So, I gather I'm somewhere between firemonkey and Eleonore, South of both of them, but favoring the SE English?? :confused: What does this data mean?
Printable View
Amazing work guys, you rock :D
Question : Im not exactly next to "Norman" (or is it just a name?), because i have a German/Polish Great grandparent?
This admixture analysis wwas done by Polako in which 7 admixture components were chosen. We collected the samples based on k7 run and I run principal component analysis ( PCA) to transform multivariate data (7 variables in this case) to 2 principal components such that most variation in the original data is preserved. This is done for visual exploration of the data on 2D plane.
You are more NorthWest than Eleonore, and firemonkey is more NorthEast than both. You are all really close and with Armstrong too as expected.
it's a Normand i added because i knew he had 4 grandparent from Normandy. This map actually shows an amazing thing for you, and this is the perfect example, you are right on the vertical line of a Norman (Which is the North/South ratio) and also exactly on the horizontal line of all Germanic population and probably a central average German (if we had one around). What had to be demonstrated...Norman + 1/4 German.
Which means you re ethnically Normand with a East shift (possibly even a bit Eastern German). If we had that map when we saw your results it would have been perfectly clear right away. That's how PCA charts like this can be much better than calculators. There s some limitations that we could talk about but it really makes it easier to visualize someone's genetic.
Interesting to have some Belgians on there, is one Flemish and the other Walloon, or is this just natural variation within one group?
Added a couple of only (high quality SNP samples) to that list. Battle axe Late Neolthic Sweden, Iron Age Briton & Sintashta Culture. Also the Western Scottish average Argyll.
And AneK7 isnt outdated yet. It's still fine.
Added the lebanese averages, but it might squeeze every one together too much. Which means that the writing would be hard to see.