Very sorry to hear this. I have read both her previous books, and look forward to her last.
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Type: Posts; User: Grubbe
Very sorry to hear this. I have read both her previous books, and look forward to her last.
https://rd.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12520-018-0609-7 The Hungarian king Bela III has been tested to be R1a - maybe Z280 or M458?
Thanks again.
Have they found other archaic admixture in Africans, that non-Africans don't have? Because they still haven't found any Neanderthal or Denisovan DNA in Africans?
I definitely agree.
Yes, I will try the Anthrogenica forum. Thanks!
OK, thanks. I really haven't read the full Supplementary info before, only bits and pieces. If I had, I would have clearly seen that the Basal Eurasians were discussed.
What made it so...
Yes - the previous paper. This is from this month, and seems to have something new, about a "basal Eurasian population".
New article in "Nature"
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v513/n7518/full/nature13673.html
"We sequenced the genomes of a ~7,000-year-old farmer from Germany and eight ~8,000-year-old...
My father's result:
EEF
41,18706
WHG
42,03763
My result, all Norwegian back to the middle of the 17. century, when I connect to a few Danes, Finns, Germans and Dutch:
EEF: 42,57355725
WHG: 40,99924797
ANE: 16,42719478
I tried all the different calculators at GEDmatch. Eurogenes was most in accordance with my myOrigins results at FTDNA for myself and two of my closest relatives. Dodecad was the least accurate,...
My result:
North Sea 22,16 %
Fennoscandian 19,57 %
North Atlantic 15,18 %
East Central Euro 9,01 %
Central Euro 7,71 %
French 7,51 %
Iberian 7,34 %
North Caucasian 4,10 %
To me, 1645 is "recent"! ;-) And it is within the 500 years of 23andme.
Nope, he belonged to the "school" of Viennese Classicism.
Do you have any recent ancestors that you know of from these areas? If not, it seems also 23andme could go further back than 500 years? I haven't tested with them myself, so I can't compare.
Thank you. I didn't think of paternal lines here, though. I mentioned NC because I have a couple of known Forest Finns families among my ancestors in the 17. century. I have not any NC in myOrigins,...
A 2nd cousin could be just that, but in my experience my 2nd-4th cousin matches are often a few generations further back, due to multiple lines from one or a few common ancestors back in the 17. or...
Since there are quite a few dark haired people in the Scandinavian countries today, I presume many of these viking folks liked brunettes too! :-) More than sexual selection for specific traits, I...
OK, if I understand this correctly: A certain % of North Circumpolar might be an influence streching back to 10 000 years, but it could also be much more recent (depending on the known papertrail).
I don't remember reading anything about "noise threshold" in myOrigins yet. You could try posting your question at the FTDNA forums, if you haven't already.
Yes, I am pretty sure at least some of the results must go back (far) more than 500 years.
I forgot to mention in my previous post (#9) that of course the vikings brought back to Norway quite a...
At least the Forest Finns who came to Norway via Sweden in the 17. century were overwhelmingly N1c, at least from FTDNA results so far. Most of them came from the northeastern part of Finland, I have...
Very interesting! Did any of you take the Family Finder test at FDNA? Their new myOrigins (earlier Population Finder) might reveal where the L came from.
Kings could get away with anything - because they were kings. Other people had to behave, if they wanted to keep their head. Even so: Some monarchs were homosexuals, but others had lots of...