Gulf of Bothnia seems to have been closely linked to the British Isles
I base the work on all things that can be used in the search of family who lived centuries ago. Written sources like sagas, carbon-14, dendrochronology, iron age pottery and so on - and more recently DNA.
...
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Search Result
Collapse
33 results in 0.0093 seconds.
Keywords
Members
Tags
-
I1-Z140, A2087
This year I ended up taking the BigY test + YFull.
The result cancelled my idea of a connection between Gordons and me within the time of surnames known to be in use. Our MRCA namely lived around 3000 years ago, the experts tell. It has been difficult...
Leave a comment:
-
Thanks, I have found it. Of what I recall FTDNA once had a click-button directing to Ysearch.
Leave a comment:
-
There was a box where one could write a short notice, max. 1000 letters. Of what I remember the customer at that time should click on "Y-search" on the Dashboard to get into the jungle.
There were things like this:
Show users that tested at least 67 of the markers...Last edited by Yde; 18 May 2017, 12:48 PM.
Leave a comment:
-
Personal profile gone?
Once there was a page at FTDNA where the customer could write informations of his ancestry and other short information. Now I can not find it. Was it deleted during an update?
-
Year 0
It is about The Protocols of the Elders of Zion.
About an enemy.
In those circles they don't like to be reminded of some.
Therefore they use the term ybp, years before present, so we have to make a new calculation every year - of a MRCA...
Leave a comment:
-
Science: The Danes are half British
"Denmark presented genomic affinity with primarily neighboring countries with overall resemblance of decreasing weight from Britain, Sweden, Norway, Germany and France".
That was a conclusion in a scientific paper in 2016...
Leave a comment:
-
I have 4000 matches in all. With Big Y there is at the moment three left.
One 107/111, confirmed by paper trail going 300 years back.
Two 11/12, with a common ancestor living "2000 years ago".
What happened to the other 3997 men? Didn't they test Big Y,...
Leave a comment:
-
If I use the TiP-calculator to find a probability that Mr. A and Mr. B share a common ancestor within the last generations ... one get these answers
Generations Percentage
1 4.85%
2 16.03%
3 30.49%
4 45.29%
5 58.60%
Which means that...
Leave a comment:
-
How many GD's are the matches?
The closest matches could be descendants of a Stewart from let's say 1500.
The dozens of other names (not so close) could be from men living before 1000....
Leave a comment:
-
111 eliminate previous levels?
"When you tested at 111 markers, that refined your results and as a result eliminated any matches you had at a previous levels. The Gordon or Scottish matches you had at the lower levels were just coincidences or random matches. I cannot answer your...
Leave a comment:
-
Y67: Scotland and many Gordons a coincidence?
I-M253: How many Gordons does a typical Gordon match on Y67? I am not a Gordon and only have ancestry in Denmark.
Since 2006 I have studied my dna-relatives and seen Y-matches gradually narrowing in on Scotland - and on Gordon.
As of 2016/2017 I have 20 matches at the 67...
-
100 % Scandinavian - from where?
Where are the parents to this 100% Scandinavian exactly from?
How many 100% Scandinavians are known by "the system", and where were their parents born?
Leave a comment:
-
I am Danish, northwest
11% Metal Age Invader
41% Farmer
48% Hunter-Gatherer
0% non-European
So quite a lot of Hunter-Gatherer in Scandinavia?
ftdna: "The hunter-gatherer subsistence strategy dominated the landscape of the European...
Leave a comment:
-
Northwest Jutland, DK, only half Scandinavian
I am nearly 100 % from Northwest Jutland, Denmark, according to papers dating back to the 1600s. Therefore I could be an interesting subject for science, but it is not so. I - an other people from that area - have to do the work ourselves....
Leave a comment:
Leave a comment: