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Post by Διαμονδ on Oct 7, 2017 23:12:49 GMT
I'm curious to know what your happlogroup is! Unfortunately, I have not yet passed the test, but I know that in those places where I have a father's roots, there are R1a-M458 and I2a1b-L621
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Dominicanese
Full Member
Posts: 348
Likes: 358
Country: Dominican Republic
Ancestry: Western Europe, West Africa, The Caribbean
Taxonomy: Atlantid + Sudanid
Y-DNA: R-L51
mtDNA: L1c2b1
Age: 25
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Post by Dominicanese on Dec 9, 2017 14:48:59 GMT
R-L51 (R1b1a1a2a1)
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Post by Διαμονδ on Dec 9, 2017 18:28:23 GMT
In what region of Europe spread this subclade?
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Dominicanese
Full Member
Posts: 348
Likes: 358
Country: Dominican Republic
Ancestry: Western Europe, West Africa, The Caribbean
Taxonomy: Atlantid + Sudanid
Y-DNA: R-L51
mtDNA: L1c2b1
Age: 25
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Post by Dominicanese on Dec 9, 2017 19:50:41 GMT
In what region of Europe spread this subclade? R-L51* (R1b1a1a2a1*) is now concentrated in a geographical cluster centred on southern France and northern Italy. but it spread from west europe to central europe its of Celtic origin
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Dominicanese
Full Member
Posts: 348
Likes: 358
Country: Dominican Republic
Ancestry: Western Europe, West Africa, The Caribbean
Taxonomy: Atlantid + Sudanid
Y-DNA: R-L51
mtDNA: L1c2b1
Age: 25
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Post by Dominicanese on Dec 9, 2017 21:22:34 GMT
good thing about haplogroups it shows how related we all are
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Post by Διαμονδ on Dec 9, 2017 21:53:52 GMT
good thing about haplogroups it shows how related we all are Yes! But the emergence of haplogroups was a long time ago, Several thousand years ago and more! There are many different theories about that.
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Dominicanese
Full Member
Posts: 348
Likes: 358
Country: Dominican Republic
Ancestry: Western Europe, West Africa, The Caribbean
Taxonomy: Atlantid + Sudanid
Y-DNA: R-L51
mtDNA: L1c2b1
Age: 25
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Post by Dominicanese on Dec 9, 2017 22:21:43 GMT
good thing about haplogroups it shows how related we all are Yes! But the emergence of haplogroups was a long time ago, Several thousand years ago and more! There are many different theories about that. yeah it is strange i still do not fully understand how that works because one thing iv noticed about haplogroups is that they vary with years and if thats the case how did we all emerge? the question in of itself is a little hard to explain but one thing i can add is that everyone alive today who is of euro ancestry (little or fully) are all related to each other 64 generations ago in rome, i saw in a doc
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Post by Διαμονδ on Dec 9, 2017 22:27:43 GMT
Yes! But the emergence of haplogroups was a long time ago, Several thousand years ago and more! There are many different theories about that. yeah it is strange i still do not fully understand how that works because one thing iv noticed about haplogroups is that they vary with years and if thats the case how did we all emerge? the question in of itself is a little hard to explain but one thing i can add is that everyone alive today who is of euro ancestry (little or fully) are all related to each other 64 generations ago in rome, i saw in a doc Just before it was a lot less people than now. Also some haplogroup died out completely in the male line, and their descendants are a more modern mutation. Overall mtDNA in my opinion, even more interesting than the paternal line. More from the point of view of history than genetics.
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backdrop12
New Member
Posts: 28
Likes: 23
Y-DNA: G-L497
mtDNA: T2f1
Politics: Green
Religion: Unitarian Universalist
Age: 23
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Post by backdrop12 on Dec 13, 2017 21:49:10 GMT
G-L497
Prometheus also states that I have traces of haplotype I (P38+. No upper or lower sublades) .
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Post by Διαμονδ on Dec 13, 2017 23:21:04 GMT
G-L497 Prometheus also states that I have traces of haplotype I (P38+. No upper or lower sublades) . Haplotype I just belong to the ancient European population! Almost every European family there is a trace! arktos.boards.net/thread/758/haplogroup Haplotype G - This middle Eastern population! The early migrants from the Middle East to Europe!
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Post by guachelin on Oct 10, 2018 3:40:48 GMT
I'm curious to know what your happlogroup is! Unfortunately, I have not yet passed the test, but I know that in those places where I have a father's roots, there are R1a-M458 and I2a1b-L621 Don't be afraid or a cheapskate.
Join www.familytreedna.com search for your surname project. Join, Test at least Y37. better yet spring for Big Y it tests YDNA SNPs and STRs (500 of them).
Myself I am R-BY27595 or in long form R-Z93>YP5585>YP5578>BY30053>Y28816>YP59505>BY27595 (the last appeared about 150 years ago with the birth of my great grandfather.
In ISOGG terms (International Society of Genetic Genealogists). I am R1a1a1b2h1a1a1b
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