If you're not prepared to love a daughter as much as you would a son... then you probably shouldn't have kids.
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If you're not prepared to love a daughter as much as you would a son... then you probably shouldn't have kids.
A mommy's boy from nowhere... like some deluded guys here... :icon_rolleyes:
https://blenderartists.org/forum/att...431847&thumb=1
Nordic + Atlantid + CM results in the most aesthetically pleasing mix
Yes.
...
Poll which is a result of this thread: http://www.theapricity.com/forum/pol...do=showresults
Why not
Hell yeah! I like it, being V13 is being against all odds. hahah!
I dont know my mtdna hg, didnt test for it..
I am happy with it but was a little bit surprised to have a Celtic haplogroup that is most common in the British Isles (especially the North-West, i.e. Ireland and Scotland).
yeah, D y-dna ueber alles
Hello cousin! long time no see eh, 50K years! have you seen our dad DE* lately? Id like to ask him few questions about our family tree. LOL
http://taylorfamilygenes.info/images...haplotree1.jpg
I'm still trying to figure out what a haplogroup is. Is it edible?
Y-DNA haplogroup is inherited from your direct paternal line, without recombination:
http://i.imgur.com/YhTG8YL.png
MtDNA haplogroup is inherited from your direct maternal line without recombination:
http://i.imgur.com/JWNzGbw.png
Autosomal DNA is inherited from all of your ancestors combined, and it recombines:
http://i.imgur.com/8cfpgP4.png
yes, i am happy with it.
A haplotype is a group of genes in an organism that are inherited together from a single parent,[1][2] and a haplogroup (haploid from the Greek: ἁπλούς, haploûs, "onefold, simple" and English: group) is a group of similar haplotypes that share a common ancestor with a single-nucleotide polymorphism mutation.[3][4] More specifically, a haplogroup is a combination of alleles at different chromosomes regions that are closely linked and that tend to be inherited together. As a haplogroup consists of similar haplotypes, it is usually possible to predict a haplogroup from haplotypes. Haplogroups pertain to a single line of descent, usually dating back thousands of years.[5] As such, membership of a haplogroup, by any individual, relies on a relatively small proportion of the genetic material possessed by that individual.
Each haplogroup originates from, and remains part of, a preceding single haplogroup (or paragroup). As such, any related group of haplogroups may be precisely modelled as a nested hierarchy, in which each set (haplogroup) is also a subset of a single broader set (as opposed, that is, to biparental models, such as human family trees).
My Y-dna in particular seemed interesting: C-M130. Other than that I'm more interested in the autosomal stuff anyway.
I will be 100% happy if my mom's side turns out to be R1a:
http://www.theapricity.com/forum/sho...=1#post4466878
Currently, I have an Off-R1a-Dilemma due to being R1b. :(
My father was thrilled with results! Even before he knew his haplo, he declared wish for that particuar one (ha read in newspapers basic things about them).
Even though he tells me it's waste of money and culture matters not gentics he is bit proud because his haplogroups is most typical among Croats, especially from those with Bosnian heritage.
I am very happy with my mtDNA, too. It's most common in Germanic and Celtic countries of nortwestern Europe and I guess it confirmed my German heritage trough my grandma. It was also part of IE expansion and that's very cool!
You should be proud to be special in sea of R1a :)
Do you feel less Polish because of your haplogroup ? I can't understand why your're sad, it's IE Celtic haplo and was probably present in Poland for long, long time .
Yeah, fo sho.
I don't care a little bit.
No, I want a Turkic hg but I take a ......
Here is where my haplogroups have been found in ancient DNA so far:
R1b-DF27:
~2431-2150 BC, Bell Beaker, Quedlinburg
W6a:
~3500-2700 BC, Yamnaya, Lopatino II
~3260-2630 BC, Corded Ware, Plinkaigalis
~2566-2477 BC, Corded Ware, Esperstedt
R1 sucks
I don't care about them.