Indeed, one need wonder as my DNA could have easily been (accidently) taken while
collecting saliva samples from the local women of Sosua :cheeky:
i laughed at this way more than i should have.
Indeed, one need wonder as my DNA could have easily been (accidently) taken while
collecting saliva samples from the local women of Sosua :cheeky:
I wonder what all of those friendly white folks in Gurabo think of this :cheeky:
Another thing that is simply crazy is how can it be possible for the 'average people of' Bani to be on average more than half afro while Azua is about a quarter afro? Azua isn't quite known for being considerably light skin, while Bani is probably the whitest town of any significant size in the entire southern region.
How is that possible? Just how?
Did they actually went to Bani and Azua? Really?
I bring this map from another forum.
Each black dot represent the 25 places where the National Geographic team collected 1,000 DNA samples (40 per place of people that claimed to be Dominican of two Dominican parents and four Dominican grandparents, and that had been living in the place for at least 10 years).
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Larger size: https://s25.postimg.org/xm7ctathb/Mapa_RD.jpg
For the sake of making sense of it all, lets assume that the Vega Real of the Cibao Valley (the second most densely populated part of the country) was facing some disease epidemic when they were collecting their samples, because otherwise it makes no sense!
They did it right in the southern parts of the country. I wonder what happened when it was time to get a representative sample of the northern population.
In the article they also claim that this is the largest DNA test ever done in the DR, when in reality the largest was done by Dr �lvarez Perell� in the 1950's. He had over 9,000 blood samples, not the 500-something they claim in the Diario Libre article. He says it in the article he published roughly half a century ago:
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Larger size: https://s32.postimg.org/7ms163tx1/Perello.jpg
Genographic Sets Sail to the Dominican Republic
�The Dominican Republic has it all.� That phrase is not just the slogan that tourists see when visiting the beautiful Caribbean nation, but it is also what a team of geneticists and anthropologists are hoping to show as they embark on a one-of-a-kind study across the eastern half of the island of Hispa�ola.
Drs. Theodore Schurr and Miguel Vilar, two Genographic Project scientists, recently visited the Caribbean country to help launch an ambitious project that intends to map the diversity and ancestry of the people of the Dominican Republic, and by doing so better understand the history of the region. The project is being led a team of Dominican researchers and is part of a collaboration between La Universidad Iberoamericana (UNIBE) and La Academia Dominicana de la Historia, both in Santo Domingo, and the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.
Over the course of the next several months, researchers and students from UNIBE will visit most provinces in the country and meet with people from at least 25 different communities. They hope to enroll some 1000 individuals and analyze the DNA samples and demographic histories collected from them.
�Visiting the remote communities really shows us the great diversity of our country, the culture, the idiosyncrasies of the inhabitants of the various provinces, and the richness of what we are,� explains Dr. Robert Paulino, lead researcher and UNIBE professor. �We are the instruments of mother Africa, the nobility of the indigenous Taino, and the European adventurer. That mixture is what makes us Dominicans.� Once completed, this project will be one of the most comprehensive studies conducted in a single country during the Genographic Project�s 10-year history.
With keen interest in Caribbean history, in 2014 Vilar and Schurr published an article on the genetic diversity of Puerto Rico explaining how the DNAs of modern Puerto Ricans show patterns of both historic and prehistoric (pre-colonial) importance. And just last month the two scientists teamed up with Dr. Jada Benn-Torres of Notre Dame University and indigenous leaders from the islands of St. Vincent and Trinidad on a new publication that shows how the genetic patterns in those Lesser Antillean communities inform us about early Caribbean migrations, as well as colonial practices and hardships of the last five-hundred years.
�We�re really trying to connect the dots and understand the migration, the flow of people in and out of the region,� said Schurr. �Each island seems to have its distinct history.� To learn more about this and other work of the Genographic Project work visit www.genographic.com.
http://voices.nationalgeographic.co...new-ancestry-study-in-the-dominican-republic/
I wonder how you find Spanish roots in DNA. Caucasian probably yes, but from one specific country? I might be wrong though.
You're wrong.
They not only can tell you what country, they often can tell you what region or province. Ancestry DNA not only gives you your ancient ancestry, it now breaks down where your ancestors lived 300 years ago, and in my case it was almost frighteningly accurate.
More people collecting more people�s DNA... Hmmmm
I knew a girl who made a living fluffing auras. She could tell you what color your aura was and what that meant as far as happiness and a lot of other stuff. Makes about as much sense as telling one where their ancestors lived 300 years ago.
Der Fish
You're wrong.
They not only can tell you what country, they often can tell you what region or province. Ancestry DNA not only gives you your ancient ancestry, it now breaks down where your ancestors lived 300 years ago, and in my case it was almost frighteningly accurate.
con ese estudio genetica dominicana enorme de 9,000 participantes podramos decir que nosotros los dominicanos somos un mulato balanciado con una pequena composicion de sangre indigena, algo que ya sabemos. ahora bien
como ya se has dicho que la poblacion mas grande desde afuera de la capital es el cibao, que es cierto. no necesariamente vas hacer predominamente europea como muchos piensan, creo que el cibao es la verdadero poblacion mulata, porque si uno vez la gente de alla no son blancos pero tampocos son prietos o negros puros como muchos de los de bayaguana, monte plata, o san cristobal. creo que la poblacion dominicana es como un 55% africano, 40% europeo (predominamente iberico y canaria), y 5% indigena. eso es mi propio opinion por lo que yo veo aqui en la capital y alla en el cibao (santiago, la vega, jarabaocoa) juntado, porque la capital es obviamente mas negro que el cibao
con ese estudio genetica dominicana enorme de 9,000 participantes podramos decir que nosotros los dominicanos somos un mulato balanciado con una pequena composicion de sangre indigena, algo que ya sabemos. ahora bien
como ya se has dicho que la poblacion mas grande desde afuera de la capital es el cibao, que es cierto. no necesariamente vas hacer predominamente europea como muchos piensan, creo que el cibao es la verdadero poblacion mulata, porque si uno vez la gente de alla no son blancos pero tampocos son prietos o negros puros como muchos de los de bayaguana, monte plata, o san cristobal. creo que la poblacion dominicana es como un 55% africano, 40% europeo (predominamente iberico y canaria), y 5% indigena. eso es mi propio opinion por lo que yo veo aqui en la capital y alla en el cibao (santiago, la vega, jarabaocoa) juntado, porque la capital es obviamente mas negro que el cibao
Are you Dominican? Your Spanish isn't good enough to pass for Dominican, unless you were raised elsewhere.
your honestly the first person to ask me such a question, its always the opposite for me
ppl would always ask me in the web while typing in english, "your not an english speaker are you? or "are you sure you speak english cause you dont type like an english speaker or it isnt good enough"
not to mentioned the great many dominicans, puerto ricans, and cubans who do not know how to type or write well at all in spanish, but they live and were raised in said countries so, i dont understand the question in all honesty
Are you Dominican? Your Spanish isn't good enough to pass for Dominican, unless you were raised elsewhere.
He could be because he puts the s where it not belongs.
"Ya se has dicho"
Pero then again I doubt too. "Propio opinion" is a mistake a native speaker wouldnt make.
u guys are likely old lol, non of my friends even type or write well in spanish and theyr dominican so, like i said i live here (arroyo hondo) been here my whole life and am from jarabacoa, lot of us type sentences like this "tu ba pa la playa manin" or "yo no has comio umia ei dia enteo" so yeah idk wtf u guys are talking about, even have some friends of mine ask me to spell their words lol and they only know spanish haha and theyr dominican