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Outside New Jersey, they are all so northern.




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Well Quebec is closer to Italy Aosta, South France and Austria Tyrol than to English average, I wouldn't call that "so northern".
There is a myth that French-Canadians are Northern French but it is wrong, they are closer to Central France as you can see.
In case of New Jersey there is a problem with too small and rather unrepresentative sample.
My DNA Origin analysis for 16 EUR (you get 2 reports examining ancestry from 3012 regions, 226 countries): https://www.exploreyourdna.com/DNAOrigin.aspx
This analysis is not based on G25 but on ADMIXTURE. And it has more regions than any other DNA test!



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My DNA Origin analysis for 16 EUR (you get 2 reports examining ancestry from 3012 regions, 226 countries): https://www.exploreyourdna.com/DNAOrigin.aspx
This analysis is not based on G25 but on ADMIXTURE. And it has more regions than any other DNA test!






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From a Wikipedia article about French emigrants to New France:
• Paris - Almost 50%
• Normandy - 16%
• Western France - 13%
That makes about close to 80%. So the remaining 20%+ were from all other parts of France combined.
By the way, the stat above is for the filles du roi, which refers to 800 French women that were sent to New France to increase the population of Frenchmen there.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/King%27s_Daughters
According to this article, around 2/3 of Quebeckers today are descended from them: https://www.cbc.ca/2017/canadathesto...omen-1.4029699




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So far all of the states with high % of English ancestry are scoring very close to English K15 average:
(Kentucky, Maine, North Carolina, Virginia, Tennessee)
This is the breakdown of immigrants to New France until year 1700 according to Father A. Godbout:
https://www.erudit.org/fr/revues/cgq...2/021058ar.pdf
Most of those who came from what is now Nouvelle-Aquitaine, came from former Poitou-Charentes:
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My DNA Origin analysis for 16 EUR (you get 2 reports examining ancestry from 3012 regions, 226 countries): https://www.exploreyourdna.com/DNAOrigin.aspx
This analysis is not based on G25 but on ADMIXTURE. And it has more regions than any other DNA test!


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On G25 all French people north of Auvergne are closer to Brits than to Aostans and Bretons are closer to Englishmen than Central French and the Seine_Maritime and the Pas-de-Calais sample are 50/50, to me they are relatively northern in any case(a rough definition of northern to me would be >55-60% Steppe+WHG) although it's obviously arbitrary.
Is there any chance to get more G25 samples out of all those k15 samples you post?


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From the blue region most should have come from the northern part, this explains the apparenl lack of southern influence which should have been strong otherwise.
https://www.erudit.org/fr/revues/cgq...2/021058ar.pdf


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They must've all moved to New England, because French Canadians in the USA are one of the worst performing ethnic groups, both when studies were carried out in the early 1900s and today. They mostly came as factory workers to Maine, Massachusetts, etc. They only surpass Portuguese(Madeirans overrespented in Portuguese Americans) I believe, even Italians outperform them. While, French Canadians are among the best performing Canadians.
@Peterski, how come you think North Dakota is too eastern shifted? The Scandinavian/German parts of the US are also going to be the most Polish/Czechoslovakian(also more East Germans among the Germans, while the east coast/south of the US had more southern Germans/Swabians/etc.. Would be cool to see samples from NYC, more from PEI, southern New Jersey, California, Appalachia(so eastern Kentucky, western W. Virginia, curious if more English or Scotland/Ireland), urban/big city vs small city/rural results.
Last edited by XenophobicPrussian; 05-08-2020 at 10:17 AM.
The Guanche skulls as a whole are unlike those of modern European Mediterraneans, and resemble northern European series most closely, especially those in which a brachycephalic element is present, as in Burgundian and Alemanni series.divided them into clearly differentiated types, which include a Mediterranean, a Nordic, a "Guanche," and an Alpine. The "Guanche" accounts for 50 per cent of the whole on the four islands of Teneriffe, Gomera, Gran Canaria, and Hierro; the Nordic for 31 per cent, the Mediterranean for 13 per cent, and the Alpineoldschool anthropology
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