Yeah I absolutely agree. My family is Croatian from Bosnia, and are a microcosm of that. My mother is fair, blonde, blue-eyed, with a round face, you would call her stereotypically Polish. My father on the other hand is tall, broad shouldered, with a dark complexion, and longer head shape (I guess Dinaric?) but he wouldn't be out of place in any Mediterranean country. I'm not too sure if saying South Slavs are mixed with Albanians is right though. According to my K36, I'm closer to Hungarians and Romanians than I am to Albanians. However, it gets a little weird, and I wonder if anyone here could unravel this for me.
My K15 two population sharing is as follows:
# |
|
Primary Population (source) |
Secondary Population (source) |
Distance |
1 |
|
55.7% |
Greek |
+ |
44.3% |
Estonian_Polish |
@ |
7.96 |
2 |
|
52.9% |
Greek |
+ |
47.1% |
Russian_Smolensk |
@ |
8.27 |
3 |
|
56.4% |
Greek |
+ |
43.6% |
Belorussian |
@ |
8.39 |
So would the Greek be a Paleo-Balkan group of some kind? Because I doubt I have Greek heritage... And the Estonian/Polish/Russian/etc would that be Slavic?
I'm also a little confused because according to my K15 results I look to be much more "Slavic" with the higher Baltic and East Euro, not too sure what "Atlantic" is?
#PopulationPercent
1Baltic21.86
2Atlantic21.66
3Eastern_Euro14.1
4West_Med13.97
5East_Med13.53
6North_Sea7.37
7West_Asian4.34
8South_Asian1.49
9Siberian0.84
10Amerindian0.51
11Red_Sea0.32
I'm curious why people are heavily relying on haplogroup data still? I could well be wrong, but from what I've come to understand haplogroups don't exactly mean much in terms of a persons heritage, and that autosomal data is much more important?
* * * * *
Also, earlier in this thread I talked about how the Illyrians seem to have dwindled, and nearly vanished. Well I read the conclusion of Wilkes book about Illyrians, and it seems the South Slavs may have inherited several Illyrian customs: such as the way they made bread, the Kolo dance which may come from an Illyrian tradition, and tattooing in the region (famous among my own people - look up Bosnian Croat tattoos) among other things. He says, this isn't necessarily due to intermixing of the population by blood, but some cultural inheritance which could have spread throughout the region.