![]() ![]() And the one further to the right is a different haplogroup (J-M27) and has cyan in their gender symbol.The one just to the right of him is the same haplogroup and has darker blue in their gender symbol,.They are both 2nd cousins of the I-P37 tester.Two men are outlined in silver have down Y-12 tests.another is I-P37 (in the lower centre/left) and I labelled him and his male line with a darker blue in their gender symbol.and I labelled him and his male line with "brown" (there are 4 men with brown gender symbols) one is R-M269 (on the left of the genomap).Two men outlined in darker blue have done Y-111 tests.Here's a genomap of one family where 4 people have done Y-DNA tests: Y-DNA: When you get your Y-DNA results back, they will give you a "predicted" Y-Haplogroup and your results will look like this for 25 STR markers: or like this for Y-111: Here's a map of how they thought Y-Haplogroups had migrated in 2006: It's basically a bunch of random numbers unless you join a Surname or Haplogroup project and compare your STR markers against those with similar markers. The orange in the lower right is for labels, and things out of scope.įirst off.Eg, it is assumed someone's father has the same Y-DNA as their son that did the test. The orange-yellow in the lower left represents results that have been "populated".The silver in the upper right represents a person who has taken a less accurate test (eg Y-12, -25, -37, or -67 for Y-DNA, or a HVR1, or HVR1 and HVR2 for mt-DNA).The dark blue in the upper left represents a person who has taken the biggest/most accurate test possible (eg, Y-111 for Y-DNA, or mt-Full Sequence for mt-DNA).haven't wrapped my mind around this yet or what I'd like to see. men get this from their mother's only, women get it from their mother's and father's. we can possibly create one or more genomaps to compare subsets of tested people and map which of their chromosomes match and were inherited from specific ancestors good for looking back 5 or 6 generations and possibly connecting to 5th cousins, etc. can be displayed in a "matrilineal" genomap but only women can pass it on to their children. can be displayed in a regular "patrilineal" genomap A brief high level summary of DNA: So there are 4 main ways we can look at our DNA: I think GenoPro is uniquely positioned to combine a graphical view of a family tree and all the data that gets generated from DNA testing and related tools. I've done some DNA testing, have learned a little more about DNA testing, and have played around with Genopro a little more to spell out some requirements a little more clearly. ![]()
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