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Thank you Victor and everyone else who shared info on dna and mtdna. It looks like time will make the tests even more affordable and understandable for the layman..
In doing the records provided by the LDS centers on the marriages, births, baptisms and deaths of our Mexican Ancestors I've gathered information that only mtdna and dna tests will prove or disprove. Mainly the discovery of African Ancestors that my Mexican born family insist never occurred! Telling them that Mulato Esclavos married Indios who then married Espanol's doesn't seem to make believers of them..We are obviously Mestizo's and I hope to prove we are all Mexico had to offer! I only wish I had reason to think I have Jerish origins too but I don't. Oh well, I can't have it all! I did find Mulato's in my lines in Zacatecas (Alcala/Seranoo) and Jalisco (Figueroa/Rolon) in the 1700's.
On a side note, I went to Mexico for the first time 2 years ago and tried to find records of birth and marriage for my grandparents in both Jerez Zacatecas and Tamazula Jalisco.. After hours of waiting at the church and city hall in Tamazula I was told they didn't have any such record for them. I came home and ordered the film from LDS and there they were! I'm learning to count my blessings and spend the hours reading the records!
Linda
Victor Villarreal <vela_este@...> wrote:
Hello Linda,
If you already ordered and sent your samples through Gary Felix's site, that means that the company doing your testing is Family Tree DNA.
What the mtDNA test will show is what haplogroup your maternal-genealogical line belongs to. This will identify the biogeographical regions and migration routes of your deep ancestry; deep meaning very, very old ancestry.
In the case of YDNA is something similar for the paternal line, except that the genetic markers in the Y chromosome mutate more rapidly so they can be used to trace genealogical relationships (by matching to others) on a shorter time scale (hundreds of years). Obviously, this kind of test is most useful from the genealogist perspective.
There's a third kind of test done by a different company which tests not the Y chromosome, nor the mitochondrial (mt)
DNA, but the autosomal DNA. This DNA represents the bulk of our DNA, the genetic accumulation or load of all our ancestors that define what and who we are, not only the maternal and paternal lineages DNA. The test purports to show by percentages our ethnic composition, for example, African, South East Asian, North Western European, etc. BUT, and this is a big but, although the test relies on the same proven DNA sequencing technologies as the other two tests, the interpretation of the analised markers as valid biogeographical indicators has been questioned by many knowledgable researchers. In simpler words, at this stage of development, this test is highly speculative and not to be taken as gospel.
Victor
--- In ranchos@yahoogroups.com, "Erlinda Castanon-Long" <longsjourney@y...> wrote: > I would love to see how others did thier dna tests. I feel cheated as > a female that I can only do the
mtdna (female)line. I ordered mine > through Gary Felix's site. My husband ordered his from another even > though it's the same lab.. he does not have ancestors from Mexico. My > test kit arrived in 10 days, my husbands took 6 weeks to arrive. I'm > waiting for my results now and expect them by the end of June. I also > like how the Mexico site will hold our results for 25 years and will > notify us if there is a match with someone. > > I don't fully understand how they analize the results but expect to > find African, Espanol and Indio blood lines if my research records are > correct. I'm hoping they break it down in percentages, Joseph, do you > know how it's done? > > Linda Castanon-Long
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