Originally posted by schnook
View Post
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Really, no matches in 4 years???
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by schnook View PostIf it makes you feel better, I was raised in Ireland to Irish parents and I got a lack of results too. My predicted haplogroup is allegedly the biggest in western Europe but apparently I'm still rare enough to not get many matches. Frustrating, but you're not alone.
And yes, GEDmatch might help. A lot of people go with 23andMe for health reports so there might be some people with your haplogroup there!
Comment
-
Originally posted by schnook View PostThat is ridiculous. Seriously, R-M269 is so common, why the lack of genetic matches?!
2. The ethnic/geographic ancestry of your paternal line may be uncommon in the database, which would be a factor.
3. A combination of 1 and 2.
Look at it this way. Once you do get any matches, it's more likely that they're meaningful, even at the 12 marker level. Think of other R-M269 men who may get literally hundreds of matches at 12 markers and dozens at 25 markers, most of which are meaningless. Would you rather have that situation?
I'm R1b-U106 and had no matches at all for a few years. I have 4 off-modal markers among the first 12. Then I found a 42/43 match in the Ancestry.com database and he retested here. We're now a 104/111 match. I do have a 11/12 match beside him, but that match falls away at 25 markers. The 104/111 match is still my only significant match and that's fine with me.
Comment
-
I have to agree with MMaddi on this one:
Look at it this way. Once you do get any matches, it's more likely that they're meaningful, even at the 12 marker level. Think of other R-M269 men who may get literally hundreds of matches at 12 markers and dozens at 25 markers, most of which are meaningless. Would you rather have that situation?
Meanwhile my son is an Irish R-M269 known L226, has 28 pages of 12 marker matches and not a single one is a surname match. It's a less common Irish name, Frawley, which I guess must contribute to the lack of surname matches.
Anyway, my grandpa carries the the fairly uncommon CTS1751 terminal snp, which has lots of representation in Ireland and may have started there. Here's more info about it with a way to check for it if you are tested elsewhere:
Good luck!
Comment
-
Really, no matches in 4 years
Originally posted by 850200 View PostReally, no matches in 4 years since I got tested in the program? Hearing that your DNA is unique and nobody else tested that comes up resembling your DNA is not what you want to hear when you're researching your haplogroup.
In my project (a large one for a common, multi-origin surname) between 5% & 8% have no close Y-DNA matches as reported by FTDNA. OOTH, about the same percentage have too many matches -- hundreds at 67 markers.
I'm investigating the why of both ends of this spectrum. It's a complicated business, but some haplotypes seem to be very common (e.g., WAMH) and others rare. The first step is to come up with a way to quantify this other than "matches" which is very fuzzy.
Someone mentioned haplogroup. Some haplogroups (e.g., A, N & O) are under-represented in the databases because few have tested. If you're in one of those, you're less likely to find matches by chance.
Four years isn't that long for a less-common haplotype. I've had members who got their first match 10 years after testing. I'd advise hangin there and checking periodically.
Comment
Comment