Exclusivo
Un auténtico mapa de sangre azul.
https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-aN5yDvQl3...9%252Cjpeg.jpg
https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-2UVYJJWqe...6%252Cjpeg.jpg
Printable View
Exclusivo
Un auténtico mapa de sangre azul.
https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-aN5yDvQl3...9%252Cjpeg.jpg
https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-2UVYJJWqe...6%252Cjpeg.jpg
Very interesting, thank you for sharing. https://puu.sh/Gfo0D/f6cfeac150.png
https://i.imgur.com/lRLgKmy.png
The Açores. This is a specific Portuguese clade of the R1b-L21 branch and there is an enthusiast performing several Big-Y tests on the population of the archipelago that are uploaded on the YFull YTree. Unfortunately, since I did a clade panel with YSEQ my results can not be added to the YTree, I would be the first Continental Portuguese in there along with the islanders. This sub-clade only has Portuguese individuals under it so far and likely it is equally prevalent, if not more, in the continental territory but we just do not have as many people tested as in the Açores.
https://i.imgur.com/tzuBeXe.png
I-S17250
https://i.imgur.com/RFUMjf7.png
Thanks El_Abominacion I didn't think to zoom in.
Looking at this closer it is possible some Boers might have had M222. M222 could have spread to others parts of Europe in the Viking Age or from some other event i.e. Wild Geese.
https://i.imgur.com/kH1JlKj.png
I knew there is a hotspot in Sweden from being part of the FTDNA project. These all have Swedish name but are surrounded by Irishmen so it would be interesting to find out if they could trace the origin.
https://i.imgur.com/DGsKK9i.png
https://i.imgur.com/7rmdI24.png
M222 is in more places than shown here. FTDNA would have a much larger testing group.
In 2013 the haplogroup began subdivision. Below the phylo-equivalent block, the subclades example a large and more diverse haplogroup than anticipated by observation of the STR haplotypes. The ages of some of the older haplogroups have been tentatively and imprecisely assessed in windows extending from 2500 -- 1500 ybp. The testing has been elective and consists primarily of men in multiples of surnames claiming differing ancestral geographies, the majority who descend from ancestors that migrated out of the UK/Ireland region to diaspora destinations of the American Colonies/US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand among others. Some of the results are anchored by men in current residence within various geographies within the UK/Ireland region. While the majority of testers have stated ancestral origins in the UK/Ireland region, ancestral origin statements are not confined solely to the region; there are stated ancestral origins in Scandinavia, France, Germany, Spain, Switzerland, among other geographies. Within recent years skeletal remains yielding DNA that may be sequenced have been recovered. Radio Carbon Dating has determined for those recovered in Ireland suggest that the majority of remains genotyped with a M222 subclade marker date to the Medieval period. We expect within the coming years additional ancient DNA information from the UK/Ireland region and other geographies.
Since my haplo isn’t as common as just basic df27... it is showing the islands as that is where most people have tested from. Nonetheless, still very interesting.
https://i.imgur.com/w2RhC83.jpg
https://i.imgur.com/QsTSSf2.jpg
Stears subclade: I-Z58
https://i.imgur.com/ZtUrrpk.png