Saturday, March 10, 2012


Native (American) Heritage Project



Roberta Estes has been quietly working on the Native Heritage Project.

This project seeks to document people who are Native in existing records. To do this, Roberta says she is taking the following steps:
    
  

 1. She is collecting every instance of documents where Native people have surnames in some record that states they are Native, of Native descent, or have Native heritage. Initially, she has focused on the primary areas of Virginia, NC and SC and the Eastern Seaboard states.   

These, for the most parts, are tribes that were annihilated. Tribes west of the Mississippi were often able to maintain their tribal and cultural heritage after those east of the Mississippi has all but disappeared.
  

 2. Regarding the DNA, Roberta is matching the list generated by item 1 against people who are haplogroups Q and C, which are Native, to find a matches between the two lists.
  

 3. Ultimately, she would like to combine that information, above, with historical research that maps oldest ancestor of those who are genetically Native and village/tribe locations and perhaps, in time, the hope is to find a correlation and a way to tell which tribe someone is descended from.
  

 This is an unbelievable amount of work. Roberta has been working on it for almost 5 years now. Much of her early work was in documenting mixed race migrations and historical reading and references documenting early tribal locations.
  

Roberta is maintaining a separate page that shows resources she has already accessed.

  

If you have any record of a person that shows their Native ancestry, with documentation, please contact Roberta Estes. She would love to give them a voice by including their record in the project.  
  
 







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        London and Middlesex Parish Records



Brian Swann was kind enough to send an announcement about free access to London and Middlesex records.

 
              The West Surrey Family History Society web site: 

   

  


                                                                 
www.wsfhs.org


Brian's brief instructions for finding records:

 - Click on Publications Page and then on Research Aids.

 - Scroll down until you get to RA 49, RA 50, RA 51 and RA 53. 
   These can be opened online and are free!


These indexes cover Baptisms, Marriages, Burials and Nonconformist registers for the specified dates pre-1837.

Brian points out that you should try to read the comments on the web site by Cliff Webb, an authority on London and MIddlesex registers.
 









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Monday, September 19, 2011

Mapping Viking Migration with Y-DNA STR's



Mapping Viking Migration with Y-DNA STR's


Y-DNA analysis of STR information can provide clues to Viking migration in recent time frames. The Y-DNA STR YMRCA estimates suggests that the Norse (Vikings) could have originated from seafaring peoples of the Mediterranean Sea.











In March, 2011, the results of grouping the DNA STR information by country for the I1 (M253) haplotype were studied.

These results suggested a migration along a sea-faring route in recent time frames. In order to visualize that, a possible migration route is presented here. As stated in the article in March, the method does have some problems. It may be worthwhile to visualization the difference in from currently posted maps of SNP's in order to contrast with what was found from the STR study.

Most SNP maps today show an overland route for M253 either through the mountains of Europe, or through the general vicinity of Germany. The STR map (below) suggests a sea-faring route, based upon TMRCA estimates for STR modal groups by country.


                                                        click on image to enlarge


Some of the resulting TMRCA estimates were stylized in order to represent the data in one graphic.

For reference, see "Y-DNA and Viking Migration"


 
  and "On Viking Origins & Y-DNA"
 
            http://hamcountry-blog.blogspot.com/2011/03/viking-origins-and-y-dna.html
 

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