Arts & Humanities: Genealogy: “Question: What percentage Native American am I?” plus 4 more |
- Question: What percentage Native American am I?
- Question: How much African and Native do I have?
- Question: If me and someone else who came from the same family as me 1200 years ago met?
- Question: Modi ke ma ka nam?
- Question: Where did the name Coppack originate from?
| Question: What percentage Native American am I? Posted: 01 Oct 2016 08:14 PM PDT Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel |
| Question: How much African and Native do I have? Posted: 01 Oct 2016 07:57 PM PDT All my grandparents, gr, gr gr and stuff are white but I have a gr grandfather that was white and looked it, pale with blue eyes he actually look like a Italian, but he had some native american and African background. Then my gr grandmother was over 50 percent white, she was pale and very much fine feature, she look very French, but she had a white father and a mixed (white, black, and native american) mother, my gr gr grandparents. This is coming from my grandfather that is Puerto Rican (my dads father) making my dad half and me a quarter. How much has pass on to me? Also am I consider white or no? What am I 90percent? |
| Question: If me and someone else who came from the same family as me 1200 years ago met? Posted: 01 Oct 2016 05:49 PM PDT You are still related but it is so far distant your risk of producing children with any type of f any type of genetic anomalies is almost nonexistent. You very possibly could share some DNA. Actually get back that far your own parents are probably related to each other many times. Your ancestry doubles each generation you go back and begins to pyramid big time. By the time you get back to the 13th century and if you reach your 20 something great grandparents by then(that is 20 greats in front of grandparents and I don't remember the exact number) if each were a different person they would out number the population of the world at that time. So kiddo you are passing cousins on the street every days and don't know it. You know some people younger than myself (I'm 81) can get back to the time of Charlemagne in 40 generations. That would be your 2 parents, 4 grandparents and up through your 38 great grandparents. The population of the world is estimated to have been about 30 to 40 million. It would be far less for Europe. If each of those 38 great grandparents were a different person they would total over 1 trillion people. So, yep, you have lots of cousin marriages in your ancestry. Many states in the U.S. allow first cousin marriage. All allow 2nd cousin marriages. Most countries of Europe allow first cousin marriages. If you produce children by someone who is closely related it is not a given that you will have children with some genetic problems. The closer you are related it is just that the risk is greater. That's all. This is probably more of a genetics question than genealogy. Genealogy is tracing ancestry using documents/records. Also how would you know you share the same patrilineal line back 1200 years ago. Having the same surname doesn't mean that. Surnames were not taken in Europe until the first part of the last millennium and the purpose was not to identify a man as a member of a family but just to better identify him on records, frequently for taxation. Too many men named Tom, Henry and George in the same proximity and they had to be able to figure who was who. When they got through legitimate sons of the same man could have wound up with a different surname and still each could have shared his with others with no known relationship, even within the same nation. |
| Posted: 01 Oct 2016 01:19 PM PDT First this is an English language site, not Hindi Second thus is zero to do with genealogy, mire like a school homework question Narendra Modi was born on 17 September 1950 to a family of grocers in Vadnagar, Mehsana district, Bombay State (present-day Gujarat). He was the third of six children born to Damodardas Mulchand Modi and Hiraben Modi |
| Question: Where did the name Coppack originate from? Posted: 01 Oct 2016 01:45 AM PDT With the "exact spelling" box checked, https://familysearch.org/search/ (the largest free genealogy site in the English-speaking world) has just over 10,000 records for it. By comparison they have over 150,000 for "Pack", which I know from personal experience is uncommon, and over 28,000,000 for "Smith". So, it is rare. Here are the collections in the BMD category that have over 100 records: England and Wales Birth Registration Index, 1837-2008 1,664 results Based on that, I'd say England and Wales. BTW, "originate" means "come from", so "originate from" means "come from from". While I'm at it, "pizza" means "pie", so "pizza pie" means "pie pie". When I was growing up there was a street in my neighborhood called "La Calle Street". "La Calle" means "the street" in Spanish. You see these all the time. They are called tautologies. |
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