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Thoughts About 16519??

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  • #46
    Oh, ok! Got it.

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    • #47
      Originally posted by rainbow
      I am an H 16519C. I live in Florida. My great great great great grandmother was from Virginia/North Carolina. Her fathers surname originated from Cornwall. I didn't know if her mom was also English or Native American. Since the test came back as H, I now know the mother was most likely also from Cornwall, England.
      Is H 16519C found in Cornwall, England? Is Cornwall considered a 'trade spot'/'trade route'? I read that Phoenicians liked the tin from that area. Maybe there is Phoenician mixed in in my line?
      My mom has very wild curly dark hair & eyes. Someday I'll like to get the 'autosomal' test done. Maybe there is some American Indian there somewhere. Or gypsy? I read the thread about English gypsies. She thinks I'm part Mongolian or Hun on my fathers side.
      hi rainbow again I have been trying to figure a few things for myself.. if we came from the rising of the sun like my gggg grandfather said.. then I have been trying to figure out by who is in known pheoncians areas and from places slaves went back from here .. so which dna most likely got here really early .. I do not know who is claiming to be native and are being told they are not yet .. .. but I doubt they get many U5b2 with inca bones to back out of their claims any time soon ..

      so just wait on your H and lets see ok... as H are amoung some of the most likely to be early travelers with R and I 's .. so lets wait and see.

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      • #48
        Originally posted by GregKiroKH2
        I am not sure. After all, I am kicking around some ideas . . . I wrote some informal papers on type one and type two muscles. The idea of having to escape wild animals like the saber tooth tiger or adapting to new climate conditions have fascinated me in the past. Muscle and brain development is very important to the mtDNA. So, environmental conditions dictate survival. If one does not have the needed survival skills, then the individual will not reproduce, right or wrong has nothing to do with it. Mitomap has a good write up on adaptive ancient mtDNA. Also, the Ruiz-Pesini et al. 2004:226 article mentions it too. The research in the literature might suggest that some alleles are more adaptive in humans than other alleles in humans. So, how is human mtDNA different from plant mtDNA and such?
        this is way to big for my litle brain..
        Are they saying . if you came from hunter gathers there might be a reason you need to remain very active and continue to eat lean and wild coarse and whole .. it's in your genes..?
        if you are adapted to cold climates youmight need higher fat foods, high energy foods and you might have to stay in cold climates for optimum health .. because it is in your genes? if that is what it is saying , then I will agree.. both lifestyles would burn off extra un needed calories if you are being true to that cellular predetermined lifestyle. thus your longevity would go up. I think .

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        • #49
          No, I think Dr. Fan told our class the best answer for these things when I took his ecology class. He said that these are thoughts of ecologist, but none of them would consider their ideas law.

          When I began to search for the specifics and then research the specifics, I found out how little I knew. And then I began to write about my thoughts which of course I would not consider law.

          I always wondered how it would be if I lived with the Saber Tooth Tiger, or what life would be like in the snow filled mountains.


          Originally posted by purple flowers
          this is way to big for my litle brain..
          Are they saying . if you came from hunter gathers there might be a reason you need to remain very active and continue to eat lean and wild coarse and whole .. it's in your genes..?
          if you are adapted to cold climates youmight need higher fat foods, high energy foods and you might have to stay in cold climates for optimum health .. because it is in your genes? if that is what it is saying , then I will agree.. both lifestyles would burn off extra un needed calories if you are being true to that cellular predetermined lifestyle. thus your longevity would go up. I think .

          Comment


          • #50
            16519c

            Could some one possibly explain the following:

            "... mutations are normally listed as something similar to '16519C.' Your heterplasmy mutation is listed as 8851 T/G ..." (I received my FGS sometime ago and am trying to learn my way through all that now.)

            Does this means 16519C is 8851 T/G? And what does the mutation 8851 T/G mean? (Funny, I was searching online and found a site that shows the baboon having this too (and a few other primates - actually quite interesting!))

            Thanks,
            Robbie

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            • #51
              When FTDNA seq'd your mtDNA they found two versions (nothing to worry about we all have multiple versions of mtDNA). So, at position 8851, you have a T (thymine) and a G (guanine) version (and possibly others undisclosed).

              The 16519C is an example of typical notation, with just a single letter, such as C (cytosine) or A (adenine).

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              • #52
                Originally posted by tomcat View Post
                When FTDNA seq'd your mtDNA they found two versions (nothing to worry about we all have multiple versions of mtDNA). So, at position 8851, you have a T (thymine) and a G (guanine) version (and possibly others undisclosed).

                The 16519C is an example of typical notation, with just a single letter, such as C (cytosine) or A (adenine).
                Thanks for that! It helps. Just when I think I have a handle on learning this "stuff" something new comes along and twists the road a bit and "... that's a good thing." Thanks again!

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                • #53
                  Originally posted by railwayop View Post
                  Thanks for that! It helps. Just when I think I have a handle on learning this "stuff" something new comes along and twists the road a bit and "... that's a good thing." Thanks again!
                  Please consider adding your FGS to GenBank. There is a thread on that topic running on the Mitosearch.org section of this forum.

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                  • #54
                    im Haplogroup H28a2 and i have HVR1-mutation 16519C

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