate worse than death for a white woman to be with a Native man back in the day.
    In the South and East Coast, these blood myths exist to cover up the fact that the ancestor was actually black.

    • @barrioazteca9232
      @barrioazteca9232 8 лет назад +78

      It's even worse with African Americans they almost all say they have Native ancestry but it's actually European. I always get a good laugh from white and black Americans when they tell me(a real native) that they are as well and when asked what tribe 9 times out of 10 they say Cherokee lol

    • @eveningdim7167
      @eveningdim7167 7 лет назад +16

      Barrio Azteca It's sad, really.

    • @nunyabiznez6381
      @nunyabiznez6381 7 лет назад +40

      Except that most of the people who are not registered members of a tribe but do have some native American blood are primarily African Americans. This is because in many states, surviving indigenous populations not part of the reservation system were often partially integrated with African American populations. Intermarriage was common. But Caucasian populations did not commonly intermarry with either until the late twentieth century.

    • @DavidSaintloth
      @DavidSaintloth 7 лет назад +21

      I was quite surprised that the OP was actually leaving the possibility that some whites have native that fell below the sample resolution...her own chart shows that at 7 generations back percentage is 1.5% to get down to zero one needs to be at 9 generations.
      The number of Europeans who have ancestry in the America's that goes back that far are a small population of New Englanders. So if you are European and you claim native ancestry but you know your ancestors don't go back 9 generations or come from New England than they can't have been native at all.
      "In the South and East Coast, these blood myths exist to cover up the fact that the ancestor was actually black."
      This is actually quite confirmed by a recent study by 23 and Me where they revealed that the majority of those who self report as European (white) have MORE African admixture than Native admixture. (Kind of ironic and confirms your conclusion.)
      African Americans mean while have more European admixture than Native (expected).
      But African Americans on average tend to have MORE Native than European Americans have Native.
      The paper is fascinating and based on thousands of 23 and Me users...it's a big one with a solid methodology:
      drive.google.com/file/d/0B9N6z_bRVUMmZGRhZVlhMjJDQzg/view?usp=sharing

    • @realsarang
      @realsarang 7 лет назад +25

      Barrio Azteca well i am part Cherokee i spoke with my father his father and his mother. they were Cherokee indians and my family is from ga where that tribe reside. native americans did mate with African slaves at the time not all native indians had slaves but they did mate with some so yea some black folks lie bit at least it's more possible than these white folks ... ironic how they stole my ppl land and now wanna be part native Indian

  • @mlr4524
    @mlr4524 6 лет назад +22

    FYI, if you're researching French Canadian North American First Nations backgrounds, the Canadian archives are good about identifying some people in the historical family tree records as Metis, which at least offers a non-genetic clue. As this video shows, a NA ancestor 6 generations back will only show up as 1.5% NA for the subject (person being tested). For French Canadian history, FN connections may go back 10-15 generations and will not show up in DNA tests.

  • @crowhouse4778
    @crowhouse4778 6 лет назад +33

    I really liked how you articulated everything. Clear, not condescending.

  • @mutsontribe
    @mutsontribe 7 лет назад +57

    Interesting on how we receive our own unique DNA mix. There is a possibility that one sibling may have Native American DNA and the other sibling in the same family may not.

    • @tantig5923
      @tantig5923 2 года назад

      Yessss!!! Omygosh yes!

  • @ellasterling6636
    @ellasterling6636 6 лет назад +77

    I took the Ancestry test and my results were 94% European and 6% Indigenous American. I was not expecting to have any Indigenous American and would never claim to be Native.

    • @analara9872
      @analara9872 4 года назад +12

      Elizabeth Warren did lmao

    • @toddmaek5436
      @toddmaek5436 4 года назад +6

      If you are 6percent then you are.

    • @Anna-Rose-
      @Anna-Rose- 4 года назад +22

      @@toddmaek5436, DNA tests cannot determine Native American ancestors because they don't give their DNA to public databases. No tribe accepts DNA, it's by documentation only. Very rarely do they use DNA and it's only to determine parentage.

    • @stikupartist3698
      @stikupartist3698 3 года назад +6

      There are white people who claim to be with just 1%.

    • @fishinwidow35
      @fishinwidow35 3 года назад +6

      @@Anna-Rose- That is for tribal membership purposes. It doesn't change your ancestry.

  • @kimberlyeverton-brown2885
    @kimberlyeverton-brown2885 8 лет назад +17

    Thank you so much for explaining this!! My Step-sisters mother was born on the Winnebago Reservation in Northeastern Nebraska, and she was always told tales that her Grandparents performed as stunt riders in Wild West Shows. After having Melanie's DNA processed, she shows no Native American, ZILCH! However people that she matches with on Ancestry do have Native American ancestry. Explaining how "The Cards are Shuffled" made a lot of sense! Time to get her brother tested!

  • @tamraparrish3526
    @tamraparrish3526 6 лет назад +21

    My grandmother is 3/4 Native American and was born on an Indian reservation in New Mexico. She has a reservation number instead of a birth certificate. My grandfather on that same side is also 1/2 Native American and 1/2 German. We have genealogy going back generations and my 23andMe showed nothing. They said it was because there aren’t enough people with that dna getting the test done.

    • @joeramirez7879
      @joeramirez7879 Год назад

      Nope doesn't sound right

    • @joeramirez7879
      @joeramirez7879 Год назад +2

      Maybe need to check too see if someone was adopted

    • @astranger6737
      @astranger6737 Год назад +2

      That doesn’t sound right, as the other guy said, must be an adoption

    • @person_1791
      @person_1791 2 месяца назад

      Having a 3/4 grandmother and not a single bit showing up on the test means that someone is lying or hiding something

    • @tamraparrish3526
      @tamraparrish3526 2 месяца назад

      No one was adopted. I’ve seen the reservation number, and I’ve talked to organizations within the Native American community. The family tree is accurate. My grandfather on my father’s side was adopted but already knew that.

  • @Thomas_Oklahoma
    @Thomas_Oklahoma 3 года назад +7

    If anyone knows or thinks they have blood of a certain Tribe and want to enroll into that tribe, you can contact that Tribe, the regional BIA offices or departments that track the dawes rolls to find Native family or ancestors, they have extensive records of Native families going back nearly 200 years. Keep in mind that you will also need your non-native family records too because Tribes need most of your family tree to determine blood quantum, if you can't provide a detailed family tree of your non-native side, these Tribes will consider your records incomplete. Most Tribes require 1/4 blood quantum, some have a more strict blood quantum limits. Some Tribes have a very generous qualifications to be a citizen such as the Five Civilized Tribes (Cherokee, Choctaw, Chickasaw, Creek & Seminole) that only requires at least one or a few family members on your family tree to be on the Dawes Rolls.

  • @amberbante9530
    @amberbante9530 8 лет назад +90

    My grandmother told me that my great grandpa ( her dad) was Cherokee and Sioux, but her birth certificate said he was "Caucasian" . I asked my Native American art history professor about this as she was Navajo and said she wouldn't mind if anyone needed help proving Native American ancestry. The professor said that since my grandma was born in 1931 in the South that interracial marriage was illegal, so my great grandmother had possibly lied on the birth certificate as both her and my great grandfather would have been arrested because of the Jim Crow laws of the time.

    • @DarnellHendeason-dk3uw
      @DarnellHendeason-dk3uw 7 лет назад +15

      Amber Bante : a lot of ppl who claim Native, were black.

    • @amberbante9530
      @amberbante9530 7 лет назад +7

      However, what a lot of people don't understand is the anti-interracial marriage laws also covered all races, so marriages between any race were risky.

    • @DarnellHendeason-dk3uw
      @DarnellHendeason-dk3uw 7 лет назад +6

      Amber Bante : laws aren't applied equally, if you were black, it was an almost guaranteed death sentence.

    • @amberbante9530
      @amberbante9530 7 лет назад +7

      I want to get an ancestry DNA test anyway as I've found out some interesting things about both sides of the family.

    • @maryantonovich3585
      @maryantonovich3585 7 лет назад +5

      Census durant roll of 1906 lists my great grandmother as wht. It was a roll for native americans only and all others had an "I" next to their names. They wrote white because she said she was white. Some didn't want that "shameful" association and just wanted to assimilate. Yet her granddaughter, my mother, was shipped off to an Indian school every year eighty miles from her home.

  • @AncestryUS
    @AncestryUS  2 года назад +5

    Hi there, thanks for stopping by. Unfortunately, current genetic ethnicity research is unable to distinguish Indigenous American tribal affiliation based on the research and technology currently available. Indigenous American tribes are very similar genetically and while there have been a number of advances in genetic ethnicity research in the last several years, research has not developed to a point where tribal affiliation can be credibly determined. However, we are continuing our research and plan to continue updating our genetic ethnicities as the science evolves.

  • @ke6264
    @ke6264 2 года назад +19

    So in my family everybody thought my great great grandmother on my moms side was Native American she had straight long black hair and olive skin, turns out she’s actually Portuguese! And we found this out because one of our family members found some old letters that she wrote a long long time ago and she talked about being Portuguese and how she was very proud to be a Portuguese woman we were completely blown away. Not to mention this totally explains why I had 7% Iberian peninsula in my ancestry results.

    • @CristaCowan
      @CristaCowan 2 года назад

      Well, there ya go. 😉

    • @garyhighley9022
      @garyhighley9022 Год назад

      That's interesting. I actually have 7 percent Iberian on my Ancestry results too. I wonder if I may have some unknown Portuguese ancestors.

    • @FlavioFonseca-sq8cn
      @FlavioFonseca-sq8cn Год назад +2

      *In Angola, West-Southern Africa, we have plenty of Native American cases of Native American DNA Ancestry (Genetic Marks) since 1530….,,(since XVI century, from North, Central and South Américas….!!!*

  • @thegreatalyssa
    @thegreatalyssa 6 лет назад +19

    My dad took one of these tests many years ago and it was obvious it was not accurate. I'm a quadruplet and even with us quads it shows some differences. I grew up multi-cultural, including an enrolled member. I have at least one ancestor from 4/5 Civilized Tribes, mostly Choctaw and Chickasaw. I know my lineage to the Creek and Cherokee (Ridge for the Cherokee). We grew up with intelligent and degreed people in the family who spoke many languages by way of their heritage as well as being learned through polyglotism. I grew up speaking Choctaw, Chickasaw (and 2 dead Indigenous languages) but only know some words in Cherokee and Creek. We were taught many European languages including French, Italian, Spanish, German, English, Romanian and more. Even though my nephews, nieces, great nephews and nieces are of less "Indian" blood, they are enrolled as citizens and being brought up as "Indian". They are speaking Choctaw fluently and Chickasaw pretty well. They are also brought up speaking Spanish, English, and some Italian and French. DNA tests don't show these things I'm talking about. We also have the 4 roots teeth and much more to our ancestry.

    • @patriciajrs46
      @patriciajrs46 7 месяцев назад

      What does your phrase mean? Please I'm confused. The phrase 4 roots teeth? Thanks.

    • @thegreatalyssa
      @thegreatalyssa 7 месяцев назад

      Teeth have roots. It is taught that molars have two or three roots. But we have four roots because of the Indigenous American ancestry. Look up something like how many roots do teeth have?@@patriciajrs46

    • @patriciajrs46
      @patriciajrs46 7 месяцев назад

      @@chairmanofthebored8684 Wow!

  • @jeffreygranger6913
    @jeffreygranger6913 6 лет назад +69

    DNA trumps "stories"every day.Somebody lied somewhere.

  • @tyrannosaurus62
    @tyrannosaurus62 4 года назад +12

    I’ve been told my whole life that “we’re spainish” growing up. Strangers would assume I was a Native American because of my long straight jet black hair and my large nose. I took a DNA test and it states that I’m 48% . I would just like to know more of my ancestors

    • @AncestryUS
      @AncestryUS  4 года назад +2

      Have you started a family tree on Ancestry? If not, here are some tips: ruclips.net/video/pUEtr_b63CA/видео.html

  • @ElvisIsASexyBoy
    @ElvisIsASexyBoy 8 лет назад +10

    This makes sense.I had always heard that we had Native American heritage but didn't know for sure.I decided to start looking into our family tree to see if i could find anything that would lead to this Native American tale.I subscribed to Ancestry and found that it was true.I found my Grt Grandparents on the Indian Dawes Rolls(they lived in Oklahoma) and the application applying for free land in Oklahoma also on a 1900 oklahoma indian territory cencus listing them as Chickasaw.The Rolls listed her as 1/32 Chickasaw and my Grandfather as Chickasaw by marriage.Going up my tree i found where the Native American came from.MY Grt Grandmother's ( on dawes rolls) 3rd grt Grandmother was full blooded Chickasaw her name was Ishtanaha from Miss,she married a Irish man. My sister had a DNA test done through Ancestry and this is the results..(remember the full blood chickasaw is six generations up the tree and this line never married back into the Native American. Native American-1% Europe -98% Great Britain-56% Ireland-17% Scandinavia-10% Europe West-9% Iberian Peninsul-2% Finland/Northwest Russia-2% Europe East-1%.I think i left some % of something out but this is a good example of what this video is saying.We have since then proved our chickasaw heritage and become Chickasaw tribal members.Thanks Ancestry for helping me prove my native american heritage,without you it would have been alot harder.Names were provided,cousins were found and pictures exchanged.I even found my Native American ancestors that were removed from Miss to Oklahoma.Thanks again Ancestry!!!!

  • @tantibusdraws6165
    @tantibusdraws6165 6 лет назад +10

    Through ancestry, I found out that I am 4% Native American. I never really believed any of the stories that my family told to me while growing up. Now that I found out that I do have Native American ancestors, I could really care less.
    Also, as stated in the video, just because you have similar physical features, doesn’t mean you have recent Native American ancestry. Most of my family has caramel colored skin, sharp facial features, dark straight hair and can potentially pass as Natives, but we are just a thorough mix of African black and white Europeans.
    Also, I have talked to a few actual Natives in the past about people claiming tribal ancestry, many really don’t seem to like it.

    • @blaquespan5316
      @blaquespan5316 5 лет назад +3

      Tantibus Draws actually that's partially true the rest of the truth is the Aboriginal people that you call Native Americans that look like me there were darker Coppertone would not allowed to register on the Dawes rolls and claim their proper ancestry... we were only allowed to check black therefore when I will try this get made even one another they came out looking a particular Geno typical way because the dark members of the tribes were not allowed to claim their ancestry

  • @jackiesanders8814
    @jackiesanders8814 5 лет назад +19

    I showed no Native American in any standard autosomal test,and we sure had a persistent "Cherokee" story , which most of us dismissed as family folklore.After uploading our DNA for more deep Ancestry testing,we found it.Then Ancestry DNA truthlines helped us find our distant Native ancestor! :) Don't give up,and thank you Ancestry!

    • @Tsalagi978
      @Tsalagi978 3 года назад +5

      Same. I kept getting West Asian at around 4% 1.8% Spanish and less than 1% Native American and West African. I have relatives in CNO and the Qualla Band of the Cherokee Nation. I found my mixed blood ancestor who was born at the Moravian Mission in Spring Place. She married a white man and was allowed to stay. Her grandmother was full blood. Her Father was Edward Adair.

    • @selfab6562
      @selfab6562 2 года назад +2

      @@Tsalagi978 you ppl are weird you are not native just bc you have a small percentage just like no one would claim to be whte or black from 5% blood

    • @selfab6562
      @selfab6562 2 года назад +2

      That doesn’t make you native. You’re just a European with a native ancestor from 100s of years ago pls grow up

  • @angtxsun4460
    @angtxsun4460 2 года назад +7

    My family story includes Native American ancestry. Our grandfather’s grandfather was supposedly half Native American and a law officer on a reservation in Oklahoma, the son of another law officer and a Native American woman. That is what our family story says. Historical records do link his family back and his unique name is that of a sheriff in Oklahoma territory. We cannot find his name on any records older than those.
    None of my generation has Native American showing up in our DNA, I wish we had been able to test my grandfather.
    Thank you for this information! Very helpful

    • @AncestryUS
      @AncestryUS  2 года назад

      Hi there, thanks for stopping by. We know researching Native American ancestors can be tricky, we have an article on our support site with some research tips that may be of some help. support.ancestry.com/s/article/Researching-Native-American-Ancestors?language=en_US. Best of luck with your research!

    • @Datacorrupter234
      @Datacorrupter234 Год назад

      You might be 1/256 or 1/512th.. or 1/1,024th..i think that is where it starts to not be detected who knows though it might also just be lies

  • @a.d.6637
    @a.d.6637 3 года назад +20

    I have tried to explain this to my family. We have records of an Algonquin ancestor on my mother's side and an Iroquois on my father's side. That's only two people in my ancestry that were native and that was a loooooong time ago. The chances of that showing up if there hadn't been any other known native DNA that entered my genome is practically nonexistent. I mean all humans are related to each other if we go far enough back.

    • @TheOwlHead
      @TheOwlHead 2 года назад

      That’s why there’s only one race and that’s why we can always prorate procreate with each other that’s scientifically proves we are one race with many tribes in ethnicities that being said you wouldn’t exist without each and everyone of your ancestors but your dad is from the Iroquois that’s crazy he was a cannibal

  • @rakka2533
    @rakka2533 2 года назад +6

    I'm half English half American, born and raised in England. I grew up being told that my mum has Native American ancestry, even specifying that it was Blackfeet. Whilst she could never specify how far back our Native American ancestor was, I never doubted the family story simply because she, and especially my grandma, looked Native American. When I was a child I didn't even know what Native American features were (being an English kid) but I knew my mum's side of the family didn't look white. I look as white as can be, but when my brother was born he had even darker skin than my mum. As a young adult now with plenty of access to the internet, my conviction that there was Native ancestry was strengthened when I saw what mixed Native people look like. I'd never seen so many people that looked like my mum and brother before. Added with the fact that my mum had been presumed Native by people she'd met, I assumed that my belief was valid. Because I was curious about my ancestry in general, I did an Ancestry test a few years back and there was 0% Native. I wasn't too surprised, because I haven't inherited any traits that would indicate ancestry anything other than European. But then my mum did an ancestry test and what she'd get? 0% Native. Not only that, but she got 100% Northern European. Though, in Ancestry's most recent update, both our results changed. My mum had 2% Southern Italian and myself has 1%. This is the best explanation for my mum's and brother's appearance, and this video has made me believe it more so when it was said that Mediterranean appearances often can get mixed up with Native American. Funnily enough, my mum and my grandma still look more Native than Southern Italian, but race is just a collection of features and ultimately anyone can end up looking like another race with the right mix. (I can definitely see the Southern Italian in my brother now though.) I'm still curious about where the Blackfeet rumour came from, but it could be as simple as one generation assuming they have Native Ancestry because of their appearance and guessing at any old tribe closest to their area and passing it off as fact. Anyway, I just find it fascinating how often this apparently happens. I didn't even search for this video, it was in my reccomedations, and I'm glad to know it isn't just my family that have been claiming heritage unfounded 😅 😂

    • @patriciajrs46
      @patriciajrs46 Год назад

      Great example. Thanks for sharing your story. It's interesting.

  • @michelemandrioli4720
    @michelemandrioli4720 8 лет назад +20

    We had a family story about my French-Canadian grandfather's grandmother having had some Native American ancestry. We found the person in the 1600s in her tree. I and one of my brothers each got

    • @dathomierabbit5721
      @dathomierabbit5721 7 лет назад +3

      Michele Mandrioli maybe but it isn't like it matters you're probably just going to piss some of the more stuck up or normal natives by claiming that you're less than 1%

    • @skiihigh12real
      @skiihigh12real 6 лет назад

      Dat homie Rabbit whatch your mouth

    • @sergiocaicedo4437
      @sergiocaicedo4437 5 лет назад

      What happen is you aint

    • @beslanintruder2077
      @beslanintruder2077 4 года назад

      @@sergiocaicedo4437 go back South of Rio Grande with that. Aztlan was never North of the border..

  • @erikap.855
    @erikap.855 8 лет назад +29

    I'm Mexican and according Ancestry DNA I'm 65%Native, 25% European, 6% African, 2% Asian South, and 2% Asia West.

    • @bernieorbust6104
      @bernieorbust6104 7 лет назад +2

      Erika Patters sounds abour right, thats a very typical result for central muricans

    • @ChiChiGlamShop
      @ChiChiGlamShop 7 лет назад +1

      I'm gonna get my Afro-Mexican husband tested. I may get it for him for Father's Day. I can't wait to see his results.

    • @bulbasaur1232
      @bulbasaur1232 7 лет назад

      are you from south mexico?

    • @Harleylovinchelley1
      @Harleylovinchelley1 5 лет назад

      For someone who came from Mexico that sounds about right. The native would be whichever tribe inhabited your part of Mexico, the Euro would be the Spanish influence and the rest would be from the Spanish ancestor due to all the migration. I am euro with about 2% west African but you wouldn't guess it to look at me in the winter. I tan easier than most paleface people and retain my tan even into the fall.

    • @Harleylovinchelley1
      @Harleylovinchelley1 5 лет назад

      @@ChiChiGlamShop HEY, why are you keeping us in suspense. Tell us what you found.

  • @blakegillpuente3904
    @blakegillpuente3904 6 лет назад +19

    Lol. The people working at 23andMe and Ancestry are just way too nice to say what's really going on: the overwhelming majority of people who claim to have distant Native American ancestry actually, genetically, do not have any indigenous DNA in their genome, and that is often due to "$5 Indians" and/or the novelty of claiming your great-great-great grandmother was BFFs with Pocahontas. This is also true for those in my state of Oklahoma who claim to be 1/164th Tribe X. It's so wild to me that super, translucent white people will call themselves Native despite not being connected to tribal customs apart from that little card and despite being paper white with blonde hair and baby blue eyes. LOL. As the child of a Mexican-American man and a very white caucasian woman, almost 30% of my DNA is of Native American; and pretty much all my NA-DNA is traced to Mexico (likely descendents of the Aztec, Maya, or other indigenous Mexicans). Lol. But, like all gueritos, my mother SWEARS her great grandmother was full or at least half Chickasaw. No, sis. I don't think so. 😂 I don't have patience for any more baby powder-complected people thinking being 1/472nd Native American makes them a person of color or changes the fact that their genome is 98+% European.

    • @blaquespan5316
      @blaquespan5316 5 лет назад +1

      Blake Gill Puente I really like what you had to say and I concur a lot of people like to forget that the copper color Aboriginal of this land that were more so my complexion we're not allowed to claim their tribal rights they were only allowed to sign black which has no constitutional value and means nothing in law and traces back to know Nation/ nationality at all... so that left my other lighter tone Aboriginal people to only mate with themselves and the Europeans who are forcing their way into the tribes and force marrying and raping their way into the tribes as a way to legitimize the fraud they committed by signing the Dawes rolls in the first place.... which is why there are almost no dark-complected aborigine then/now... great-grandmother n grand mother are full blood in Muskogee my father father what's Blackfoot and Muskogee due to the Trail of Tears a lot of tribes started breeding with one another yet on the birth certificate there listed as negro and on mine I'm listed as black again no nationality whatsoever... it is sad to have your heritage stolen and then to see people like her claim it... 😢

    • @rosexx241
      @rosexx241 2 года назад +5

      Ikr it’s completely absurd. I knew a white girl who looked like Barbie. Super straight golden blonde hair, baby blue eyes and pale skin that burned red. She claimed her grandmother was full blood native... I don’t understand why they do this. Guess they think it makes them more interesting.

    • @missyyouknow6002
      @missyyouknow6002 Год назад

      You cannot go by the color of skin. Look at me. I'm very white and redheaded. My grandmother was Cherokee. ( my mothers mother) I got none of the resemblance. My cousins and other family members do. P.s I do not identify as indian although it matter of factly shines through per my DNA.

    • @NurseMo42
      @NurseMo42 6 месяцев назад

      Omg yesss I just wrote a response on this same thing then I just saw yours!!! Exactly 😂 $5 dollar Indian. Dawes act.
      Choctaw DNA in me . I will be taking my test soon

  • @GMack333
    @GMack333 7 лет назад +228

    Im %100 human

    • @hectorpascal
      @hectorpascal 6 лет назад +8

      The ROOT-WORDS are HUM & HUMAN which come from the Latin humus, meaning EARTH & GROUND, and the Latin humanus which means MAN

    • @hectorpascal
      @hectorpascal 6 лет назад +6

      "Im %100 human" Yep, that's all that REALLY counts.

    • @ytyoked3946
      @ytyoked3946 6 лет назад

      Cool

    • @Tata-iu3fy
      @Tata-iu3fy 6 лет назад +1

      andrew craig do you know Bob?

    • @brentrichards1200
      @brentrichards1200 6 лет назад +5

      @co122189 You know white people aren't actually the color white, right? Plus, good karma? That doesn't exist.

  • @judydover7240
    @judydover7240 7 лет назад +5

    My brother tested with Ancestry and did not show any Native American Ancestry. One thing you did not mention (which I believe is because Ancestry does not offer Y-DNA testing) is Y-DNA testing. My brother tested his Y-DNA at FTDNA (Family Tree DNA) and his Y-Haplotype is Q-M3, a male Native American Haplogroup. We had no idea that we had Native American ancestry in our ancestral surnamed line until we got the Y-DNA results.

    • @dathomierabbit5721
      @dathomierabbit5721 7 лет назад

      Judy Dover wow coooool congratulations on being 1% Native American enjoy bragging about that and pissing people and if you don't say how Native American you are you still are going piss people off by claiming your Native American while you look white ass fuck

  • @amynazza
    @amynazza 2 года назад +4

    My sister in law is Peruvian, her grandmother was full-blooded Quechuan and didn't speak Spanish. Her mother spoke both languages. My sister in law's ancestry results show something like 60% Native American! So the 'native American' really applies to all Americas of the western hemisphere. Not just the indian tribes of the USA boundaries.

  • @noniemac
    @noniemac 7 лет назад +20

    I have family records that include my great grandfather was half Cherokee. This record is an interview for membership in the Dawes Rolls. My grandfather, George Washington Hicks, claims his father is white and his mother was full blood Cherokee. Your explaination made more sense than anything I have read. I do not show any American Indian in my DNA, however my sister shows 2% of Indian blood. As a family, we always listened to the stories of our Native blood. And now I have records to back it up. Thank you.

    • @noniemac
      @noniemac 4 года назад +2

      Alpha Omega I know right? So maybe my family’s records are wrong.

    • @jacklynnmjackson2383
      @jacklynnmjackson2383 2 года назад +1

      So your GrGrand that was one half Cherokee, what was his other half. Why do ppl rely on 1parent. It's ridiculous.

    • @karenwaddell9396
      @karenwaddell9396 2 года назад +1

      Went to the archives but could not find interview records. My gmother interviewed and the story goes she was too distant. I’d like to see the interview records. How?

    • @KamalasNotLikeUs
      @KamalasNotLikeUs 2 года назад +1

      Why not just be proud of being white European?

    • @selfab6562
      @selfab6562 2 года назад

      Maybe bc Dawes rolls was made by whte ppl to lie about their race and be labeled native for land… you’re whte and so is your sister f that 2% blood pls

  • @fredjohnson7588
    @fredjohnson7588 6 лет назад +10

    I know for a fact that I have an ancestor who was 100% native American, it didn't show up in my done and that makes a lot of sense because it was my 8th great grandmother. She was an Indian chiefs daughter, they lived in the Hudson valley in New York state. I've traced my genealogy back to her husband who was my 7th great grandfather

  • @marieknight9385
    @marieknight9385 3 года назад +8

    Thank you, I can't even remember how many times someone told me about their native relative without me ever asking.

  • @lisabaltzer3163
    @lisabaltzer3163 8 лет назад +22

    This explains why even though my sister and I are both 25% Asian but I look part Asian and she doesn't.

    • @londonm3161
      @londonm3161 4 года назад +1

      my little brother and I are both 15-20% native but that poor boy got ALL the irish genes ahsdljasdhfkagsf he goes outside for ten minutes and gets a nburn while i've never burned in my life. my bf is also 25% asian (filipino specifically) and his little brother, who is 100% white, looks more asian than he does to the average person

  • @hiddenname9809
    @hiddenname9809 8 лет назад +42

    I am Asian. It's amazing how many white people I know claim to have Native American ancestry even though you cannot see a trace on them or their family members. I mean, everyone in their family are pale-skinned, blue eyes, blonde hair. Even facial features, not a single feature that would give away as Native American.

    • @Seereene1
      @Seereene1 8 лет назад +12

      +Laarni Shaner I think back in the day claiming/telling a child they had native American ancestry was a convenient way of disguising they had a black (for white people) or white (for black people) ancestor. Black women's bodies were not their own. They could not legally be raped and had no recourse against unwanted sexual advances. It's easier to tell a child/grandchild there's a Cherokee grandmother than grandma or great grandma was raped by her owner or random white man. And there's many a white family hiding a black great, great, great grandparent for social reasons in a racist society.

    • @berzerker1100
      @berzerker1100 7 лет назад

      Laarni Shaner

    • @yussef961
      @yussef961 7 лет назад +2

      i m asian too lol my parents are from lebanon but i don't look arab or asian i look european whereas my familly is av ery old lebanese one and my dna proves it too

    • @robertfirthiv9623
      @robertfirthiv9623 7 лет назад +1

      Seereene1 Oh shush it

    • @carlcushmanhybels8159
      @carlcushmanhybels8159 6 лет назад

      Sereene1 -- you tell the truth.

  • @Streamwalker1000
    @Streamwalker1000 6 лет назад +6

    You are a great teacher ! You did a nice job explaining the DNA apportionment. This is interesting to me, because I have no idea who my Biological Mother was. My Biological father was drifter and had about 3 children....all out of wedlock. I was adopted and later found my Biological Father...(Frank Griffin). He was about 2/3 Irish, but he refused to tell me who my Mother was. My DNA panel showed 30% Irish, 26% Scandinavian, 25% British. The rest included a mixture of Eastern European, including a "Trace" of Middle Eastern. I'm tall thin, with Blue eyes and when I was young, I had thick Blond Hair. So, my assumption is that whoever my Mother was, she was Scandinavian with Eastern European Genes. We have no idea where the trace Middle Eastern DNA came from. Thank you, for your GREAT presentation. (Richard H. Pratt, Ph.D., Ltd. )

    • @AncestryUS
      @AncestryUS  6 лет назад +1

      Thank you, Richard. Using your AncestryDNA Match list, you should be able to figure out the identity of your biological mother. When you look at that list, how many 3rd cousin (or closer) matches do you have?

    • @Streamwalker1000
      @Streamwalker1000 6 лет назад +1

      Hmmm...I don't seem to have those. Ancestry DNA match list ? All I have is the pi chart with the %tage distribution of the nationalities. How do I get that information....I presume it's on file somewhere at Ancestry ?

  • @dmarie1184
    @dmarie1184 7 лет назад +72

    Thank you very much! I'm thinking in our case, they claimed Cherokee ancestry to hide the fact they had African ancestry. My results showed African ancestry and most of my dad's side came from Appalachia (TN and NC) so it's likely they tried to hide it especially given the time and place.

    • @zummagonzalez5096
      @zummagonzalez5096 7 лет назад +11

      I remember reading an article regarding what you are saying about 10 (or more) years ago. It spoke about how some AA's & mixed couples pretended that the AA partner was Native American because they felt it would be much easier accepted. They explain that this is the reason why so many AA's think that they are part Native American when they are not.
      Now some people took the pretending in a different direction because when they got here they were not aware that what they were pretending to be didn't have it good here either.
      I met a elderly woman about 15 years ago who told me she met her sailor husband in Puerto Rico. He was a southerner & felt that she would not be accepted down there so they decided to tell everyone that she is Italian.
      I also knew a dark skin Panamanian family and a dark skin Dominican Family who pretended to be African-American because when their families came here 60-70 years ago they felt they would be easier accepted if they were AA instead of Latinos.

    • @PeasantWithaPitchfork
      @PeasantWithaPitchfork 6 лет назад +4

      dmarie1184 Melungeon! Google it

    • @robbirobbiano4642
      @robbirobbiano4642 6 лет назад +3

      MELUNGEON

    • @babygirl5299
      @babygirl5299 3 года назад +1

      Me Tooooooo 4 to 6% African Mali and Nigerian. Irish mom is 100% so I have 50% 29% scotch German Swedish welsh

    • @babygirl5299
      @babygirl5299 3 года назад +2

      My sister has 65% Irish. To my 50

  • @fayeguinn6430
    @fayeguinn6430 6 лет назад +4

    I was told I had a great grandmother who was Native American but through research I found out she was a step great grandmother which explained why I could not find any family on the Dawes Rolls. Her last name was Rattling Gourd which was cool.

  • @johnc95249
    @johnc95249 2 года назад +6

    This is a great Podcast. I have a small portion of Native American DNA. I’ve gone through a large portion of my DNA matches and searched for others with Native American Ancestry. This has help me identify my ancestral line that the Native American Ancestry is associated with as 99.99 % of those with Native American Ancestry also descend from this line. Thank you for the Podcast!

  • @TheFultonrick
    @TheFultonrick 8 лет назад +110

    Or Grandma got down with someone else & just didn't tell grandpa.

  • @Seabacon346
    @Seabacon346 8 лет назад +64

    The deck of cards was a good analogy. Thanks

    • @cfG21
      @cfG21 8 лет назад +12

      Chante Bacon most native americans ,real ones, roll their eyes at people like her claiming native american.. in actuality the myth of being native american actually meant black african american
      this myth came about to cover up the fact that they are actually african american descent.

    • @Seabacon346
      @Seabacon346 8 лет назад +3

      cfG21 Yeah. I'm not Native American and I roll my eyes at that too.

    • @jcbentleyalley154
      @jcbentleyalley154 7 лет назад

      cfG21 yep

    • @chomama1628
      @chomama1628 3 года назад

      Genetics are very complicated. Even siblings can have different dna profiles.

  • @Wassaja_Eskiminzin
    @Wassaja_Eskiminzin 2 года назад +2

    I have lots of Native American in me.
    My dad side
    Paternal grandpa: Jicarilla & Chiricahua APACHE (NEW MEXICO & COLORADO)
    Paternal grandma: NAVAJO & HOPI. (ARIZONA)
    Maternal grandpa: O’ODHAM & HUICHOL (SONORA DESERT)
    Maternal grandmother: AFRICAN & EUROPEAN born in (Nayarit Mexico)

  • @PeasantWithaPitchfork
    @PeasantWithaPitchfork 6 лет назад +279

    Everybody can't be Cherokee, but every one claims to be! SMH

    • @kiarafigueroa56
      @kiarafigueroa56 6 лет назад +8

      100% accurate.

    • @credinzel6996
      @credinzel6996 6 лет назад +1

      Christine M Lester 1/16 Cherokee, while I'm here looking at them like "Ametur".

    • @seantowns2119
      @seantowns2119 5 лет назад +5

      Yes lots of people truely have Cherokee Ancestry.

    • @RapOvrDos
      @RapOvrDos 5 лет назад +6

      James E. Ogilvy Barbra Bush is a $5 Indian and if you believe her you might be a $5 Indian also get an unabridged dictionary or go read the thief Columbus’ journal the discerption gave wasn’t pale skin or light skin it was copper so that makes Bush a lie

    • @emmanuelwilliams6004
      @emmanuelwilliams6004 5 лет назад +6

      RapO vrDos You are 💯 bro they love to steal other people history and claim it for there own .....

  • @realtalk6073
    @realtalk6073 6 лет назад +84

    A lot of 5$ Indians were on the Dawes Rolls

    • @fgeiger41
      @fgeiger41 5 лет назад +4

      How they miss that part? You beat me to it. 😂😂😂

    • @oppboyputt
      @oppboyputt 4 года назад +4

      Not gonna lie that's my ancestors were $5 Indian who had mulatto children who said they were Indians

    • @olg06
      @olg06 4 года назад +1

      I know how disgraceful 😒

    • @lorriemiller6750
      @lorriemiller6750 3 года назад +2

      @@oppboyputt Actually the term mulatto originally meant mixed White European and Native American long before it changed by definition to be mixed African and white it can also include actual Native American which in usually referred to as Metis or a combination of all is called Melungeon. Even the Dawes and tribal rolls will say for those of mixed descent will state the ancestry as Native. And white such as French or English or if their ancestor is black it will say black and Native.

  • @warflowersociety
    @warflowersociety 4 года назад +4

    Or, vs. DNA, obtain vital records, find your ancestor on the Dawes and apply (or not) to your tribe. DNA results do not allow membership (blue card and CDIB). Keep in mind also, some tribes adopted into the tribe, those were not Native American. Tradition, once adopted, you were blood. However, government does require vital records. My ancestors are on the Dawes, walked the Trail of Tears, and their blood degree shows on their records. Yes, some maybe on the Dawes that aren't, but degree would be stated. Also note, we adopted from other tribes.

    • @michelleholt2007
      @michelleholt2007 2 года назад

      I’ve always wondered what I could do as far as having a way to apply for a tribe. I have found my great great grandmother and great great great grandparents on the Dawes Roll. They came to Tennessee via Trail of Tears from South Dakota.

  • @firstpower100
    @firstpower100 9 лет назад +18

    Very informative and helpful info. I must also add that DNA ancestry results that do show significant Native American ancestry percentages do not necessary mean that a person is descended from a US American Indian nation. A possibly exists that the person could be descended from a Canadian First Nations aborigine or a latino/hispanic ancestor who was of predominately Indigenous American heritage from Mexico or elsewhere in Latin America. For example, I am half African American and half Venezuelan and my DNA results showed 16% Native American ancestry. I know for certain that I inherited none of it from my African American side. One must do independent family genealogy research in conjunction with DNA ancestry in order to fully verify true American Indian heritage since AncestryDNA currently cannot distinguish between Native Americans in the US and indigenous people in Latin American countries as well as Canadian First Nations.

    • @gaebren9021
      @gaebren9021 7 лет назад

      What about the Sami people of northern Finland, Norway and Sweden? Would they have the Native American Ancestry DNA. I think they are somewhat related. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sami_history

    • @amynazza
      @amynazza 2 года назад

      True. My sister in law is Peruvian, her grandmother was full-blooded Quechuan and didn't speak Spanish. Her mother spoke both languages. My sister in law's ancestry results show something like 60% Native American! So the 'native' really applies to the Americas of the western hemisphere.

  • @ruthblood780
    @ruthblood780 8 лет назад +4

    Since my mother always said her great grandmother was full blooded Canadian Indian, j never understood why it didn't show up on my DNA. Thank you for explaining this!.

  • @cosettelaplante699
    @cosettelaplante699 5 лет назад +2

    My daughter's dad said he was 1/4 (his mom 1/2) Native American. His mom's test results indicate 41% Native American. My daughter's results indicate 20% Native American (Central and Southern New Mexico and Colorado). She looks similar to Q' Orianka Kilcher. Tbh, her peers always teased her about being Mexican. As far as specific tribe... there is a debate over whether they are Navajo or Apache.

  • @Tgore2
    @Tgore2 7 лет назад +156

    why are ppl so hell bent on being native american

    • @credinzel6996
      @credinzel6996 6 лет назад +9

      Ginger Snapped Hey, being white is cool. Also, where I go, it's mostly the blacks..for some reason...strange.

    • @cincybest
      @cincybest 6 лет назад +18

      Credin Animations FIRST BECAUSE NATIVE AMERICANS ARE AWESOME SECOND THEY'RE SEEN AS EXOTIC THIRD MOST PEOPLE ESPECIALLY BLACKS DON'T WANT TO ADMIT AND HAVE A HARD TIME DEALING WITH THEIR EUROPEAN ANCESTRY.

    • @barbaro267
      @barbaro267 6 лет назад +6

      It's cool to think that a part of you isn't Caucasian, or whatever race you are.

    • @sirengirl7473
      @sirengirl7473 6 лет назад +1

      I don’t get the blacks part also

    • @pattydinero6292
      @pattydinero6292 6 лет назад +8

      easy - because we are in America, and it gives us a deeper connection to our country. Being a country of immigrants, it means something to the soul.
      In my case, i'm 4% Native American, 2% East Asian. So 6% is a lot when you don't have a direct relative (this could mean my great-great grandparent was full-blooded; or, in my case, have two great-great's who were 50% [one of mine is confirmed]).

  • @TheQwuilleran
    @TheQwuilleran 8 лет назад +71

    Your simplified analogies explain genetic inheritance well, thank you.

  • @Kelli_D.
    @Kelli_D. 6 лет назад +7

    This is why I wish others in my family would get the DNA test done. It's been said I (And my sister) have Blackfoot and Cherokee- One is from my mother's side, one is from my father's side but I forget which one goes to who. I've been researching our family tree for many years and have never came across a single name that even sounds Native American. According to my own DNA testing - when I click for the stats where the Native American Indian would be located every single area says "No connection". so I'm pretty confident we actually have NO Native American Indian in our bloodline at all.

  • @PammyGrammy
    @PammyGrammy 8 лет назад +37

    My G-G-G-Grandmother was supposedly Cherokee. My DNA test shows under 1% Native American. I guess that could be correct. I wish my mother was still alive to get tested.

    • @GuardianoftheGoldenStool
      @GuardianoftheGoldenStool 7 лет назад +4

      +SchweizMuscogee You are sort of correct in the sense about the crapshoot, seeing that upon conception each child receives a random 50 percent of each their parents dna, but you are a straight up liar about she could have more, and Ancestry DNA doesn’t have a reliable database to compare it to. Native Americans all have a quite similar genetic signature, although varying, but there are detectable imprints upon their genetic signature peoples testing for it can detect despite the variations. Therefore the small percentage she received is more than likely correct in an estimation range wise.

    • @John-pu5kz
      @John-pu5kz 6 лет назад +3

      Sorry about your mom😞

    • @deviljho4260
      @deviljho4260 5 лет назад +2

      DNA tests are still highly inaccurate your supposedly believing in false information take everything with a side of salt.

  • @ChuckieCOT
    @ChuckieCOT 8 лет назад +5

    Great explanation, I came out with 18% Native American, was very happy to see I still have my native blood in me much stronger than I thought👍🏽

  • @cratorcic9362
    @cratorcic9362 3 года назад +4

    I can prove Shawnee ancestry... but that’s partially because one of my ancestors, Henry Lail, was captured by the Shawnee during the Revolutionary War at a young age. He married a woman who was the daughter of a French fur trader (who was most likely Métis, from research) and a Shawnee woman. However, this is a pretty well-documented historical event
    She’s so far back in my ancestry (7th-great-grandmother), that she wouldn’t specifically show up in my DNA test... however, if you test her matrilineal descendants (through my great-grandfather’s sisters, so my 3rd cousins of various removes), you can connect them within the MtDNA of Native Americans.
    Which is just a lucky break because there is such an unbroken female line connecting such a recent ancestor in my family tree to her.
    I do have other provable Native ancestry (ironically, through another mixed person, who was Black and Native). To be fair, though, it’s also because there was such a meticulous paper trail connecting him to me, in part because the guy sued for his freedom from slavery in the early 1700s and won.
    There’s another ancestor of Native descent, but, ironically, his white dad is the one whose identity is in question, not the Native mother, Pamunkey Chieftess Cockacoeske. Her half-white son, John West had a daughter I descend from. (This is one of eight different lines of descent I have through the West family, though).
    In all these cases, though, the stories not only line up, but the paper trail also still exists.
    The other confounding factor is that my family tree contains enough inbreeding that any given descendant is gonna be a random degree of descent from these more distant ancestors, some showing more Native and others showing less.
    Long story short, genetics is weird.

  • @TheGalooch
    @TheGalooch 7 лет назад +10

    I am of early French Canadian ancestry. The explorers and fur traders were my ancestors. In my family tree there are at least six 8th and 9th Native Great grandmothers documented. Native does not show up in my DNA but it does show up in the mirror!

    • @TheShootist
      @TheShootist 3 года назад +3

      you're going to need to do a MTDNA test in any case. Y-dna won't show your 9th great grandmothers.

    • @tantig5923
      @tantig5923 3 года назад +2

      I like that response!! I say that quite often to myself!!
      Who are you in the mirror?
      Some days I look Indigenous
      Some days I look Caribe
      Some days I look Africana
      Some days African American
      Some days I Look like Me lol🥰

  • @kittimcconnell2633
    @kittimcconnell2633 7 лет назад +6

    We had this story from both sides of my family. I got DNA testing for myself and my mother (father is 20 years deceased). 0.0% American Indian. I have .5% Sub-saharan African and my mother has a trace of Indian subcontinent. Since she is 78% British and Irish, I think her India connection is either an East Indies pirate or Roma. :)

    • @paulridenour1086
      @paulridenour1086 Год назад

      Ancestry does not test all of your DNA. GEDmatch does. You should upload your DNA to GEDmatch. We know my wife is Cherokee. Ancestry has her at 2% Native American (NA). GEDmatch has her at 3.42%. Ancestry said I have 0% NA. GEDmatch said I have 1.15% NA. Use GEDmatch!!!!

  • @tanyajuli4145
    @tanyajuli4145 8 лет назад +74

    The mythical Native American ancestor does seem very widespread. Given the history of how they were treated by governments, it's curious how having this in a family tree seems almost to give some borrowed legitimacy or nobility, doesn't it? I did a tree for a friend recently who also had this legend, but zero facts, and in fact both maternal and paternal sides were pretty well documented back to the old countries, even with lurid family stories that I was able to verify, zero trace of NA ancestry. In watching the various US and Brit shows like who do you think you are and the PBS program, you note all the celebrities with these myths--and that's what it turns out to be most of the time--myth. I wonder what Native Americans think about this weirdness.

    • @lewcipher358
      @lewcipher358 8 лет назад +3

      +Tanya Juli Please understand that the subjugation of the Native American people of the current United States wasn't merely moving them out west somewhere and separating them from the rest of society. A century of suppression of documentation was so successful that most people commenting here will say, "Oh, what a silly myth to believe!"

    • @tanyajuli4145
      @tanyajuli4145 7 лет назад +2

      I can tell you Rambo Mohawk that that is not the case for many tribes. The hopi for example. In some tribes, if your mother was not a member of the tribe, neither are you. Other tribes are extremely picky about who they consider tribal members or not whether money is involved or not.

    • @GypsyIndigoBlu
      @GypsyIndigoBlu 7 лет назад +2

      people so lost on word play... if you were born in the US then you are Native American DUH!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @boonespores4110
      @boonespores4110 6 лет назад +7

      In my opinion, I believe that myths and stories told by Non-natives( Those who claim to be, but really arent) give them a sence of "immunity" to the history atrocities done to Native Americans. I have heard the "Cherokee Princess" story over and over living in Oklahoma. It is sad, but at the same time it tells alot about how they think. They want people to see them as someone who's family suffered under the US government. They have no connections like benefits, healthcare, or profit sharing like a tribal member would get; but having a connection like a story gives them a sence of "entitlement". I am 3/16ths Fort Sill Apache. I would be considered white to everyone ( even myself), but I grew up being part of the tribe and its customs. Both of my maternal great grandparwnts were held as prisoners of war with Geronimo here in Lawton-Fort Sill, Oklahoma. I was raised to remember the times of hardship my family faced. Before being taken as prisoners, we had about 500 people in our "tribe" (The Chiricahua- Warm Springs Apache). The US government didnt realize that my ancestors were from different "bands", and still sent us all together by rail to St. Augustine, Florida and then to Mount Vernon, Alabama. Both times we were locked up in cells and shackles. After being incarcerated for 23 years in nasty conditions our tribe was finally released in 1915 at Fort Sill. At the time of release we only had 81 members, and we were no longer big enough to be considered a tribe. It wasnt until 1973? the Fort Sill Apaches were federally recognized as an official tribe. My great uncle Allan Haozous was the first Fort Sill Apache to be born outside of prison, and he went on to become Oklahoma's first cultural ambassador. I know most of my tribal history, and the furthes I can trace back is into the mid-1800s. That is with historical documentation. My great grandfathe Sam Haozous was the grandson of Mangas Coloradas, the first Warm Springs Apache leader to sign a treaty with America during the gold rush in Arizona. He rode with Geronimo in the Apache Wars against the US. No myths in my family, but I understand why some wish there were. And by the way, Geronimo never jumped from any cliff in Oklahoma. By the time he was transfered to OK from Alabama in 1896, he was already in his 70s... Sorry to dissapoint lol.

    • @missourired5204
      @missourired5204 5 лет назад

      Tanya Juli native raiding parties would capture white women to keep , some married & some were used as slaves & raped resulting in children.

  • @YangSing1
    @YangSing1 7 лет назад +19

    If Native Americans originated from East Asia, what is the difference between Native American and East Asian DNA?

    • @Suite_annamite
      @Suite_annamite 7 лет назад +4

      Certain genetic mutations started in northern and northeastern China (Manchuria), and started stretching along with patterns in Siberia; and I suppose that's where they became different.

    • @dathomierabbit5721
      @dathomierabbit5721 7 лет назад +3

      YangSing1 South Asia not east Asia

    • @GoldenBuffy
      @GoldenBuffy 6 лет назад +5

      When you say "Blacks say," that sounds as if you are including every single Black person in America. Which is so far from the truth. lol Yes, I am Black, and I am American, but do I believe that Black people as a whole are the original Natives to the Americas? Heck to the no.

    • @khasualentertainment6734
      @khasualentertainment6734 6 лет назад +1

      DontTreadOnMe IwontTreadOnYou well if you look at america and its people 5000 years ago itll be native but today its mixed n white. Just like 5000 years ago in Eygpt it was black but now its what.. The people changed over time from death to wars to invasions. Just like america. NA say whites invaded n stole land.. Same in Egypt. The people were black.

    • @khasualentertainment6734
      @khasualentertainment6734 6 лет назад

      Golden Buffy he a troll. I see him on every race comment page.. Saying the same

  • @karenhackbarth6423
    @karenhackbarth6423 4 года назад +2

    Thank you for this!!! This is why, when discussing my father's side of the family. I say my father's Native American ancestors. When people question this, I explain I'm heinz 57 (my color), red, white and blue 100% American. When asked for ethnicity on forms I write human being, red, white and blue.

    • @JimmyOgilvie52
      @JimmyOgilvie52 4 года назад

      Love it!! I've always said that I'm a "Heinz 57" too! Maybe we're related? LOL (I do have a 1st cousin who married a Hackbarth. lol)

  • @ruthwright6247
    @ruthwright6247 6 лет назад +15

    Thank you so much....I found this video to be quite helpful. My Native American DNA did show up in my AncestryDNA results but not in my Uncle and my Sister. This video helps me understand so much more than I did before. Thank you !

    • @paulridenour1086
      @paulridenour1086 Год назад +1

      Ancestry does not test all of your DNA. GEDmatch does. You should upload your DNA to GEDmatch. We know my wife is Cherokee. Ancestry has her at 2% Native American (NA). GEDmatch has her at 3.42%. Ancestry said I have 0% NA. GEDmatch said I have 1.15% NA. Use GEDmatch.

    • @ruthwright6247
      @ruthwright6247 Год назад +1

      @@paulridenour1086 yes I went to Gedmatch. Thank you

  • @dianamartinez9659
    @dianamartinez9659 8 лет назад +4

    Well, I was told David Kirk was my father, but never knew him. According to my Grandmother, He was a service man who cared for my mother and when he returned from the war, was going to marry her. So on my birth certificate shows her married and my father David Kirk. The marriage never happened. This I found when I was in my 40's. So now both my Mom and Grandmother passed, Mom being an only child. I do remember, while growing up, my mother would always say, "You have relatives in Spain, You're Castilian". So my hope is through this testing I may find this to be true. Won't that be exciting! Can;t wait to find someone who may know him.

  • @q.t.gamingfamily
    @q.t.gamingfamily 5 лет назад +4

    Let me begin, I love your video. Your explanation was very clear. I tried to explain this to a loved one who dismissed it when I tried explaining it before I finished. I hope your video gets further than I did. I’m thinking that it’s as true as is nearly all (if not all) African Americans have some European ancestry. I don’t find it so unheard of because we’re a mixed country. If the mixing was back in 1600s-1800s it won’t necessarily show up. Another is there are many unrecognized tribes and many tribes who are extinct (for a lack of a better word) who we don’t have a definitive dna sample to compare. I only have 0.3% Native American DNA with 1.1% unassigned. Maybe one day we’ll find out to whom that 1.1% is attributed.

  • @yprowe
    @yprowe 9 лет назад +6

    As of January 2015, the U.S. Federal government recognized 566 tribes (now 567 with the Pamunkey in Virginia), not thousands. There are still a significant number of state-recognized tribes across the country, many of which are not in the western portions of the United States. The Powhatan Confederacy wasn't located in what is now known as Oklahoma.

    • @AncestryUS
      @AncestryUS  9 лет назад

      +yprowe Well I certainly knew that. Sorry if I misspoke. :-) (Crista)

    • @yprowe
      @yprowe 8 лет назад

      I wasn't speaking of the Patawomomeck. I used the Pamunkey because they are more familiar to me; also, they had recently received Federal recognition. No disrespect intended to the Patawomeck.
      Many Eastern Woodlands tribes did what they must to survive, such as disassociating themselves. It is one reason why it is difficult to find some of the documentation. Another of those reasons was the practice of arbitrary designation by officials. My ancestors who were living off the reservation were labeled based on the assumptions/wishes of others.

  • @FutileGrief
    @FutileGrief 8 лет назад +29

    I wanted to take this test but am seriously doubting it, since they group all American ethnicities into one category. South America itself has an incredibly vast variety of indigenous ethnicities that if I get that background check only to be labelled "native american" I would feel like they're telling me the obvious and are over simplifying a result that deserves to be expanded and studied. Not taking the test until they include the other 2/3 of a continent they neglected to take into account which is central and south america. That is so typical.

    • @AncestryUS
      @AncestryUS  8 лет назад +14

      +ThatOnePerson Our Native American reference panel includes people from all Americas. As new information becomes available that allows scientists to distinguish between different populations, we will update the ethnicity estimates for our users.

    • @FutileGrief
      @FutileGrief 8 лет назад +3

      Ancestry
      Thank you for your answer, as I'm really interested in taking the test, but the way the information is expressed on the page makes people believe that the result "native american" could mean anything, from Chippawa to Muisca and everything in between. For example, where can I see a more detailed listing of the possible results within the "native american" spectrum? And could the results we get now be updated once the scientific data is greater?

    • @HairH2O
      @HairH2O 8 лет назад +1

      +ThatOnePerson I think the misconception is that there is only one native American tribe but there were several. Some came from Asia through Alaska Canada into America and Some came by boat by the South Pacific. The ones who came by boat were here longer. The tests are accurate but it is the tribe of native American you have to relate to.

    • @AncestryUS
      @AncestryUS  8 лет назад +5

      +ThatOnePerson Yes. As our scientists are able to update the ethnicity estimates your results will be updated automatically. No need to retake the test. (Crista)

    • @AncestryUS
      @AncestryUS  8 лет назад +7

      +HairH2O The vast majority of NA DNA is common - with no distinguishing markers. However, many who take the test and have NA DNA that shows up ALSO have Eastern Asian or Polynesian or some other ethnicity as part of their ethnic mix that when combined with the NA finding, allow them to distinguish. (Crista)

  • @joannathesinger770
    @joannathesinger770 2 года назад +3

    My grandfather told us when I was in my early teens that we were related to a specific someone...who was Native American...but since he couldn't provide specifics, we thought it was a "tall tale". Fast-forward to about 10 years ago when I decided to delve into genealogy and connected what I knew about my family to older established-and-recorded historical data from the colonial period...and...it wasn't a tall tale after all. It was through his mother's family so it had been passed down verbally through the family for 300 years. He just hadn't been taught the specifics.
    And...while Ancestry doesn't show I have Native American...my very same Ancestry DNA results have been uploaded to 23andMe and Gedmatch and they both show me to have about 1.65% Native American ancestry...which is about what I would suspect considering the time that has passed. Sometimes it's in the algorithms.

    • @LittleImpaler
      @LittleImpaler 10 месяцев назад

      Where is gedmatch test. Couldn't find it.

    • @joannathesinger770
      @joannathesinger770 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@LittleImpaler it's not a test. It's a website and you can upload your test results from ANY DNA testing company to it to compare your DNA to others who have tested at other companies. They also have VERY interesting and useful tools there that are helpful that no other company has.

  • @FireWolfRN
    @FireWolfRN 8 лет назад +4

    Ancestry and DNA is still a relatively new and fascinating field. As time progresses and more people are tested I think it will become more accurate. Your explanation was truly easy to understand. Sadly there are so many of us in these last few generations that do not have accurate birth certificates, marriage and remarriage and so much else pulls us away from our roots.

  • @janetruggles6926
    @janetruggles6926 8 лет назад +12

    This explains a lot, why I'm blond and white skinned, and my first brother had dark brown to black hair, brown skin, second brother has sandy hair white skin, and then my youngest brother, is red headed, white skin, and short, (the other brothers are vary tall like our Father, and the youngest looks like my Mother's family's side.

    • @lisabaltzer3163
      @lisabaltzer3163 8 лет назад +2

      janet ruggles Sounds like my family.

    • @BadgerCheese94
      @BadgerCheese94 8 лет назад +3

      My grandma's side is mixed Native American, Spanish and Dutch. My grandma has dark skin and green eyes. Her sister, is very light skinned with bluish green eyes.
      I personally only recorded 1% Native American.

    • @ryanwhoadie7843
      @ryanwhoadie7843 7 лет назад +1

      janet ruggles ohhh god now this old bitch is gonna thanks she is native now

    • @denise3422
      @denise3422 7 лет назад

      See white people don't even want to be all white...lol people study geography the continent's thousands of years ago was connected this meant you could cross land from Africa to the Americas. Black or dark skinned people were here before Columbus that is a fact.

    • @donnaritch4934
      @donnaritch4934 6 лет назад

      Denise, the Vikings were here as well hundreds of years prior to Columbus. Anyways, not all white people don't want to be white..maybe some but not all. My family on both sides were here well before the Amer. Rev. so they've been here for some time. One side has been here since the Mayflower days. I am proud of all of my heritage, most of which I sorta knew from doing my family genealogy. I did not expect any Native American in my results even tho there was the typical GG+ mother on my dad's side who was supposedly N/A. On my Mother's side, she claimed there was some French.. both sides, I found no documented evidence. When my results came in, there was 0% French and a smidgen of Nat. Amer. and I did the GEDMatch and it showed 2.38% along with other various Asian ethnicities. So, I was surprised to see that any showed up all. Genetics is fascinating.

  • @TH-iv9qf
    @TH-iv9qf 3 года назад +2

    Very intelligent, not many understand or accept the truth. I have NEVER understood DNA or science that well in the past, but I believe my brother has more native American than me. My two children who are both Cherokee and Creek look completely different. My son carrys more native ancestry/traits than my daughter but she STILL is Cherokee and Creek also. Both my mom and dad and their father's (my grandfather's) were Cherokee Indian. I married a Creek Indian. So my children have both, however they also have European ancestry, so do I. I passed down certain traits to all my children, but two of my children who are from two native tribes combined look completely different. Your explanation is backed by science but I always understood it from my soul. Thank you for the knowledge. Just wish people could accept the truth instead of lies. DNA doesn't lie!!!!

  • @theburningelement.6447
    @theburningelement.6447 2 года назад +5

    My native American showed up it was only 1% but guss what, it still showed up

  • @Hevynly1
    @Hevynly1 8 лет назад +11

    Interesting! I was shocked to find out I had Native American ancestry... not because I took a DNA test, but luckily because I was able to go back that far in my tree, when the French first came to Canada. I found it so cool!

    • @dathomierabbit5721
      @dathomierabbit5721 7 лет назад +2

      Hevynly1 yeah whatever you're probably 5% at most if you have to go that far back

  • @michaelwolff1694
    @michaelwolff1694 10 месяцев назад +1

    I got my DNA done through you folks.... no Native showed up. However, I had my results analyzed by several other companies, and the Native connection DID show up, albeit, very little. We had NO stories in our family, of Native great, great grand parents or anything like that... but when I did my paper trail research, I found a possible connection to Natives... but still not 100% sure where it came from. Also detected by other DNA companies, was Native DNA from Greenland; again, very little, but I suspect it came by way of my Norse connection, that settled there.

  • @WhitJielle
    @WhitJielle 6 лет назад +5

    According to my grandmother we have many native ancestors just 4 or 5 tiers above me. I've always been curious because I love the spiritual and cultural practices that Native communities maintain. From what I understand, the one way for me to be able to visit these communities is to prove relation. I would love to spend time on a res and learn more about the TRUE history of these natives as well as be able to experience the scared energy that, hopefully, remains at these sights. Also, I think it would be useful in understanding my metaphysical self and spiritual abilities that run through our bloodline.

    • @jr.solaris253
      @jr.solaris253 2 года назад

      Don't forget to also state the obvious. You have African traits.

  • @malenatully
    @malenatully 5 лет назад +4

    According to my father, our family has a small amount of Mexican. I would like to venture out and do an DNA test. I have no doubts, I am full Native American. I honestly think I was reincarnated, my dreams are places I never been, nor the food I eat. I feel misplaced in this era. Definitely, I would like to get results.

  • @elizabethanderson5163
    @elizabethanderson5163 5 лет назад +2

    I was never told I had any Native but took the test and found out I did! I was quite surprised. I was able to trace my ancestor and she was of the Mi'kmaq tribe in Nova Scotia. I have some Native facial features and kids used to ask if I was Chinese as a kid lol. I don't look Chinese but my eyes do look a bit Asian or Inuit and my facial structure looks Nativeish. But I am mostly Norwegian, German, Dutch, French and Scottish.

  • @SOP83
    @SOP83 6 лет назад +7

    I tested ~3% and my mom tested the same ~3%
    I wish my grandparents on my mom's side were still alive. This stuff is very interesting, every percent is a piece of who you are and should be cherished. I only wish I knew more about family further back than my great grandparents, but unfortunately nobody knows anything about them it seems. I'd love to see a picture of the native ancestor and know his/her name.

  • @RocsGirl
    @RocsGirl 6 лет назад +3

    I seen identical twins results... They didn't get the same results and they wondered why. From then I understood the %ages. This is another great analogy.

  • @jeffmorse645
    @jeffmorse645 6 лет назад +34

    Ancestry DNA says I'm 1% Native American. It says I'm 98% European and 83% is Great Britain. That's my heritage and that's my culture - not the measly 1% NA. I think its ridiculous to try to claim these tiny fragments as something important to your makeup. When I walk down the street people see a blue eyed, fair haired white guy. My surname is English. That's what I am and I'm perfectly happy with that. Oh, and I do have a sister who thinks she's a Cherokee princess or something with all the Native American art and knick knacks all over her house. Whatever.

    • @JuiceJ443
      @JuiceJ443 6 лет назад

      There was a native American she did a video on that last name was English. Maybe you are related

    • @jaqueswilliams5192
      @jaqueswilliams5192 5 лет назад +9

      Your last name doesn’t define your ethnicity. That’s just your dads dads ethnicity

    • @darrylb9872
      @darrylb9872 5 лет назад +11

      I embrace all parts of my DNA and don't see anything wrong with that. Your 1% NA came from an ancestor of yours.

    • @JimmyOgilvie52
      @JimmyOgilvie52 5 лет назад +2

      Sounds familiar. lol

    • @deborahyoung1873
      @deborahyoung1873 4 года назад +6

      @@darrylb9872 it still doesn't mean they are Native American.

  • @bertocisneros4721
    @bertocisneros4721 6 лет назад +11

    "mines did" thirty-six percent Native American and it indicates straight to New Mexico which corresponds to my family history of our Pueblo ancestry (of course with a similar amount of Hispanic/Spaniard too)....that's from Ancestry

    • @davidlyons6235
      @davidlyons6235 6 лет назад

      My Great Grandfather was a sheepherder in a little territory called El Rancho de Taos. I haven't taken the test, but my son did and it showed 8% Native American(New Mexico) for him. I plan on getting the test done too.

  • @FollowingTheDream455
    @FollowingTheDream455 10 месяцев назад +1

    My dad's family told me that my great great grandmother was part Akwesasne Mohawk from Canada. I inherited no Mohawk DNA, instead my DNA percentages are: 54% NorthEastern Europe and English, 16% Scottish, 14% Irish, 5% Basque, 4% Welsh 2% Spanish, 2% Benin and Togo(West Africa) , 1% Mali(West Africa), 1% Senegal( West Africa), 1% Germanic Europe(some Ashkenazi Jew ancestry from Bavaria. My father's family DOES have members who I actually know are relatives, and most of them have very small percentages of indigenous American, about anywhere from 1-5%. There is one member who lives in Quebec, Canada, who has 40% Indigenous American DNA. The relatives who have very little DNA are a generation or two above me, and my great grandma wasn't full Akwesasne, so I'm guessing that probably wasn't enough Indigenous American DNA to be passed down to me.

  • @405boy4
    @405boy4 6 лет назад +6

    See I noticed from watching a lot of black celebrities who did it they found like 0-3% Native American. When my results came back it didn't show any Native American in m despite me I knowing that my Great-Great Grandfather was half black/half Chickasaw Indian from Arkansas.BTW, I'm from Oklahoma and two of my five kids are mixed(Black/White/Choctaw and Chickasaw Indian). Well I only did my oldest daughter and I'm still waiting on her results to come back as her mother has stronger Native American lineage than I do. In fact She gets benefits for my kids and other helpful programs for school clothing and supplies, Tribal clothing and even a future ttwo-year college scholarship program for 4-year schools. But yea I can't wait til her results come back.

  • @grbegay
    @grbegay 8 лет назад +6

    There is another possibility. Your Native American great great grandfather may have been hanging around with a Native American tribe and while not full Native American, was counted as full when the tribal roll was taken and documented. My great great grandfather is on the Caddo roll as full. Yet, it is likely he also had French and Delaware ancestry. My other tribal ancestry is Navajo (Dineh). My people likely originated in Asia way way back. My sister had the DNA test and there was an Asian component. I *know* my ancestry - Navajo, Caddo and hispanic. It is documented. It doesn't exactly match the dna test (that my sister had), but it is who I am.

  • @senorguzman8
    @senorguzman8 Год назад +2

    Doesn’t seem to be many videos online with natives and African mixed ancestry. Which I find quite odd when we know the relationships that natives had with African and Scottish both being high in number. It seems as though if you did not mix with a European you can’t claim your mixed ancestry

  • @DirectorCM
    @DirectorCM 2 года назад +5

    Just got my results back today, my father's mother was full blooded Comanche. My results showed that I am 30% Indigenous Americas-North. Suffice to say I was relieved to find out that my whole life was not built on lies lol

    • @lauraobregon1686
      @lauraobregon1686 Год назад

      So does that mean she was full blooded? How does that math work 😅

  • @darrenurie8295
    @darrenurie8295 8 лет назад +29

    A lot of time some natives didn't fess up to being natives, like on the Dawes roll

    • @fishinwidow35
      @fishinwidow35 3 года назад

      My grandparents didn't so they could get good jobs

  • @thewildonespersevere6506
    @thewildonespersevere6506 6 лет назад +2

    My dads side thought that my great great great paternal grandparents were Cherokee. As it turns out, my great papaw grew up believing these people were his grandparents, but in reality his biological grandparents had died before he was born. The Cherokee grandparents were essentially his "adopted" grandparents, and he died never knowing.

  • @IamEddieLee
    @IamEddieLee 8 лет назад +94

    In my family, some folks claim to be Native (likely Choctaw), but I ain't buyin' it. Even more claim to be Creole. I ain't buying that either

    • @kiechawnbush8162
      @kiechawnbush8162 8 лет назад +20

      I am not buying the native American story in my family

    • @avaadorey1
      @avaadorey1 8 лет назад +5

      Same

    • @solomonthell7589
      @solomonthell7589 7 лет назад +10

      Creole isn't a race so wth?

    • @kathrynroskow5062
      @kathrynroskow5062 7 лет назад +13

      Nor is Native American. So what's your point?

    • @KenDSigma
      @KenDSigma 7 лет назад +14

      Just tell them they can call themselves what they want; but, you are the ORIGINAL MAN. (the Blackman). Everything else is pseudo-European inventions. lol

  • @priscillac.9428
    @priscillac.9428 8 лет назад +4

    Nice video! I did my DNA came out 49% Native American although I thought it would be less because of my father's side. There were the stories that get past down and I just had to know for sure..very exciting!

  • @deer105
    @deer105 3 года назад +1

    I have a similar story. The ancestor is identified and we have photographs of her. She was my ancestor 5 generations back and was supposedly Cherokee living in the Ozark region of Arkansas. Neither my mother, myself or my daughter have DNA recognized as Native DNA.

  • @robertstigers311
    @robertstigers311 5 лет назад +10

    Thank you for explaining this, I have been wondering about the portions of inheritance. My dad had eight siblings, and we have been trying to wrap our minds around several of my aunt's results. You explained it well

  • @kaleahcollins4531
    @kaleahcollins4531 6 лет назад +8

    Thank you for clearing this up because ppl debate me on how dna genetics really wrks. Though it wasn't inherited its still in the blood line

  • @lindagervais2945
    @lindagervais2945 6 лет назад +1

    Same here I'm waiting on seeing our family photo my grandma with a cherokee Indian princess. Glad I listened.