Can you find a family tree for Paul that connects him to Claude? I'm having trouble doing so. I may put him in the maybes if I see something a bit more convincing.
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Type: Posts; User: sparkey
Can you find a family tree for Paul that connects him to Claude? I'm having trouble doing so. I may put him in the maybes if I see something a bit more convincing.
Probably multiple migrations because it is a bit old. A nontrivial amount probably came with the Anglo-Saxon. (But your particular I2a-Isles-B sample, if that's what you are, does not look insular at...
This thread is about P310*, rather than P310 as a whole. Don't confuse P310+ with P310*. P310+ means P310+ without implying anything about downstream SNPs. P310* means P310+ P312- U106-. The Irish...
It's the older, largely continental branch of the otherwise insular I2a-Isles branch. But before you do too much research on it, you should confirm what your subclade actually is with Bernie Cullen....
British Isles? My money is on France, probably coming to America as Huguenots. Nowadays, Loreau is a particularly common surname in the Loire-Atlantique department, which is just a couple departments...
NW, let me try to understand your argument better, because you said you'd cite examples, but I'm having trouble pulling anything specific out of your screed.
You believe that explicitly...
I am completely certain that you match with the Lorah family. If your last name is Lowery, that's particularly interesting, because it would seem that your family name was Anglicized to Lowery from...
My guess is that Doggerland disappeared too long ago for a connection in this case. The AS4/AS7E/P/M227 branch hooks back up with the large Nordic L22 branch (probably originated in Denmark or...
Feminists can be nuts when it comes to trying to prove a point by appealing to biology. I've seriously read an argument recently that human sexual dimorphism is a result of social pressure alone....
If you're mainly interested in Y-DNA, go for FTDNA. They let you do follow-up tests that get into the details of your precise haplogroup. They also have a larger private Y-DNA database, and more...
I hate word redefinition in political philosophy (misuse of the terms "rights" and "justice" really get to me), but I don't think that is what is happening here. "Gay marriage" is simple a...
M227 is interesting because it's on the same branch as I1-P/AS4/AS7E, the one with the non-Germanic feel to much of its distribution, but it's a greater outlier than the others, and its TMRCA is...
Y-DNA isn't likely to determine whole personality types (nor is blood type for that matter), but it seems almost unavoidable that it has some effect on certain attributes that affect personality....
Nordtvedt's own estimates are constantly changing, although that's not necessarily because STR estimation is hopelessly flawed. The error bars resulting from STR dating are known and usually provided...
A new linguistics paper from Pagel et al. is making a splash by reconstructing a family tree of different language families, including Dravidian, Kartvelian, Uralic, Indo-European, Altaic, and others...
Looks to be mtDNA. Other sites are quoting:
Apparently mtDNA I2 has been found in Turkey before (Fernandes 2012), but I don't know about Egypt.
Your suggestions would make more sense if the Dinaric branch of I2a and I2a were equivalent, but they're not. I2a-Din is far downstream of I2a itself (assuming you define I2a as P37.2+ here). It's...
2 - more peaceful than average, I2c.
M423 is the SNP common to the Dinaric/Disles and Isles subclades of I2a. Does that help?
You're over-interpreting Nordtvedt's schematic map. It isn't intended to show the precise geographic branching locations of M26 across its history, it's only, as Nordtvedt says, a "schematic, don't...
Do they say how they know? He would be the only non-I2 I've seen in his particular Colbert line, which would indicate a NPE fairly recently in his family if they have proof that he's R1b, like...
Hold your horses, this...
...is speculative and very likely incorrect. We have a couple of ancient samples from LBK, one of which was G2a, and the other was some sort of F, but not R1b (Haak...
Not sure about the Cimbri, but I've read that the Suebi left remnants. Anyway, my point wasn't that by 111BCE, the Celts were replaced by Germanic peoples, I used that date to mark the beginning of...
The Cimbri at first, and shortly after, the tribes commanded by Ariovistus (Suebi, Nemetes, Harudes...). The later Alemanni were probably related to, or even largely identical to, the Suebi of the...
What is now Southwestern Germany would have been dominated by Helvetii and similar Celts until circa 111 BCE. After that, the region received many assorted Germanic migrations... but the lack of...