Southwest Finland has rich Late Iron Age archaeological records that show diverse cultural and trade networks. Onkamo, Päivi (University of Helsinki, Faculty of Biological and Environmental Sciences, Organismal and Evolutionaryīiology Research Programme University of Turku, Department of Biology) Turku, Department of Biology) - Krause, Johannes (Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, Department of Archaeogenetics). Research Programme Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, Department of Archaeogenetics University of
Salmela, Elina (University of Helsinki, Faculty of Biological and Environmental Sciences, Organismal and Evolutionary Biology University of Zurich Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, Department of Archaeogenetics) Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, Department of Archaeogenetics University of Helsinki, Faculty of BiologicalĪnd Environmental Sciences, Organismal and Evolutionary Biology Research Programme) - Majander, Kerttu (Institute of Evolutionary Medicine, Percentages of East Asian (pure African type is 100 - x)Ībstract author(s): Saari, Nelli-Johanna (University of Helsinki, Department of Philosophy, History, Culture and Art Studies Max The result implies however that not all and there haveīeen different evolution and migration routes in Eurasia. To see how much theĪfrican haplotype in Europe represents Near East migrations needs more The Eurasian haplotype is related to the OOA event. Showing high similarity in the whole Eurasia it is likely that
I made a statistics showing a full bifurcation between East-Asia andĪfrica. I stay waiting for wider scientific stance. Such a Late Iron Age migration from Estonia should also be seen by an elevated R1a proportion in Finland, but the small R1a amount in Finland doesn't imply any Estonian origin. Those times were very exhausting in Estonia due to many wars and the Estonian population size decreased remarkably. We know it because we have original documents. Historians suggest that the main migration bringing the Baltic Finnic language happened during the Roman Iron Age and we know for sure that around 20-30% of the North Estonian population had Finnish origin after the Swedish era in the 17th century. Sure people have moved from Estonia to Finland, but also conversely. There have been a lot connections between our countries, but historians have never mentioned exactly aforementioned time frame as a significant event in our history. I have not knowledge about such Estonian migration. Sounds like Estonian self-seeking idea about Estonian Vikings. I am not going to start searching my Italian cousins, because my paper trail, fully covering to the end of the 17th century, doesn't show Italian roots.Ī new Estonian study sets the connection between our countries to the 8th and 10th centuries AD and bases it on an assumed Estonian migration to Finland. Maybe there is seen a growing genealogical demand in countries where the paper trail is incomplete or they simply try to give a shortcut bypassing paper trail, but according my experience there is no substitute for the old fashion genealogy work.
It is obvious that these companies use a special data adaptation and model putative ancestral pools to geographical locations according their own approaches, but they are not professional historians. Maybe results of open source softwares are not perfect, but at least you have a possibility to find out how the results are done.
My advice is, don't pay, you can get ancestry tests for free from services using open source softwares. Those ancestry testing companies looks like modern alchemists. Surprising Orcadian in Balkans, really? Only to mention two examples. I have seen a man of fully Croat ancestry getting additionally 12 % Orcadian ancestry.
For me 9 of 10 services give Finnish plus minor 5-8% admixture of Greek or Italian. IJSER associated with leading universities, institutes and libraries worldwide.Many online genetic services provide individual ancestry results but don't reveal their methods. Indexing is an important part of journal, indexed content at the article level, also provide DOI for the articles. IJSER is an online international open access peer review scholarly journal published monthly.