tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post8500756672896125052..comments2024-03-27T14:50:47.345-04:00Comments on <center>Sandwalk</center>: The DNA Genealogy ScamLarry Moranhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05756598746605455848noreply@blogger.comBlogger83125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-44018895814566336832014-05-22T13:47:54.492-04:002014-05-22T13:47:54.492-04:00This actually went on until 1985. I was also given...This actually went on until 1985. I was also given a fake birth certificate by catholic services. Apparently babies were taken from their mothers at this time and given to more " appropriate" families. It has been recommended that if someone is adopted they do all 3 tests, and gedmatch, and also ancestry can match you to real people. I was very happy with my dna tribes results.Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13642103688677067577noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-15464181156392945152014-02-22T17:38:18.874-05:002014-02-22T17:38:18.874-05:00Thank you Gyp so.
In addition, DNA evidence mark...Thank you Gyp so. <br /><br />In addition, DNA evidence marks the Irish and Scottish populations as coming from Portugal millenia before the advent of Judiasm. Unknownhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00066676101826960946noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-42760161983563437692014-01-12T09:08:04.290-05:002014-01-12T09:08:04.290-05:00Do you really want to see the biggest scam artist ...Do you really want to see the biggest scam artist of all?<br />Try ISOGG and DNAExplain<br />Neither of which are geneticists or scientists.<br />http://www.dnaexplain.com/About/Resume.asp<br /><br />http://www.isogg.org/Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02779252712913995283noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-6158675304726653092013-12-29T15:48:33.290-05:002013-12-29T15:48:33.290-05:00Having been tested with three companies, my opini...Having been tested with three companies, my opinion is ,<br /><br />FTDNA : Good at mtDNA and Y DNA ancestry, but their autosomal testing (population Finder) is at very early experimental stage, not much reliable<br /><br />23andme: Their autosomal testing is probably better, provides a more detailed match list, dont take health results seriously.<br /><br />DNA tribes : i transferred my 23andme results for their analysis. The analysis seems to be in line with what i know - Balcans, Slavic, SE Europe, but some tests have contradicting results. For example, results with native populations and all populations are totally different.<br /><br />i think 23andme probably is the one that is most informative with a nice user-interface.<br /><br />kerciyeshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09862246549379840256noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-73309114379803033062013-12-18T21:01:21.290-05:002013-12-18T21:01:21.290-05:00I wish I had seen this blog before ordering my mom...I wish I had seen this blog before ordering my mom's DNA test through DNA tribes. The results are impossible to understand and a total waste of money. I will be posting negative comments about them everywhere!Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-77133350976421492342013-12-07T20:13:12.872-05:002013-12-07T20:13:12.872-05:00I did my test with DNA Tribes and it is surprising...I did my test with DNA Tribes and it is surprising that many people are disappointed.<br /><br />I was born in Egypt with Moroccan and Arab Ancestry but no idea where in Arabia. Did the test and it confirms my Moroccan ancestry and Arab ancestry. My Arab ancestors were from Qatar. Other Populations that poped up seemed random at first but with a little research i was able to connect all the dots.Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00866983041271169190noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-20494148687707973542013-07-28T14:55:05.704-04:002013-07-28T14:55:05.704-04:00Lie you do. Health is probabilities. Ancestry is f...Lie you do. Health is probabilities. Ancestry is fairly accurate. You imagination will do you in. Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10879752734869436551noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-92018271703577698172013-05-22T21:38:05.108-04:002013-05-22T21:38:05.108-04:0023andMe RIPOFF!! SCAM!! REPORTS FALSE AND UN-TRUE ...23andMe RIPOFF!! SCAM!! REPORTS FALSE AND UN-TRUE (AVOID THIS SCAM)<br /><br />23ANDME is a RIPOFF! RIPOFF! RIPOFF!. It's a SCAM!!! It's a SCAM!!! I bought one of their $99 test kits that will break down my genetics and tell me my chances of getting ill from certain cancers and heart disease. I could not believe my eyes when I saw the test results. TOTALY FALSE! They make these numbers up! I called them for a refund and I was insulted by Andy Page who refused to return my money. I had my tests done somewhere else and the results were totally different.<br /><br />I called them again and a technician by the name of “Arnab Chowdry “ secretly told me that the results are made up and no actual genetic study is done. Anne “The founder of this scam” he told me, made up the idea when they where dating each other. I want to make myself available for any class action lawsuits against this FRAUD!.<br /><br />http://www.ripoffreport.com/r/23andMe/Mountain-View-California-94043/23andMe-RIPOFF-SCAM-REPORTS-FALSE-AND-UN-TRUE-AVOID-THIS-SCAM-Mountain-View-Califo-1052446Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-17059967980064300522013-05-22T21:13:40.430-04:002013-05-22T21:13:40.430-04:0023andMe co-founder Anne Wojcicki, is the wife of G...23andMe co-founder Anne Wojcicki, is the wife of Google co-founder Sergey Brin.<br /><br />Google is a private company that uses your Web searches, photos, Gmail messages, etc. to get data on you. Google scans every photo you upload to Google+. It can find out what your family members look like.<br /><br />I wish I had not spent hundreds of dollars on 23andMe, only to be scammed. I went into my Google account and discovered that there was a search history from some time before I sent in a sample. I was researching a specific race. Lo and behold, that's the race I got for my results. I want my money back.<br /><br />http://www.businessinsider.com/googles-plan-to-take-over-the-world-2013-5#ixzz2U4YQKhQP<br />http://www.spenceforensics.com/dnaancestry.html<br />http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/science-news/9912822/DNA-ancestry-tests-branded-meaningless.html<br /><br />Thank you for this site.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-58363393349175274822013-05-14T12:44:22.083-04:002013-05-14T12:44:22.083-04:00I have read the comments on this blog and I have t...I have read the comments on this blog and I have to laugh. I was <br />I was watching Jerry Springer or Maury Povich the other day and they were trying to find the father of this woman's baby and they marched out 7 different men onstage and that woman swore up and down that each and every single one of those men were the baby's father. In the end none of them were the father. I very seriously doubt that this a new phenomenon and in fact has gone on in every age. If you think that you know who your grandpa is or your great grandpa is you may want to rethink it.It just might be that great grandma caught the eye of the Chinese guy at the laundry mat or the Moroccan gas station attendant. I read on here about the guy claiming the results were wrong because he knew that his ancestors were from the same small town in England for the last 400 years. Again... lol Maybe grandma didn't tell grandpa about the night they had an argument and how the Brazilian or Tunisian guy at the pub comforted her. I think that for all the geniuses on here looking for answers don't forget one of the most obvious answers human nature infidelity and deceit.Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00716594428269976086noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-58622446235709652612013-04-10T00:11:33.590-04:002013-04-10T00:11:33.590-04:00@ Anonymous
DNA Tribes have a lot of paperwork exp...@ Anonymous<br />DNA Tribes have a lot of paperwork explaining how to interpret your results. Maybe you missed these...<br /><br />@ James Brian Marshall<br />Looks like you may have your wires crossed in a number of places and have over generalised [just] a few unsubstantiated claims.<br /><br />It's better to do some in-depth research rather than clutch at the straws of stories told from ages past.<br />The Declaration was written by Catholics as a submission to Pope John XXII so it would naturally mention a connection to Israel. This is hardly grounds to state, scientifically, that Scots descend from Israelites.<br /><br />Welsh is an ancient form of Hebrew? Now I've heard it all....much be a good batch that you're smoking there...<br /><br />Regarding your Hebrew-British claims....well we could be here all day...in summary what you stated is total nonsense.<br /><br />As for Iroquois and Cherokee ties to Jewish DNA....this is unsubstantiated as scientists have not been able to rule out mixing with people of Ashkenazi heritage.<br /><br />The 'Bat Creek Inscription' has been found to be a hoax.<br /><br />If we do a little more research....we find that everything you have stated has no basis in fact.Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08406807314870311080noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-50861451939869561892013-02-25T14:36:11.887-05:002013-02-25T14:36:11.887-05:00An interesting letter in the post this morning:-
...An interesting letter in the post this morning:-<br /><br />"Dear Sir, I located your address online from a phone company listing. Since the listings are by first name initial only, I apologize for not being able to properly address you by forename as well.<br /><br />I have cogitated long and hard a few months now of how best to compose a letter like this and not be intrusive. But contact with so-called experts in diplomacy and etiquette failed to give much guidance.<br /><br />Therefore I shall cut to the chase.<br /><br />I am an American descended from 17th century English colonists. Research pinpoints the likely progenitor of my surname lineage to be a George ****, who arrived in Virginia in 1679.<br /><br />As with many immigrants from this early period, any scrap of evidence to verify birthplace for this forebear has yet to surface, should it exist.<br /><br />Age bracket of the immigrant, patterns for given names firmly adhered to by British society in the past, coupled with my perusal of old parish records available online, allow me to make the supposition that George ****, the colonist, may have originated from a **** family in (my home town).<br /><br />The parish records also show that the **** name was widespread in England from the late Middle Ages onward. Many of these families with this last name may not have been related at all. But I still am of the opinion that a strong chance exists that the Virginia ****s stem from (my home town).<br /><br />Having provided this background information, I am contacting you to inquire whether you would consider, at my expense, participating in a Y-chromosome DNA study. The Y-chromosome is inherited only from father to son, much like a surname is in patrilineal societies. Therefore, this study is necessarily restricted to men.<br /><br />If particular gene sequences of your Y-chromosome were to match mine, this survey could stand to prove or disprove **** as the ancestral seat for most Americans with the **** surname in their pedigree. Again, the impetus to conduct this genetic analysis is the lack of documentation for the emigrant's place of origin.<br /><br />If you are a man and know that your **** forebears have long been resident in the **** region, I invite you to participate.<br /><br />I can offer recompense in the form only of the Y-chromosome comparison and of DNA assessment as well of your maternal ancestry. I shall be privy only to the Y-chromosome results. If you can see other means by which I can show my appreciation to you for this great imposition on your privacy, please propose such to me.<br /><br />If you decide to aid me in my research, collection of the tissue sample for DNA analysis is very easily obtained by swabbing the inside of one's mouth with a small cytology brush and mailing the brush, postage-paid, to the laboratory.<br /><br />For further questions or details you might have, do not hesitate to contact me.<br /><br />Thank you for consideration of my request.<br /><br />Yours very truly"<br /><br />Name<br />Phone numbers office & home<br />Emailanonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03729881754309936893noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-88711781279332303492013-02-05T21:51:45.372-05:002013-02-05T21:51:45.372-05:00I took a chance without fully knowing, and still n...I took a chance without fully knowing, and still not understanding, how genetic DNA tests work and tested a family member at FTDNA. I have had no luck with the YDNA results since I chose the 37 one and got back only distant matches on the 25 level. Of course their response to that was that not enough people have tested for him to come up with a match.<br /><br />So, I paid more money for the Family Finder tests which has actually produced several matches that I've been able to trace in actual records.<br /><br />I'm not totally sold on the population finder yet though, simply because I can't trace my ancestry on paper beyond America and the fact that the field is so new. Maybe in the future it will be more accurate, but right now I think we're just guinea pigs !<br /><br />Overall, I would not encourage others to spend money on these test unless you're willing to take a risk. I personally don't think FTDNA is scamming people though.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-42956152929407644752013-02-03T22:58:36.374-05:002013-02-03T22:58:36.374-05:00White people originate from Persia and Georgia.
T...White people originate from Persia and Georgia. <br />The Caucus Mountains in Georgia (I think)are where Caucasians come from. <br /><br /> James Brian Marshallhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07889997109571762096noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-87786929076329338862013-02-03T22:56:02.270-05:002013-02-03T22:56:02.270-05:00Hey there ease up! Read this and maybe this helps....Hey there ease up! Read this and maybe this helps... <br /><br />The Declaration of Arbroath 1320 — English Translation<br />Written to "His Holiness" Catholic Church. <br /><br />Most Holy Father and Lord, we know and from the chronicles and books of the ancients we find that among other famous nations our own, the Scots, has been graced with widespread renown. They journeyed from Greater Scythia by way of the Tyrrhenian Sea and the Pillars of Hercules, and dwelt for a long course of time in Spain among the most savage tribes, but nowhere could they be subdued by any race, however barbarous. Thence they came, twelve hundred years after the PEOPLE OF ISRAEL CROSSED THE RED SEA, to THEIR HOME IN THE WEST where they still live today.<br /><br />http://www.constitution.org/scot/arbroath.htm<br /><br /><br />THE BIBLE DECLARES OF ISAIAH 11:11 <br /><br />11 And it shall come to pass in that day, that the Lord shall set his hand again the second time to recover the remnant of his people, which shall be left, from Assyria, and from Egypt, and from Pathros, and from Cush, and from Elam, and from Shinar, and from Hamath, and from the ISLANDS OF THE SEA.<br /><br />Jeremiah 25:22<br />King James Version (KJV)<br />22 And all the kings of Tyrus, and all the kings of Zidon, and the kings of the ISLES which are BEYOND the SEA,James Brian Marshallhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07889997109571762096noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-59203453196836544702013-02-03T22:44:58.712-05:002013-02-03T22:44:58.712-05:00Not so... If you understand how the Irish arrived ...Not so... If you understand how the Irish arrived in Ireland.<br />For instance read the Scottish Declaration of Independence-Declaration of Arbroath 1320 which declares, "Thence they came, twelve hundred years after the PEOPLE OF ISRAEL crossed the Red Sea, TO THEIR HOME IN THE WEST where they still live today". <br /><br />http://www.constitution.org/scot/arbroath.htm<br /><br />Please notice the Scottish give a route,from whence they came, "Red Sea and Israel"... Please also notice the Scottish raise the Standard of the Lion of Judah, the same lion of Judah raised by the the English standard of arms, the same Lion of the Irish. The same Lion which can be found in Israel today. <br /><br />If we do a little more research we find the Welsh who still speak Welsh, speak an ancient form of Hebrew.<br /><br />If we read our Bibles, it tells us the Northern Kingdom of Israel was driven amoungst the nations. To one day be gathered again to a land of their own one more. Meanwhile Isaiah writes about "The People" who "glorify the Lord upon Isles of the sea. Isaiah 24:15 kjv ... Isaiah 11:11 declares: In that day the Lord will reach out his hand a second time to reclaim the remnant that is left of his people from Assyria, from Lower Egypt, from Upper Egypt, from Cush, from Elam, from Babylonia, from Hamath and from the ISLANDS OF THE SEA.<br /><br />To sum up. In Hebrew, Bryt means Covenant. Ish means people belonging to. British means "people belonging to the covenant".<br /><br />So don't be so dang sure of your genealogy. Because I know mine. I'm English,French,Scottish, and 2 part Iroquois Indian. Which incidentally the Iroquois and Cherokee have been tied to Jewish DNA research whose markers originate out of the Egyptian-Lebanon area. <br /><br />Yea and that's not supposed to be either... But it's true. <br />Just as the Bat Creek Hebrew Stone found in Tennessee also has been proven a factual find. See: <br />http://www.ampetrographic.com/files/BatCreekStone.pdf<br /><br /> <br /><br />James Brian Marshallhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07889997109571762096noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-60138432190264230972013-01-25T18:00:08.843-05:002013-01-25T18:00:08.843-05:00I agree. Nicely done...purebreds don't really ...I agree. Nicely done...purebreds don't really exist in my humble O.The Thinkerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16539766548834574469noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-26079400611119747792013-01-25T17:57:27.791-05:002013-01-25T17:57:27.791-05:00I agree. We all began somewhere else a long time ...I agree. We all began somewhere else a long time ago...the names of those places have changed over time and unless you have a paper trail a thousand years over you can't actually be sure of anything...maybe an aunt raised a nephew as her own because she couldn't conceive and the nephew married a cousin and no one ever told anyone about the concubine that daddy used to have. If you look Slavic you must be Slavic...I know I'm German, but that is saying a whole lot because Germans are made up of a whole lot of different peoples...when people came here from somewhere else, the peops at Ellis Island wrote down what they could undertand or couldn't to be more specific. Names were changed so they could leave work on time...just because you think you are one thing doesn't mean your ancestors didn't migrate to China hundreds of years before...none of that makes sense, right...neither do some of your posts...dna is a long string of life before we were ever even thought of...I don't look like anything but me...and my DNA tribes results prove I am a descendent of a whole lotta other mutts...yay!!!!The Thinkerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16539766548834574469noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-381682997870803882013-01-25T17:47:00.067-05:002013-01-25T17:47:00.067-05:00I agree....we all came from somewhere else...and t...I agree....we all came from somewhere else...and the names of those places have changed over time...live with it.The Thinkerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16539766548834574469noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-90967250677752241512013-01-01T21:19:52.302-05:002013-01-01T21:19:52.302-05:00I agree with you. DNA Tribes indicated that I have...I agree with you. DNA Tribes indicated that I have a good bit of North African and Spanish blood, and I was sure it did not come from my mother. For me, it pretty much confirmed that the legend about the Moorish origin of my surname is true. My mother's known ancestry is so concentrated in Northern and Eastern Europe that my father's origins seem to stand out in stark relief. On the other hand, I've read there is a strange genetic connection between Finns and Berbers. Therefore, the great amount of Finnic blood DNA Tribes says I have may belong to both my parents! The point is, the testing company gives us results; however, it is up to us to interpret those results. In order to do that, we have to educate ourselves about the movements of ancient populations--which is not easy. That I happened across the Finnic-Berber connection was a fluke. I will probably never know how much of each ethnicity comes from which parent, but that is not the fault of DNA Tribes. <br /> Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-42061046295918104382012-12-10T02:51:37.557-05:002012-12-10T02:51:37.557-05:00I wasted money on the DNA Tribes analysis and, lik...I wasted money on the DNA Tribes analysis and, like many other people here, i feel i was ripped off. I am of Northern European ancestry and their test said that I was primarily Malaysian. One look at me can determin this is totally innaccurate. what a ripoff.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-15883502648080773662012-10-31T23:30:37.900-04:002012-10-31T23:30:37.900-04:00DNA Tribes test results make no sense, apparently ...DNA Tribes test results make no sense, apparently my strongest ancestry is from Saudi Arabia. No English, no German and no Native American ancestry whatsoever, despite family data. Could they have gotten the samples mixed up?Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-12915983605169122742012-09-03T16:35:47.606-04:002012-09-03T16:35:47.606-04:00Thank you, to the person warning about FTDNA. I re...Thank you, to the person warning about FTDNA. I read that compelling story, about the guy who found biological relatives through that company. Being desperate, I was so close to purchasing. Now I know better.<br /><br />I went with 23andMe, after reading Neil Schwartzman's story about finding his biological relatives through them. Maybe he's one in a million. Or 23andMe have a team of writers, making up stories to lure people. I feel so scammed.<br /><br />People there, have mistakes in their personal traits and health reports. I should have significant European in my ancestry, but I got 0%. Every time I read on the site about humanity originating in Africa, then moving into other environments to form sub-groups, it makes no sense to me. How can they assign people to one of many haplogroups, when they only took samples from four populations? I don't even fill out the surveys anymore. 23andMe might turn my incorrect results into data. Then some poor soul will get the shock of their life.<br /><br />When I ask for help on the forum, I mostly get bullies who seem to want to drive me into suicide. 23andMe's people, do not seem to like you questioning their results. Since they do not admit that their testing is still in experimental stages, I cannot trust them. They act as if their tests have the final say. They asked if I wanted to spend another few hundreds of dollars, on another test. Nah, I'll pass. Seriously, I wish I had never taken this test.<br /><br />They do not have the technology to do what they claim. But they sure have the money to advertise. And they don't care, if your test results are wrong and unusable. If you complain, they try to label you as a con artist, looking for money. Ha, I know who the real con artists are.<br /><br />Thank you for this site. It's going to save some poor soul from a nervous breakdown.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-76222166158736727672012-08-26T21:17:40.475-04:002012-08-26T21:17:40.475-04:00I think the problem is with the DNA testing compan...I think the problem is with the DNA testing companies with the way the product is marketed and presented on the website. There is rarely any background on how the test works on the companies site in full view. <br /><br />For mtDNA and Y-Paternal 23andme does a *Halpogroup* which is not a *Halpotype." They do not test the Chromosome in large to call it a halpotype. The company is not going to ward off anyone getting too complicated but they should explain the basis of the test is actually quite limited. <br /><br />It's not that the DNA test is wrong or the company is a scam, but I feel these tests are being misrepresented and are subject to change with added/or minus population references. DNAtribes, they are producing results based on their population data. The more populations added the less credible the result. Everyone wants every milk and craney but this causes confusion in the population results. For ancestry, it is all comparative testing based on statistical data for common alleles in populations. This is why 23andme and DeCodeme uses only African, European and Asian. <br /><br />23andMe and DeCodeme use the International Hapmap or samples.<br />http://hapmap.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/ethicalconcerns.html<br /><br />"The individual DNA samples used in the Project are identified as coming from a male or a female, from one of the four populations participating in the study, and, in the case of the parent-child trios, from either one of the parents or the child. The samples are anonymous with regard to individual identity. Samples cannot be connected to individuals, and no personal information is linked to any sample. As an additional safeguard, more samples were collected from each population than were used, so no one knows whether any particular person's DNA is included in the study. No medical or phenotypic information was obtained from the donors." <br /><br />How do they arrive what is common for Europeans, Africans,Asians and Native Americans? Say for example you have 100 Native American test subjects, 70% test with the frequency pattern (AIM's) A-B-C and the remaining 30% test D-E-F. Now, if A-B-C is found most common with the Native American test sujbects and less common in Africans and Europeans, than A-B-C will be used as a marker for statistical data for comparative ethnic testing. While D-E-F is also found in 30% of the Native American test subjects, will not be used since it will be deemed not as common for Native American. However, just because A-B-C was found as common markers in the Native American test subjects, does not mean it is NOT found in other populations, or exclusively only with Native Americans or Native Americans can't carry another marker. This can produce false positives or false negatives. When you show similarity to an ethnic group, just means you have alleles in common with them, not that you have actual ancestry from this group of people. <br /><br />Bearing in mind, there are no samples from the USA for Native Americans or Canada Six Nation Tribes. Most of the Native American samples are coming from the all but plentiful Central Americans (Pima, Mayan) and some South American Brazilian. North Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-28360636621324671632012-06-16T01:46:42.266-04:002012-06-16T01:46:42.266-04:00I too was confused when I received my DNA Tribes r...I too was confused when I received my DNA Tribes report,but the more I knew about the process ,I was put at ease. Take for instance,if you have Native American genes but not listed with a specific tribe.Look on part D of DNA Tribes report and see if you can find mestizo. That is the Native American aspect of your chart. If it's within the top 10 of your chart within part D,then that's a high margin/ percentage.And proof of your Native American roots.<br />catmandu------------Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com