If you haven’t read my first two posts about the Color Clustering (aka Leeds) Method, read the original posts: Color Clustering: Creating Color Clusters Color Clustering: Identifying “In Common” Surnames I thought this method would be too messy to work with 4th cousins. But, I figured out yesterday how to make it work: I built my clusters based on the shared matches of 2nd and 3rd cousins and then I just sorted the “4th cousins” into these clusters! Here are the steps I used: STEP 1: Create a color cluster chart. (see first post) Using all of AncestryDNA’s predicted 2nd & […]
After creating Color Clusters using the new Color Cluster Method (aka the Leeds Method), the next step is to identify the surnames associated with these groups. (For creating Color Clusters, please read my original Color Clustering post.) Note: This method is especially useful for people working with adoptees or other unknown parentage cases where they do not already know what surnames to concentrate on! COLOR CLUSTERS: Identifying Common Surnames STEP 1: Create Color Clusters and determine which clusters you need to work with (or work with all of them). In this case, the adoptee identified the Blue Cluster as her biological […]
Unsure of how other people were sorting their Shared Matches from AncestryDNA, I created my own method. This method is quick – it usually takes less than 10 minutes – and visually shows genetic connections while also “sorting” the matches into groups reflecting the test taker’s great grandparents’ lines. Please test out this method and let me know what you think! Although I think it will be valuable for many genealogists, I think it will be especially useful for adoptees, Search Angels, and others who are trying to identify unknown, close relatives. NOTE: For the examples below, all results are […]
I have been immersed in DNA for the past few months! I am ready to start blogging again, but here’s a quick update: January/February: Worked with an adoptee to locate his biological father. May: Attended a 2-day workshop with Blaine Bettinger in Austin and learned how to do Visual Phasing, use some advanced DNA tools, and more! June: Started working with other “unknown parentage” cases and DNA Detectives as a “Search Angel” (meaning without charging). July: Spent a week at GRIP in Pennsylvania taking “Advanced Genetic Genealogy” with CeCe Moore, Blaine Bettinger, Dr. Tom Jones, and genetic counselor Brianne Kirkpatrick […]
DNA tests can reveal family secrets. When a “secret” has been hidden on the Y chromosome causing the tester’s DNA to not match his own surname, we call it a “non-paternity event.” Somewhere in the past, whether they were aware of it or not, one of the fathers who shared that Y-DNA was not a biological father. And, though the term “non-paternity event” sounds very scientific and cold, the results of realizing one of these events is in your tree can be shocking. Over the past few days, I have followed Bill Griffeth’s story as he tells about his own […]
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