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Noone is saying about simple haplogroup.
It is just a proof's mean, not wonderfulness itself.
If similar role would play the gene for the smallest toe of the left leg - we would be speaking about it.
As you see we do not - becasue such gene does not care needable information. But Y does.
He is the same imortant as a certificate of birth - which is not a wonderfullness in itself,
bvut bears needable information. Paper can be falsyfied, Y never.
But he transoprted your X which made you a woman and his daughter.And as I'm a girl he did't even transport his Y haplogroup to me.
And yet you can marry to another family, another Y, so you have more options![]()



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I assumed he would have more hits if it was an eastern European one. In ancestral origins he gets 19 anonymous in the UK, but as I mentioned before, the shown hits he gets are few and in Scandinavia. Most who has R1a in Scandinavia live in Norway, and he does have one Norwegian hit. Obviously, way back, it came from the east, just as N1c, so it's not like it matters in that sense. I was hoping, though, that we'd find relatives that are specific on his male side of the tree, as it's not a branch that's explored much.
ETA: I'll confer with the admins of the FTDNA R1a group so I get the right ones.
That's certainly not for you to decide.




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First R1a came to Scandinavia already with Corded Ware culture, while N1c came probably much later.
These are the oldest R1a samples from Scandinavia:
Sweden RISE94, Viby, Götaland, 2621-2472 BC
Denmark RISE61, Kyndeløse, Zealand, 2650-2300 BC
Sweden LNBA, Ölsund, Hälsingland, 2573-2140 BC
Denmark RISE42, Marbjerg, Zealand, 2191-1972 BC
As you can see 3 of them are from Southern Scandinavia, but one (Olsund) is from Northern Sweden.
Olsund individual is discussed in this paper:
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/bior...13241.full.pdf
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/bior...1/113241-1.pdf
About the origins of Corded Ware culture:
http://eurogenes.blogspot.com/2017/1...hungarian.html




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For comparison the oldest known sample of N1c from Europe is also from 2500 BC, but found near Smolensk in Russia. There was no any N1c in Scandinavia at that time, but there was already some in western Russia.
R1a migrated to Scandinavia either from Latvia-Lithuania-Poland by boats across the Baltic Sea, or from Germany (both routes are possible). N1c migrated to Scandinavia much later and probably from Finland-Estonia.
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Possible routes of R1a migration to Scandinavia with Corded Ware culture (red arrows):
https://i.imgur.com/GfE3Abm.png
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I'll take it you are not a Christian woman
https://www.theapricity.com/forum/sh...96#post4876096


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Yamnaya people can only accept blood transfusion from other Yamnaya. That is because there blood was common among them. Soon we will knowif ruling clan Piasts have same bloodline. I can give to a AB+ but cannot not receive. Where do you think AB comes from?[hint look at Harkonnen avatar,> Somalia]
Current R1b samples found in -Yamnaya-3300–2600 BC, Afanasievo-3300 BCE — 2500 BCE, Vucedol-3000 BC – 2200 BC, Catacomb-2800–2200 BC, Bell Beaker-2800–1800 BCE, Poltavka-2700—2100 BC, Scythian-9th century BC up until the 4th century AD, Sarmatian-4th, 3rd and 2nd centuries BCE....
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