Kurdsta wrote:okay.... i dont get most of it. all i got was italian??
care to explain what some these things are suppose to mean i have no idea about gene results.
does it tell you what percentage of what ethnicity you are?
kardox wrote:good job. So you are similar to Europeans (Indo-European ancestry, ) and people in the Mideast (Arab invasion), and you have Asian similarities, that could be the mongol invasion? And Like all non sub-Saharan Africans you have around 2% of neanderthal ancestry. Am I wrong?
Btw, how much did you pay ?
kardox wrote:good job. So you are similar to Europeans (Indo-European ancestry, ) and people in the Mideast (Arab invasion), and you have Asian similarities, that could be the mongol invasion? And Like all non sub-Saharan Africans you have around 2% of neanderthal ancestry. Am I wrong?
Btw, how much did you pay ?
Kurdistano wrote:Interesting maternal Haplogroup. Haplogroup T is strong in the Baltics and believed to originated somewhere in Anatolia. Some people also connect it to light hair and eyes.
Your paternal Haplogroup as we know is J1 but now its somehow confirmed that it is not the semitic connected J1c3d but only J1.
jjmuneer wrote:Kurdistano wrote:Interesting maternal Haplogroup. Haplogroup T is strong in the Baltics and believed to originated somewhere in Anatolia. Some people also connect it to light hair and eyes.
Your paternal Haplogroup as we know is J1 but now its somehow confirmed that it is not the semitic connected J1c3d but only J1.
Yep, it either corresponds with my tribe's name in the eastern caucasus, which has elevated frequency of J1, or Anatolia as you stated.
Regarding T1, well I've also seen studies that suggest it was a maternal haplogroup in fairly large frequencies along H, in ancient andronovo(Khazakistan). It may have something to do with the indo-europeans, considering its practically absent in Basques who are non indo-european.
Kurdistano I know Kurds score SE first on global similarities, but do you know why I score NE second, and not near easterner? I''ve compared my genome to Orange pulp's, and she has the same.
I was also wondering on Mcdonald's anyalsis, do you know why I have a "high" frequency of south asia and minor "east asian"? Apparently the east asian is either "noise" or insignificant.
In relation to my T1 being assoicated with light hair and eye people, well I don't know about that, but I guess I my family have more light hair and eyes than other Kurds within the region, but it still exists throughout.
Its hard to tell ... but for you, European is probably both. The south Asian is VERY
typical of people in your region .... its a “crossroads” between Europe and the Mideast,
South Asia, and East Asia.
According to the Balanovsky thesis we've been discussing in other threads, 16 Don Scythians from a 2500-year-old burial ground near Rostov had their mtDNA tested...
Scythians EUROPE. Ancient times (about 2500 years ago) is presented in this study for the European Scythians (Table 3). The observed spectrum of mtDNA haplogroups (in order of T, U5a, H, I, D, A, C, F, U2e, U7) demonstrates the great genetic diversity and the prevalence of West Eurasian haplogroups. Other authors (Lalueza-Fox et al., 2003) found a similar gene pool in related Scythian culture in Kazakhstan. This indicates that in the Scythian epoch of "West Eurasian" gene pools spread much farther east than it is now.
Is there any way of getting more info about this?
By the way, it's interesting that apparently mtDNA T was the most numerous haplogroup, because it has already popped up in numerous remains from Neolithic and Bronze Age Ukraine and Siberia.
Balanovsky Oleg P., Variability of gene pool in space and time: Data synthesis, genogeography, mitochondrial DNA and Y-chromosome. Dissertation for the degree of Doctor of Science. 2012
Kurdistano wrote:As most people know its getting more and more clear that the Proto-Indoeuropeans started somewhere in the Near East during late Neolithic-Bronze Age. Those moved into Steppe areas and mixed with local Hunther and Gatheres from which the Indo-Iranian branch also originated.
76.00% and above is very matchy
75.90% and above is a good match
75.80% and above is okay
Feyli Man 76.71% (Kurd)
Kakhi S 76.05% (Georgian)
Marion Marougi 76.01% (Assyrian)
Elias Hovanesian 75.94% (Assyrian)
Sara Kevorkian 75.92% ( Armenian,Greek, Italian)
Ayse Hobeloglu 75.92% (Turk)
Dimitri Bibiluri 75.91% (Georgian)
Bilal Hobeloglu 75.91% (Turk)
Marguerite Strolle 75.90%
Apostolos Tsakpinis 75.90% (Greek)
Mustafa Isik 75.90% (Turk)
Toby Marougi 75.89% (Assyrian)
Christopher Younan 75.89% (Assyrian)
Jemal Gogitidze 75.88% (Georgian)
Nikoloz Gogitidze 75.88% (Georgian)
Giray Enkavi 75.87% (Balkan Turk)
Hal 2000 75.87% (Cypriot Turk)
Ara Tanajian 75.86% (Armenian)
Bonnie Dolce 75.86% (Italian)
Shlomy Shalom 75.86% (Jew)
IRAKLI AKHVLEDIANI 75.85% (Georgian)
Larisa Lyotova V3 75.85%
Berrin Yavuzer 75.85% (Turk)
Armend Skeja 75.84% (Albanian)
Kaya Akyuz 75.83% (Laz Turk)
Azad Rojhelat 75.83% (Anatolian Kurd)
Ramon Boghozian 75.82% (Armenian)
Murat Demirtas 75.82% (Turk)
CC Bilgin 75.82% (Blakan Turk)
P B 75.82%
Greek 1960 75.82% (Greek)
Hala Salman 75.81%
Battisto Moscia 75.80% (Italian)
Hayk Rakidjian 75.80% (Armenian)
John Maragoudakis 75.80% (Greek)
Cousin Mento 75.80% (Italian)
Orange Pulp 75.80% (Turk)<<<<< Me
jjmuneer wrote:Kurdistano wrote:As most people know its getting more and more clear that the Proto-Indoeuropeans started somewhere in the Near East during late Neolithic-Bronze Age. Those moved into Steppe areas and mixed with local Hunther and Gatheres from which the Indo-Iranian branch also originated.
Some Europeans however won't accept this.
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