Monday, July 04, 2005

Y-Haplogroup Predictor

Y-Haplogroup Predictor: " Beta Version 2.0 is available for trial use. There are two major differences from Version 1.1X:

1. Up to 64 markers may be input. These include all of the markers tested by FTDNA, Biotix, DNA Heritage, Relative Genetics, Sorenson, and Trace Genetics. In addition, 14 markers not yet tested by any of these companies, but reported by studies at NIST, are included. For a few markers, there is not yet sufficient data for these to be activated in the program. Where a marker is not yet active, its name will be shaded in grey instead of blue. A number may be entered for such markers, but it will be ignored by the program."

: "1. To obtain test results from American male Atheys who descend from each of the probable sons of the immigrant, Capt. George Athy, who came to America in about 1661. These results can show that such descendants are closely related, thereby confirming the family history research.

2. To test the hypothesis that everyone of the Athey/Athy/Atha/Athon/Athan surname, whether of the U.S. branch or the English branch, has a single common ancestor, probably the historical figure, Gerard de Athee, who was a prot�g� of King John of England.in the late 12th and early 13th Centuries. Gerard was apparently the first of the family to adopt the Athee surname, which he took from the village of his birth, Athee sur Cher on the Cher River in the Touraine region of France. It seems unlikely that anyone else in Britian or Ireland would have adopted the same surname, though this remains to be proven. Since we know that he had descendants who used the Athey name, if we find that we have a single common paternal-line ancestor, then it was probably Gerard. Of course, if not all Atheys derive from the same ancestor, then we won�t know which group is from Gerard without further historical research."


(1)
off topic for Denmark

(2)
SUPERFICIALLY ATTRACTIVE BUT IN THE END ASKING FOR MONEY

sucker bait

(3)
Adolf Hitler would have loved this stuff

sorting people by pedigree like domestic animals

(4)
Family History is interesting
cultural and social developments the microcosms reflecting the macrocosm

and this?

(5)
When you reach maturity you have to accept that some questions have no answers

(6)
It only takes one promiscious mother and the whole is rubbish


Your money could be better spent helping living widows and orphans

read The Emperor's New Clothes

Google Search: "pedigree collapse"

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