Barbara, you should really have your father and Joe’s parents take a DNA test. It’s always best to have the older generations test anyway, but especially since you and Joe share DNA. If your father and Joe match, then one of Joe’s parents would match your father even closer than you and Joe. You can then eliminate family lines not connected by DNA and build up your tree to find your most recent common ancestor.
You can inherit ancestry some of your siblings do not have or from a distant ancestor that nobody else inherited from in your immediate family and percentages can vary between family.
Yes you can have DNA that your siblings do not have and vice verse however, it still has to be passed from parent to child so the parent still has to have that DNA. What more than likely is going on is both her and her daughters father have the DNA its just such a small amount that its not showing on the test. The daughters is showing because she inherited it from both parents making her have more DNA then both parents individually. Most DNA sites will not show DNA under 1%
@@shadowkissed2370 yep, not to mention when Ancestry did that “update” over a year ago a LOT of strands got shaved off and there is no way to look that up.
Creole is French Canadian and any indigenous or African is Creole too but not necessary to have black or indigenous , you only have to be related to an Acadian. That’s a French speaking person to part of Canada attacked by British and burned out . Forced out
@@shadowkissed2370my daughter got my Norway . I t don’t have any . It just didn’t express in me . Also my French doesn’t show as French it shows as northwestern Europe , Germanic . But her dad had 2% French and she got that from him , he may have more , but what she got was from him . Because he didn’t take a test . I worded that strangely I’m afraid .
I love the analysis and comparison detail you include in your video!! Also, love the interaction between mom and dad and mom and daughter. What great videos to watch!
This is so good. I’ve been listening so intently that I can’t finish right now I’ll listen to the rest tomorrow but this family is so lucid and well I can’t explain how well they are presenting their research. I just plain love it thanks
Growing up in southern Belize, I can remember whenever there was a new kid in class, we would ask ‘What’s your title?’ (surname) to figure out how you are related to the new kid.
Great results! Update when you find out where the "other" dna originated from. I love your personalities and your relationship together. You are fun to watch. You did a lot of work to trace everything back. Good job!
Dna is so complicated and fascinating at once ive recently started digging into mine and am currently waiting my dna results. Ive always loved history and genetics and dna. Then i found out at 24 that my dad might not be my dad. I was also told at a young age that my dad possibly had another daughter out there that no one had any information for and he passed away so i cant ask him. We also never knew much of anything about either side. I only knew my one grandma and she passed when i was 13 we only saw her a couple times a year so i didnt even know much about her. All of this combined made me really want to know who i am and where i come from.
Genealogy is so interesting and cool! I've enjoyed your channel for awhile and would never guessed you and your husband were distant relatives. I am mostly PA Dutch (German) and British. Pennsylvania has alot of communities with German heritage (such as the Amish), and that is where my grandparents were from. I grew up in another state and recently moved to a rural PA town with alot of German influence (some people speak a dialect of English that borrows slang from German). I grew up in a very diverse DC suburb with not many people of European ancestry, so it's a new experience for me. It's fascinating to think that I may perhaps encounter distant relatives now that I live where my ancestors settled. I have already met people and seen stores that include surnames found further back in my family tree.
In 34 years of marriage, Joe and I have never even discovered one cousin by blood or marriage that we have in common so it was a shock to find myself on his list of matches. It's really interesting like you said. People with the same last name, especially if the name is unique is definitely cause to question if they are related to you.
Interesting results you got :). Making a family tree is so much fun and the satisfaction you get when you can complete a branch etc is soo huge. Specially ow as you have this cousin connection trying to figure that out. My father's parents were 2nd cousins to each other. My dad did know that they were cousins to a degree, but it was a surprise to him too that they were 2nd cousins. That is maybe a little too close of a relative for my liking (even though I don't even know all of my 2nd cousins)... but one close relation in your tree does fairly little. And marrying your cousins is inevitable in smaller communities which my grandparents came from (and royalty. Maybe I am royal?? :D).
Such a cool thing to get all your family taking DNA tests. I've finally gotten my son and his father to take the tests - I was joking but it wouldn't be a far stretch to find out my ex and I are distant cousins too!!! Great job, so much fun to watch!
How interesting. Makes me want to do my DNA test. Both of my parents, grand parents and only 1/2 sibling are deceased but it would still be interesting to see where my DNA shows where I'm from. Really enjoyed the video.
It depends how you inherit it. For example I have 25% Albanian 🇦🇱 but my sister has 0. While my sister has middle eastern and northern Italy when I do not have those regions.
You are so delightful and smart. I would never have the energy and wherewithal to figure all this stuff out. You must have selected the best genes of the whole lot and are now a superhuman. 😄❤️
Tell Anna I said hi. I see baby girl getting so tall. I love her wild hair. If mommy was alive she woulda been spoiled. Mommy would have asked me "Dah weh di rass you gone tek dah test fah?" lol
That is not entirely uncommon my parents are actually distant cousins themselves and did not know that they were actually genetically related at all. cm is centimeters
Your family tree looks a LOT like mine! I'm half Central American (My mom was born in Honduras - Honduran Father, Nicaraguan Mother), and my father is Anglo-American with deep MD-VA roots (I call him a European smoothie). Every time Ancestry updates their site the results switch the regions from chart to my mom and aunties' charts. Especially the Middle East, Jewish, C. Asia, results. When you have a diverse mix..it really helps to test as much family as possible 😂😂
"Removed" refers to how many generations there are between you and two other people who have a family relationship. Ex. if you have two people who are first cousins, Cousin A and Cousin B, then Cousin A's CHILD is not a first cousin to Cousin B but instead is first cousin once removed. It goes in both directions - both the child and Cousin B are first cousins once removed to each other. If Barbara and Joe have "removed" in their relationship then they are not in the same generation and Joe's great-grandparents are Barbara's great-great-grandparents or whatever it is. 😃
Thank you for going through your DNA matches. Some people don't understand the fact that it is as important as your racial breakdown. Another thing that will be beneficial to share is paternal and Mtdna haplogroups.
The term once removed twice removed simply mean which generation you compare too. Moms first cousin is daughters first cousin but once removed since she is different generation. Moms first cousin’s child is daughters second cousin.
The child always has more or less the same DNA from BOTH parents. Its not an exact science, but children always have their own percentages. For example, if my mom is 100% British, I am guaranteed to have half of that. 3484 CM is what is most important Parent/Child relationship. You have a lot of close family I noticed. The 2nd to 3rd Cousin especially are the children and Grandchildren of the Grandparents siblings! What you do is going into their family trees that are tied to their DNA and find the common ancestor (only if their tree is developed enough) Looks like you guys did exactly that in your search so good job!~
It can only show you if both of your parents took the test. Or if you and your mom took the test it would just show your moms side and you can assume if they aren’t related to her they are on your dads side.
@@Shante-330 thanks for replying. I actually went to Ancestry.com to find out about and saw that criteria. Unfortunately, both my parents have passed so I’m out of luck on that option.🙁...I know more extensive DNA testing may be able to tell, but, oh well🤷🏽♀️.
I absolutely love 💗 Jada...my Niece from my half sister who is 1/2 Mexican has one ☝🏽 of my beautiful nieces’ who’s name is Jayda. My dad was 3/4 Indigenous Native N. American so wow 😯...so my niece who is 1/2 black will be all kinds of ethnicities. I miss her now as she’s beautiful and happy like your daughter. Your Ancestry is abundantly Amazing 😉. The cousin situation is hilarious as my maternal grandparents were supposedly 4th Cousins. 🤷🏻♀️🙋🏻♀️🔎👌🏽💌 Momma has the dedicated genealogists research bug! I love your DNA History is so fun. Jada has your husbands fun personality..Switched at Birth!!! Lol 😆 Daughter Cousin 😘👏🏽 Thank you for sharing and posting. You made me smile 😊.
The ethnicity numbers are just estimates, they update from time to time. Trying to treat it as a mathematical comparison of family members is problematic as it is just an estimate .
It doesn't matter what order they are listed as a relative. Also it doesn't matter how you are related. If a person is related through both sides, then your daughter could have more DNA in common with a cousin than you do. Also you can do a side-by-side comparison rather than writing it on paper, because the updates could have changed something as more people are tested
The Eritrea region may explain the missing Jewish background. They have a large region of Jewish people. Tiffany Haddish the comedian's father is a Eritrean jew. She has a whole video about her bar mitzvah. Thanks for sharing.
You have to have your parents take the test. It's automatic. I think you just need one because my father took it and it shows Father's Side so I just assume the others are Mother's Side.
It’s random. You both have dna from A-Z. It randomly picks from both parents grandparents and great grandparents. Your daughter will get hrl but your other child will get jlq. Dna is amazing. No one is exactly the same and from one spot on the map. I absolutely love this fact.
We have done a lot of investigation on both sides of our family & mostly we are Irish, Scottish & Maori & because of the Maori we assume we’ll have some African as well because they assume that the original Polynesians were from Africa that travelled by water when there was a famine in Africa & the rest the the people travelled over land to the Middle East & Europe. I remember learning in Junior High from one of my teachers who was of African heritage & he told us about the facts about the Maori because he found out of my heritage❤️
because your mix is closer to a different group, my son came out English because im mostly Scandianvian an my husband has a lot of Irish and central europe. This mix is what you find in England
What was going on about the father side and the mother side? Were the parents kits swapped? Is the result marked for Barbara actually Joseph´s i.e. was his spit sent in under her serial number?
Not true. I can be 1% something on one site and 14% on another site. I lost my North African DNA via updates, However, haplogroup is North African, Morocco, Egypt (Arab) FTDNA. Depending on what the map is. I range between 82-96% African. However, on CRI Genetics (Which I don't recommend at this time. I am 50.2% European on one test.) and they got my Maternal Haplogroup either Wrong or short.
@@TheBlueRage Certain DNA companies have to small of a reference population to determine admixtures correctly. Going from 1% on one site to 14% on another is way to large of a gap. There's definitely something wrong with the sample size st that point. Also, make sure to check your results biyearly if not more often. Sometimes DNA companies will gain a large sample pop. But largely anything under 3% isn't something to super focus on.
My friend added in his family's info to an app named geni - you can google search 'geni family tree' and he mapped out what he knew of his family tree, and the cousins mapped out what they knew, and he had 600 cousins - truely. It might be something you might want to look at, to make mapping out who is who and give a good visual presentation of your 'family'. Nice video, even though I have no clue obviously who any of these people are, I enjoyed watching this video..........
I would think its possible the genetic marks for senegal are similar to what jada has but are not necessarily from an ancestor who is from Senegal. Theres a little bit of art in DNA.
We all are a mix! Lucky us. My father always said it makes us stronger being mixed.
Yes 👏
Barbara, you should really have your father and Joe’s parents take a DNA test. It’s always best to have the older generations test anyway, but especially since you and Joe share DNA. If your father and Joe match, then one of Joe’s parents would match your father even closer than you and Joe. You can then eliminate family lines not connected by DNA and build up your tree to find your most recent common ancestor.
I’m just tryna see why they tryna figure this out cause it’s gon be so awkward nowwww😭😭😭 now they cousins
@@isaiahgowdy7149 Because it's fun 😁
Absolutely ! They will give you another generation back ! That’s your sixth generation .
They only test a fraction of your dna .
love that you are doing this as a family ... tracing family trees is so much fun and I always tell people to be ready for surprises
You can inherit ancestry some of your siblings do not have or from a distant ancestor that nobody else inherited from in your immediate family and percentages can vary between family.
Yes you can have DNA that your siblings do not have and vice verse however, it still has to be passed from parent to child so the parent still has to have that DNA. What more than likely is going on is both her and her daughters father have the DNA its just such a small amount that its not showing on the test. The daughters is showing because she inherited it from both parents making her have more DNA then both parents individually. Most DNA sites will not show DNA under 1%
@@shadowkissed2370 yep, not to mention when Ancestry did that “update” over a year ago a LOT of strands got shaved off and there is no way to look that up.
Everybody has Norway but me ! Including my daughter .
Creole is French Canadian and any indigenous or African is Creole too but not necessary to have black or indigenous , you only have to be related to an Acadian. That’s a French speaking person to part of Canada attacked by British and burned out . Forced out
@@shadowkissed2370my daughter got my Norway . I t don’t have any . It just didn’t express in me .
Also my French doesn’t show as French it shows as northwestern Europe , Germanic . But her dad had 2% French and she got that from him , he may have more , but what she got was from him . Because he didn’t take a test .
I worded that strangely I’m afraid .
I love the analysis and comparison detail you include in your video!! Also, love the interaction between mom and dad and mom and daughter. What great videos to watch!
This is so good.
I’ve been listening so intently that I can’t finish right now I’ll listen to the rest tomorrow but this family is so lucid and well I can’t explain how well they are presenting their research.
I just plain love it thanks
Welcome Deborah, I have all 5 of our tests in a playlist here at the channel.
Your daughter is so beautiful!!!!!
Thank you both for sharing.
Thank you so much for the break down on “Once Removed” Your family is beautiful regardless of accidental 3or 4th cousins 😆🥰
Growing up in southern Belize, I can remember whenever there was a new kid in class, we would ask ‘What’s your title?’ (surname) to figure out how you are related to the new kid.
Even now we say "Who dah yo ma, who da yo pa?"
I do this in America if your a Gladden a renau a Flowers a Tillet or Gillet we related lol im 2nd generation here in America
@@STAY_FRESHK I’m Gillett and Flowers. Lol!
@@STAY_FRESHK I think I’m also related to Gladdens.
@@STAY_FRESHK Im Flowers
Your daughter is so beautiful! Absolutely gorgeous girl!
Great results! Update when you find out where the "other" dna originated from. I love your personalities and your relationship together. You are fun to watch. You did a lot of work to trace everything back. Good job!
I can't stop smiling when I watch your videos ❤️❤️💜💜 Beautiful souls you are 🌼✨
This is so much fun, thank you for sharing Barbara and Jada!
Cool. Thank you for sharing. It would have been super interesting to see more detailed information of your native side!!!
Dna is so complicated and fascinating at once ive recently started digging into mine and am currently waiting my dna results. Ive always loved history and genetics and dna. Then i found out at 24 that my dad might not be my dad. I was also told at a young age that my dad possibly had another daughter out there that no one had any information for and he passed away so i cant ask him. We also never knew much of anything about either side. I only knew my one grandma and she passed when i was 13 we only saw her a couple times a year so i didnt even know much about her. All of this combined made me really want to know who i am and where i come from.
Genealogy is so interesting and cool! I've enjoyed your channel for awhile and would never guessed you and your husband were distant relatives. I am mostly PA Dutch (German) and British. Pennsylvania has alot of communities with German heritage (such as the Amish), and that is where my grandparents were from. I grew up in another state and recently moved to a rural PA town with alot of German influence (some people speak a dialect of English that borrows slang from German). I grew up in a very diverse DC suburb with not many people of European ancestry, so it's a new experience for me. It's fascinating to think that I may perhaps encounter distant relatives now that I live where my ancestors settled. I have already met people and seen stores that include surnames found further back in my family tree.
In 34 years of marriage, Joe and I have never even discovered one cousin by blood or marriage that we have in common so it was a shock to find myself on his list of matches. It's really interesting like you said. People with the same last name, especially if the name is unique is definitely cause to question if they are related to you.
I enjoyed watching your Ancestry DNA 🧬 videos. Thanks for sharing your your heritage and lineage 💯💕.
Thanks for watching because I put a lot of time into editing the videos.
My dad from PG how cool love seeing ancestry episodes
I love this! I love you guys humor too!
Jada is hilarious 🤣 love this video.
Hey guys, new subscriber, thanks for sharing.
Loved this video! I think all this DNA stuff is fascinating!!!!
I wonder if there are recessive genes that are brought out by the double relation
Love this presentation.
You have a beautiful family. Great videos!
i love jada!! i can't help but smile when i see her!!
ua-cam.com/video/1Bf70XKk8f4/v-deo.html
Wait I’m confused I thought your dads mom was half Indian where’s the Indian surename?
cm = centimorgans
Is just a way of measuring the length of dna
I love all of your personalities!
Interesting results you got :). Making a family tree is so much fun and the satisfaction you get when you can complete a branch etc is soo huge. Specially ow as you have this cousin connection trying to figure that out.
My father's parents were 2nd cousins to each other. My dad did know that they were cousins to a degree, but it was a surprise to him too that they were 2nd cousins. That is maybe a little too close of a relative for my liking (even though I don't even know all of my 2nd cousins)... but one close relation in your tree does fairly little. And marrying your cousins is inevitable in smaller communities which my grandparents came from (and royalty. Maybe I am royal?? :D).
Such a cool thing to get all your family taking DNA tests. I've finally gotten my son and his father to take the tests - I was joking but it wouldn't be a far stretch to find out my ex and I are distant cousins too!!! Great job, so much fun to watch!
Truthfully, you two look so much a like. You didn't need a test to prove that you're related. Both beautiful women.
Jada is so pretty and I love her style!
Yes she is.
I have to laugh when you call her mommy cousin.I used to be a maid for this family 2 kids , and the little girl called me aunt grandma patty.
How interesting. Makes me want to do my DNA test. Both of my parents, grand parents and only 1/2 sibling are deceased but it would still be interesting to see where my DNA shows where I'm from. Really enjoyed the video.
It depends how you inherit it. For example I have 25% Albanian 🇦🇱 but my sister has 0. While my sister has middle eastern and northern Italy when I do not have those regions.
I love the song at the end of your show.
You are so delightful and smart. I would never have the energy and wherewithal to figure all this stuff out. You must have selected the best genes of the whole lot and are now a superhuman. 😄❤️
this was fun to watch!
Your daughter is beautiful.
Excellent breakdown! I enjoyed this..
So Cool, almost 45% African and almost 15% Indian and 4% Native American. How exotic.
You have mom and I cracking up..
We enjoyed the video
Tell Anna I said hi. I see baby girl getting so tall. I love her wild hair. If mommy was alive she woulda been spoiled. Mommy would have asked me "Dah weh di rass you gone tek dah test fah?" lol
@@TheBarePantryShow hahaha ikr 😄
That is not entirely uncommon my parents are actually distant cousins themselves and did not know that they were actually genetically related at all. cm is centimeters
Centimorgans with dna. I assume autocorrect changed it
Did you figure out who were common ancestor is? Normally not that hard in the 3rd cousin range. If you haven’t, just start building your tree.
Your family tree looks a LOT like mine! I'm half Central American (My mom was born in Honduras - Honduran Father, Nicaraguan Mother), and my father is Anglo-American with deep MD-VA roots (I call him a European smoothie). Every time Ancestry updates their site the results switch the regions from chart to my mom and aunties' charts. Especially the Middle East, Jewish, C. Asia, results. When you have a diverse mix..it really helps to test as much family as possible 😂😂
I noticed cindy mcclay 's last name is simular to my son's last name mclayea through his father and grandfather Thank you for sharing .
My brother had DNA from a different African nation than me. I have Senegalese DNA. DNA can be a roll of the dice 🎲
"Removed" refers to how many generations there are between you and two other people who have a family relationship. Ex. if you have two people who are first cousins, Cousin A and Cousin B, then Cousin A's CHILD is not a first cousin to Cousin B but instead is first cousin once removed. It goes in both directions - both the child and Cousin B are first cousins once removed to each other. If Barbara and Joe have "removed" in their relationship then they are not in the same generation and Joe's great-grandparents are Barbara's great-great-grandparents or whatever it is. 😃
Jada is such a beauty 😍💗
Thank you for going through your DNA matches. Some people don't understand the fact that it is as important as your racial breakdown. Another thing that will be beneficial to share is paternal and Mtdna haplogroups.
She has this distinctively gorgeous skin tone, just beautiful, feature wise ,she looks W&S Asian type
Love you guys you sound like are family.
La parte que heredas de tus antepasados es una lotería, un pellizco de aquí y otro pellizco de allá
Were your Grinage line out of Maryland by any chance?
As long as the family tree is within the family, the rest will match up as time goes on because they kept updating the database
The term once removed twice removed simply mean which generation you compare too. Moms first cousin is daughters first cousin but once removed since she is different generation. Moms first cousin’s child is daughters second cousin.
The child always has more or less the same DNA from BOTH parents. Its not an exact science, but children always have their own percentages. For example, if my mom is 100% British, I am guaranteed to have half of that. 3484 CM is what is most important Parent/Child relationship. You have a lot of close family I noticed. The 2nd to 3rd Cousin especially are the children and Grandchildren of the Grandparents siblings! What you do is going into their family trees that are tied to their DNA and find the common ancestor (only if their tree is developed enough) Looks like you guys did exactly that in your search so good job!~
The ppl show up in order of cM quantity. So the higher the number, the higher they appear on the list.
Ivory Coast is same as Senegal and Mali between the two.
Do an update video on this because Ancestry just released their newest update and they're even more accurate now. See what changed
Love this family!
DNA is fascinating; thanks so much for sharing!
Interesting. My results don’t show what side of the family the matches come from. I need to find out how to get that information.
It can only show you if both of your parents took the test. Or if you and your mom took the test it would just show your moms side and you can assume if they aren’t related to her they are on your dads side.
@@Shante-330 thanks for replying. I actually went to Ancestry.com to find out about and saw that criteria. Unfortunately, both my parents have passed so I’m out of luck on that option.🙁...I know more extensive DNA testing may be able to tell, but, oh well🤷🏽♀️.
You’re looking for Louisiana in the 1700s. For the Creole . French Canadian
Cousin chart: www.familysearch.org/blog/en/cousin-chart/ & cM = centimorgan (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centimorgan)
Barbara , you came up on mine I think thru my father
Potugese native also has middle eastern
I absolutely love 💗 Jada...my Niece from my half sister who is 1/2 Mexican has one ☝🏽 of my beautiful nieces’ who’s name is Jayda. My dad was 3/4 Indigenous Native N. American so wow 😯...so my niece who is 1/2 black will be all kinds of ethnicities. I miss her now as she’s beautiful and happy like your daughter. Your Ancestry is abundantly Amazing 😉. The cousin situation is hilarious as my maternal grandparents were supposedly 4th Cousins. 🤷🏻♀️🙋🏻♀️🔎👌🏽💌 Momma has the dedicated genealogists research bug! I love your DNA History is so fun. Jada has your husbands fun personality..Switched at Birth!!! Lol 😆 Daughter Cousin 😘👏🏽 Thank you for sharing and posting. You made me smile 😊.
The ethnicity numbers are just estimates, they update from time to time. Trying to treat it as a mathematical comparison of family members is problematic as it is just an estimate .
Looks like their family got a big discount from ancestry.com , almost everyone is on website.
😆 🤣 😂
It doesn't matter what order they are listed as a relative. Also it doesn't matter how you are related. If a person is related through both sides, then your daughter could have more DNA in common with a cousin than you do.
Also you can do a side-by-side comparison rather than writing it on paper, because the updates could have changed something as more people are tested
The Eritrea region may explain the missing Jewish background. They have a large region of Jewish people. Tiffany Haddish the comedian's father is a Eritrean jew. She has a whole video about her bar mitzvah. Thanks for sharing.
How do you get it to show what side you are related on? I haven't been able to locate that.
You have to have your parents take the test. It's automatic. I think you just need one because my father took it and it shows Father's Side so I just assume the others are Mother's Side.
It’s random. You both have dna from A-Z. It randomly picks from both parents grandparents and great grandparents. Your daughter will get hrl but your other child will get jlq. Dna is amazing. No one is exactly the same and from one spot on the map. I absolutely love this fact.
We have done a lot of investigation on both sides of our family & mostly we are Irish, Scottish & Maori & because of the Maori we assume we’ll have some African as well because they assume that the original Polynesians were from Africa that travelled by water when there was a famine in Africa & the rest the the people travelled over land to the Middle East & Europe. I remember learning in Junior High from one of my teachers who was of African heritage & he told us about the facts about the Maori because he found out of my heritage❤️
Belize boiling soup over there boy, look like good soup though 😩😩😩😂😂😂
Interesting I've received a lot of euro.ancestor surname matches but don't share with anyone else, interesting
These tests are updated every few years. They get more advanced as time goes on. I forgot.
@@RosaleeSmith We have received all the updates. I wanna try another company to see how they differ or remain the same.
Norman’s are French speaking but they spread across Europe . They are from Charlemagne I believe .
Did you go in and add mother's side and father's side? My DNA matches do not specify what side of the family they are on.
The system automatically matches you based on your dna if you have family members that also took the test.
Can your child have a different region and neither one of you as her parents have the same region?
It's still extremely common in many parts of the world for first cousins to marry without any social stigma.
because your mix is closer to a different group, my son came out English because im mostly Scandianvian an my husband has a lot of Irish and central europe. This mix is what you find in England
Did the King person 2-3 cousin ever contact?
They had our people everywhere
What was going on about the father side and the mother side? Were the parents kits swapped? Is the result marked for Barbara actually Joseph´s i.e. was his spit sent in under her serial number?
No, we found out that Joe and I are distantly related so the kids are related to some people on both sides of the family. I did mine 3 years ago.
I had the same thing happen having someone get 7 percent French but parents are at zero or like 2 percent. 🤷🏼
You can disregard anything below about 2-3% as being, essentially, genetic “static,” or random chance. According to geneticists.
Not true. I can be 1% something on one site and 14% on another site. I lost my North African DNA via updates, However, haplogroup is North African, Morocco, Egypt (Arab) FTDNA. Depending on what the map is. I range between 82-96% African. However, on CRI Genetics (Which I don't recommend at this time. I am 50.2% European on one test.) and they got my Maternal Haplogroup either Wrong or short.
@@TheBlueRage Certain DNA companies have to small of a reference population to determine admixtures correctly. Going from 1% on one site to 14% on another is way to large of a gap. There's definitely something wrong with the sample size st that point.
Also, make sure to check your results biyearly if not more often. Sometimes DNA companies will gain a large sample pop. But largely anything under 3% isn't something to super focus on.
@@TheBlueRage who do you recommend? I have had groups completely removed.
My friend added in his family's info to an app named geni - you can google search 'geni family tree' and he mapped out what he knew of his family tree, and the cousins mapped out what they knew, and he had 600 cousins - truely. It might be something you might want to look at, to make mapping out who is who and give a good visual presentation of your 'family'. Nice video, even though I have no clue obviously who any of these people are, I enjoyed watching this video..........
human's experience love at first sight might not be love at first might just be family attraction . hey cuzo
CM is centiMorgans
Cm = centimetres ?
Your daughter Jada is beautiful just like her mom.
Your first cousin is your child's first cousin once removed, children of cousins are 2nd cousins...
I would think its possible the genetic marks for senegal are similar to what jada has but are not necessarily from an ancestor who is from Senegal. Theres a little bit of art in DNA.
Because you can take from a different ancestor then all of the rest
WOW!
so sweet
French Canadian could be Creole . That might be a hint that it’s on joes side .