...well, its the same as this thread...almost at least...
http://www.theapricity.com/forum/showthread.php?t=108
Im A-. Mother is O- and father is AB+
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...well, its the same as this thread...almost at least...
http://www.theapricity.com/forum/showthread.php?t=108
Im A-. Mother is O- and father is AB+
AB+ is pretty rare! Between 1-3% of the world’s population has this type.
In Europe around 12% of Hungarians have this type.
You are also probably not Basque as the Basque have virtually no B or AB blood.
And it looks like Iberian Celts were found to have B and AB blood.
Your parents must have been either both AB, AB/B,AB/A, or A/B.
AB has both A and B antigens on red blood cells (but neither A nor B antibody in the plasma) so you can donate plasma to anybody.
Studies also showed that type A and AB have a higher risk of heart disease and high cholesterol due do the difference in blood vessels between the blood groups. In research group AB is also resistant to cholera due to its protein structure. On a microbiological note blood groups are very interesting.
I have sources for all this info from various books(not my head). If I find anything else that’s interesting in my books I will let you know!
Gallaecians were A+. If you say otherwise I'll butcher you. :)
A- is common on my maternal side.
I am Turkish from both sides but blood type does not determine ancestry.
Phenotype does not equal genotype either. I know blond Euro looking Turks that plot more ''Eastward'' in DNA plots than Turks that physically look Near Eastern.
http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grupo_sangu%C3%ADneo
* O+ A+ B+ AB+ O− A− B- AB−
España 36% 34% 8% 2,5% 9% 8% 2% 0,5%
may be true, but my exgf from Galicia was O+
In any case, A+ maybe (The Celts)
I'm only stating things from research. That information can be found in the book
A natural history of man: a biologist's view of: birth and death
Where is your source from out of curiosity?:confused:
http://i647.photobucket.com/albums/u...um/Capture.jpg
Sure, also the Celtici were all A+ and R1b1b2a1a2 :tongue
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celtici
I hardly think that you are a biologist, geneticist, anthropologist, or even medical student, so you do not qualify. I am in noway insulting Iberians or the Spanish population. I am only stating scientific findings from medical journals. Don't be mad at me I'm not making things up as I go along.
http://i647.photobucket.com/albums/u...n_album/dt.jpg
Read more:D I will buy you a book and send it.
Berber mtDNA
The Berbers are the indigenous populationof north-west Africa. Although their Y-DNA is almost perfectly homogenous, belonging to haplogroup E-M81, Berber maternal lineages show a much greater diversity, as well as regional disparity. At least half (and up to 90% in some regions) of the Berbers belong to some Eurasian lineages, such as H, HV, R0, J, T, U, K, N1, N2, and X2, mostly of Middle or Near Eastern origin. 5 to 45% of the Berbers will have sub-Saharan mtDNA (L0, L1, L2, L3, L4, L5). There are only three native North African lineages, U6, X1 and M1, representing 0 to 35% of the people depending on the region.
Haplogroup U6 has been observed from the Iberia and the Canary Islands to Senegal in the West, and from Syria to Ethiopia and Kenya in the East. It is also found at low density in Europe, though mostly limited to Iberia. Approximately 10% of all North Africans belong to this lineage.
So, through MtDNA some Berbers are related to Europeans. Please stop showing your ignorance.
You're the ignorant American who tries to guess the blood types of the Celtiberians, lol.
You're pretty ridiculous, a black African and a Chinese may have the same blood type, the Celts of Spain were different from each other, Celts were not one people, were a culture, the Celtiberians had the same types of blood that the current Spanish, A+ and O+ mostly and that's the only reliable source.
Blood group doesn't tell anything about an individual's phenotype, but the interesting point about it is that their statistical breakdown does tell a lot about ethnicities' past history.
If an originally homogeneous nation (provided it's large enough to impede bottleneck effects) repeatedly receives, generation after generation, some input from another race, the average phenotype will end up being substantially modified.
But strangely, it seems the original statistical distribution of blood groups keeps replicating itself at each generation. Sounds like a very conservative factor.
IMHO this inherent stability could be the reason why the Basque people, though being phenotypically and even genetically extremely close to their Castilian and Gascon neighbours, still show anomalous blood group stats.
Most astonishing, Eurasian invaders like the Finns and the Turks succeded to assimilate to their cultures peoples of Northern Europe and Anatolia. Now the Finns are virtually undistinguishable from the Germanics and Slavs surrounding them, and the modern Turks are just another Middle-Eastern nation. Despite their vaguely common origin in the Finno-Ugric and Uralo-Altaic Urheimats, they are racially as different as they can.
But their blood group distribution remains eerily similar:
http://mihow-assets.s3.amazonaws.com...bloodtypes.png
Here is a scientific paper (fortunately not too long) on blood types and personality.
http://www.hy-ls.org/index.php/hyls/article/view/4/24
Quote:
Dependence vs high Reward Dependence) in AB,
B, O, and A, in that order [1]. A similar order of
ABO blood groups has been described in the
spectrum of high Anger vs low Anger (except that in
Anger, O moves to the highest position in the list).
More recently, obsessive-compulsive disorder having
a genetic linkage with ABO blood group A has been
a hypothesis supported by some but not all
researchers [2,3].
A+
http://anthro.palomar.edu/vary/image...ood_allele.gifQuote:
The A blood allele is somewhat more common around the world than B. About 21% of all people share the A allele. The highest frequencies of A are found in small, unrelated populations, especially the Blackfoot Indians of Montana (30-35%), the Australian Aborigines (many groups are 40-53%), and the Lapps, or Saami people, of Northern Scandinavia (50-90%). The A allele apparently was absent among Central and South American Indians.
O+
I certainly found Northen-Sun more than interesting and informative as per normal she is very well informed and worth a read.
You have very extensive research regarding this human aspect.I too have found Rh positive common in Asia and diversity of blood groups in Europe proves that many new populations have settled in it.In my opinion its good in a sense that if someone needs a different blood group, it will be readily available.
A+ (+/-)
I am not certain that the Rh- factor happened in Europe, but it certainly survived better there. The highest frequencies to my knowledge are in the Karaite Jews of Iraq and the Basques. Besides the places mentioned, it is also found in the Caucasus.
I’m really sorry to disappoint you that you have some European genes(sad for us as well). :(
MtDNA Haplogroup H is a Eurasian Haplogroup found in 40-50% of Western Europeans.
http://www.eupedia.com/images/conten...roup-chart.gif
European mtDNA haplogroups and their subclades
Haplogroup H & V (mtDNA)
Haplogroup H is by far the most common all over Europe, amounting to about 40% of the European population. It is also found (though in lower frequencies) in North Africa, the Middle East, Central Asia, Northern Asia, as well as along the East coast of Africa as far as Madagascar.
H1, H3 and V are the most common subclades of HV in Western Europe.
H1 peaks in Norway (30% of the population) and Iberia (18 to 25%), and is also high among the Sardinians, Finns and Estonians (16%), as well as Western and Central European in general (10 to 12%) and North-West Africans (10 to 20%). H3 is commonest in Portugal (12%), Sardinia (11%), Galicia (10%), the Basque country (10%), Ireland (6%), Norway (6%), Hungary (6%) and southwestern France (5%). Haplogroup V reaches its highest frequency in northern Scandinavia (40% of the Sami), northern Spain, the Netherlands (8%), Sardinia, the Croatian islands and the Maghreb. It is likely that H1, H3 and V, along with haplogroup U5, were the main haplogroups of Western European hunter-gatherers living in the Franco-Cantabrian refuge during the last Ice Age, and repopulated much of Central and Northern Europe from 15,000 years ago.
Haplogroup H13 is most common in Sardinia and around the Caucasus. Its distribution is reminiscent of Y-DNA haplogroup G2a. The same is true of H2 to a lower extent. This would suggest a Caucasian or Anatolian origin.
H5 and H7 are also common in the Caucasus, but their lower incidence around the Mediterranean, and higher frequency from Anatolia to the Alps via the Danube suggest a possible link with the spread of agriculture (YDNA E1b1b, J2 and T) or of the Indo-Europeans (R1b1b2).
mines B +
Dad: B+
Mom: O -
I'm O -.
Father: A+
Mother: B+
Sister: AB+
And I think I am also AB+ as my sister.
Now I hope you will describe my various blood origins. :D
I am A+, as are my parents and my husband. It is the most common blood type.
I have AB+. My father has: B+ and my mother has A+. Or is it the opposite?:confused::D
A+ here.
Didn't much of the rh- population die off because of the Black Death/Bubonic Plague? I think those with rh+ were more resistant.
Mine O+
Mother A+
Father O+
O-
I and my father are O+, my mother is O-.