domogled
Regular Member
- Messages
- 43
- Reaction score
- 18
- Points
- 8
- Location
- Bristol
- Ethnic group
- Southern European 100%;Greek&Balkan 100%
- Y-DNA haplogroup
- E-Y188867
- mtDNA haplogroup
- T2f1a1*
JajarBingan, that makes sense only if I am curious about more recent connections with newer relatives, i guess a higher number of relatives with all 4 grandparents in the same country is telling you a story closer to present time, perhaps one stretching back to the last 200 years. My main curiosity lays between 2800 years ago (TMRCA of my last known subclade) and maybe 300-400 years ago. My main focus is on the deeper roots, I have a pretty decent image regarding the relatives up to great great parents, but from that point backwards is where the things gets blurred and I think the dots I connected earlier might tell an older story, exactly what I am more keen to find.
But i can try such a chart of course
1 grandparent:
4 grandparents:
The top5 connections with samples having all 4 grandparents in the same country relative to that country number of inhabitants is:
1.Romania: 0.0000036659
2.Croatia: 0.0000019258
3.Greece: 0.0000012999
4.Serbia: 0.0000009969
5.Bulgaria: 0.0000009856
Thanks for sharing such interesting results, your discovery regarding the unlocking of the beta section was simply spot on, and it just opened new research directions for me.
I am highly appreciative regarding your will and commitment to share new findings...much appreciated sir.
But i can try such a chart of course
1 grandparent:
- United States of America (225)
- Romania (110)
- Poland (40)
- Greece (36)
- Ukraine (32)
- Canada (31)
- Italy (28)
- Croatia (27)
- Germany (26)
- Russia (24)
- Hungary (22)
- Slovakia (22)
- Bulgaria (19)
- Austria (17)
- Serbia (15)
- United Kingdom (14)
- Bosnia and Herzegovina (11)
- Ireland (9)
- Turkey (9)
- Belarus (7)
4 grandparents:
- Romania (72) 0.0000036659
- United States of America (66) 0.0000002026
- Greece (14) 0.0000012999
- Croatia (8) 0.0000019258
- Poland (7) 0.0000001843
- Bulgaria (7) 0.0000009856
- Serbia (7) 0.0000009969
- Canada (5) 0.0000001346
- Italy (4) 0.000000066
- Slovakia (4) 0.000000736
- Bosnia and Herzegovina (3) 0.0000008554
- Ukraine (3) 0.0000000669
- Austria (2) 0.0000002279721874
- Germany (2) 0.0000000241575069
- Turkey (2) 0.0000000250595164
- Hungary (1) 0.0000002044780697
- Russia (1) 0.0000000069204152
- Ireland (0)
- United Kingdom (0)
- Belarus (0)
The top5 connections with samples having all 4 grandparents in the same country relative to that country number of inhabitants is:
1.Romania: 0.0000036659
2.Croatia: 0.0000019258
3.Greece: 0.0000012999
4.Serbia: 0.0000009969
5.Bulgaria: 0.0000009856
Thanks for sharing such interesting results, your discovery regarding the unlocking of the beta section was simply spot on, and it just opened new research directions for me.
I am highly appreciative regarding your will and commitment to share new findings...much appreciated sir.
For the relatives, I suggest filtering to 4 grandparents.
Here's a personal example:
Russia - 60 relatives; with 4 grandparents - 0
Germany - 28; with 4gp - 0
So for me the distribution of relatives (without the New World) overall looks like this:
Poland (74)
Ukraine (66)
Russia (60)
Romania (43)
Germany (28)
Hungary (21)
Austria (20)
Italy (18)
Slovakia (16)
United Kingdom (15)
Lithuania (13)
Greece (11)
Belarus (10)
Croatia (9)
Czechia (7)
Moldova (7)
Serbia (7)
France (6)
But when that's filtered down to 4 grandparents, it suddenly makes more sense:
Romania (26)
Poland (15)
Ukraine (12)
Moldova (5)
Hungary (4)
Serbia (4)
Greece (4)
Belarus (3)
United Kingdom (3)
Croatia (2)
Slovakia (2)
Austria (2)
Italy (2)
France (2)
Lithuania (1)
Czechia (0)
Germany (0)
Russia (0)
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