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Re: CTS4466 Subclades Age Estimates MK1 Re: Y-DNA Warehouse Tree Tech Demo
My guess is that the ¡°grandfathered¡± kits still have the button on the Raw Data download page that can generate the BAM or download it when already available. Admins with full access to a member
By James Kane · #546 ·
Re: CTS4466 Subclades Age Estimates MK1 Re: Y-DNA Warehouse Tree Tech Demo
So, how can one tell if a BAM is going to cost additional? I hate to write someone whom I¡¯ve encouraged to take the BigY and now have to tell them that they need to spend more money. Is there a way
By Joe Carroll · #545 ·
Re: CTS4466 Subclades Age Estimates MK1 Re: Y-DNA Warehouse Tree Tech Demo
Correct, age analysis requires having at least 60% of the available Y chromosome to be sequenced. Big Y is a popular choice for this, but it¡¯s not the only solution. Hence why the Y-DNA Warehouse
By James Kane · #544 ·
Re: CTS4466 Subclades Age Estimates MK1 Re: Y-DNA Warehouse Tree Tech Demo
Hi James, I had a few questions. I¡¯ll number/bold them just because I need to give a little background. Looking at A6518 Walker/Fullers (Under A212), it looks like you only have data for three
By CJ · #543 ·
CTS4466 Subclades Age Estimates MK1 Re: Y-DNA Warehouse Tree Tech Demo
Since this is always a popular topic, I have rewritten my old branch age algorithm on top of the new warehouse data. ?Once there is sufficient STR data collected, the improvements from Iain
By James Kane · #542 ·
Re: Y-DNA Warehouse Tree Tech Demo
Since there's a huge demand for displaying samples on the tree, and I have a couple days waiting on the tree inference to run there's been some updates: All test subjects have been assigned a new 8
By James Kane · #541 ·
Re: U¨ª Liath¨¢in, D¨¦isi, Ogam, Christianity and Britain (particularly Wales)
Paul, Roy Flechner paints a very different picture in his recent book. Saint Patrick Retold: The Legend and History of Ireland's Patron Saint by Roy Flechner, Princeton University Press (March 5,
By john brazil · #540 ·
Re: U¨ª Liath¨¢in, D¨¦isi, Ogam, Christianity and Britain (particularly Wales)
At the time of these burials, slavery was not a big thing in Ireland. At least until the later arrival of the Vikings. As the emirate of Cordoba was the most wealthy province in Europe, then I suspect
By Paul O'Donnell · #539 ·
Re: U¨ª Liath¨¢in, D¨¦isi, Ogam, Christianity and Britain (particularly Wales)
Hi Elizabeth, I have just started to read Crawford Gribben's very recently published (September 2021) 'Rise and Fall of Christian Ireland'. Inter alia he mentions the finding of remains of an
By john brazil · #538 ·
Re: U¨ª Liath¨¢in, D¨¦isi, Ogam, Christianity and Britain (particularly Wales)
Hello, Neil. A bit late in responding to your and John¡¯s various notes. First, to answer your earlier question, the link to the Curran results is
By Elizabeth · #537 ·
Re: U¨ª Liath¨¢in, D¨¦isi, Ogam, Christianity and Britain (particularly Wales)
https://wikivisually.com/wiki/Dal_Fiachrach_Suighe There¡¯s alot in this thread. Point one: My son and I are O¡¯Sullivan line under L270/FT43021/A1133 in the Eoganacht South Irish ancestry. Point
By EdSmith¡¯49 · #536 ·
Re: U¨ª Liath¨¢in, D¨¦isi, Ogam, Christianity and Britain (particularly Wales)
Hi Neil, Thanks for the analysis - I will have to study this in depth. I guess you now appreciate how I came to the view that STRs were relatively unhelpful in my A541>A151>FT11485>A714 branch and
By john brazil · #535 ·
Re: U¨ª Liath¨¢in, D¨¦isi, Ogam, Christianity and Britain (particularly Wales)
Hi John, Thanks for this. I don¡¯t disagree with you at all ¨C I think you¡¯re on the right track and will celebrate when you are proved correct ¨C you make a good case. There are undoubtedly 3
By O'Brien, Neil · #534 ·
Re: U¨ª Liath¨¢in, D¨¦isi, Ogam, Christianity and Britain (particularly Wales)
Neil, I think we continue to have slightly different perspectives on the Irish colonists in south Wales and their origins back in Munster. According to Eoin MacNeill the U¨ª Liatha¨ªn led the
By john brazil · #533 ·
Re: U¨ª Liath¨¢in, D¨¦isi, Ogam, Christianity and Britain (particularly Wales)
Hi Elizabeth, Thanks so much for this. To answer your earlier query first, given that the Jones¡¯ kits match to A541>¡­.A151, the presumption is that A151 are descendants either of Deisi or Ui
By O'Brien, Neil · #532 ·
Re: U¨ª Liath¨¢in, D¨¦isi, Ogam, Christianity and Britain (particularly Wales)
I¡¯m back again, having read through much of Neill¡¯s message by now. Neill, one point re U¨ª Meic Caille (Ui Corrain) / Curran. There is a small surname project (158, and rather few Y-DNA results)
By Elizabeth · #531 ·
Re: U¨ª Liath¨¢in, D¨¦isi, Ogam, Christianity and Britain (particularly Wales)
Yes Neil, I accept that matching modern surnames to septs of the U¨ª Liath¨¢n is a bit of a challenge - which, hopefully, we will be able to address further together shortly. But we have some hints
By john brazil · #530 ·
Re: U¨ª Liath¨¢in, D¨¦isi, Ogam, Christianity and Britain (particularly Wales)
Hi Elizabeth, I have taken the liberty of editing the subject line again - to distinguish this thread from James's. No, I don't think anyone is suggesting that the move of the U¨ª Liath¨¢in and the
By john brazil · #529 ·
Re: Y-DNA Warehouse Tree Tech Demo
Neill, John, All, I am yet to read through all the messages thoroughly, but am I to gather that the discussion is meant to suggest that the move of the Ui Liathain and Deisi to Wales is the source of
By Elizabeth · #528 ·
Re: Attention Members Who Contributed BAMs for Analysis
James, All those people now trying to download csv files might have broken FTDNA. Sent: Friday, 17 September 2021 12:07 PM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [R1b-CTS4466-Plus] Attention
By Paul O'Donnell · #527 ·