Originally Posted by
brennus dux gallorum
Completely different, but still r1b, which means extremely closer in terms of very, very limited recent male ancestry than with anyone with other haplogroups (I, J etc) or even with R1a.
As for the second, i wouldn't say so, what i am saying is that technically in the end the half English half Greek has a higher percentage of common DEEP ancestors with a southern French than with either English or Greeks, even though his RECENT ancestry is closer to either English or Greek.
My point (or not at all"mine" but what genetics imply) is that ydna shows something very specific: a deep male ancestor, meanwhile autosomal dna shows the rest of your ancestors, so technically your whole racial background. You can be an r1b and at the same time an autosomally 99% African, but never an African because of your A or B or E Ydna when your autosomal Dna has nothing to do with Africa