Black Man Ancestry DNA

Published 2020-10-25

All Comments (11)
  • Even though they don't list it it is significant because without even one ancestor you wouldn't exist.
  • @chriswells2953
    Great video and I took my DNA test on Ancestry as well but the sound on the video was terrible. I could hear anything he was saying.
  • @honeyjazz4147
    Test with other companies particularly 23andme it's more accurate and more detailed, if you have any Native American ancestry 23andme can pick it up they breakdown everything.
  • Suggestion for you...Test DNA via 23andMe. Taíno Paternal Ancestry origins in The Bahamas. Maternal Haplogroup is L1b1a (Bantu Expansion & Austronesian admixtures). This is my Ancestry Composition: ~ Sub-Saharan African 77.6% (Broadly Sub-Saharan African 0.2%) West African 60.0% Nigerian 37.6% (Yorùbá identity via Caribbean descent) Ghanaian, Liberian & Sierra Leonean 13.7% Senegambian & Guinean 1.5% (Wolof identity) Broadly West African 7.2% Congolese & Southern East African 17.4% Angolan & Congolese 15.6% Southern East African 0.6% Broadly Congolese & Southern East African 1.2% ~ European 19.6% (Broadly European 0.2%) Northwestern European 18.5% Greater London, United Kingdom +9 regions* British & Irish 11.0% French & German 4.5% Scandinavian 0.4% Broadly Northwestern European 2.6% Southern European 0.9% Italian 0.9% ~ East Asian & Native American 2.6% Native American 2.0% Chinese & Southeast Asian 0.6% Filipino & Austronesian 0.3% Indonesian, Thai, Khmer & Myanma 0.3% ~ Unassigned 0.2% *Other United Kingdom regions are ranked in order by strongest evidence as follows: 2. Greater Manchester 3. West Midlands 4. Merseyside 5. West Yorkshire 6. Tyne and Wear 7. Belfast 8. Cheshire West and Chester 9. Essex 10. Glasgow City This is my DNA results' genealogy presentation on YouTube video link, https://youtu.be/gykKqv5Pt1w
  • @Isinforblood
    Half of blacks have native ancestry which isn’t just only African in there, which a lot mixed in with native Indians too but I guess the other half of blacks who never really mixed in have more African ancestry in their blood
  • @07androctonus
    during colonial americas, europeans kept some records about the places of origin of the Africans they were taking. it was useful for them in some cases, because it was said each place of origin represented a particular ability or characteristic of their people. those names europeans gave to those places were not as specific as we would like to today, though. as you say, they weren't that interested. but they do give us some ideas... here in méxico arrived many peoples from "nación Angola", "nación Congo", "nación Mandinga", "naciones Bran, Biafara, Zape, Jolofo", some from "nación Biohó, Cabo Verde, San Tomé, Benguela, Mozambique...". some of those are obvious like Congo-Angola-Benguela-Mozambique or Mandinga and Wolof. for the others, research is required but generally coincide with modern SeneGambia-GuinéBissau.