My Genographic Project Results

The migratory route of my deep ancestors:

haplogroupr1b_migration.gif

A depiction of my Y-chromosome showing the short-tandem repeats that were tested:

ychromosome.gif


More information on the Genographic Project.

Comments

5 Responses to “My Genographic Project Results”

  1. NuSapiens on May 31st, 2005 3:25 pm

    What Genographic Results Look Like

    Via The Personal Genome, an example of what participants in the Genographic Project receive. This person’s Y lineage is R1B, the line most typical of Western Europeans:

  2. Genetics and Public Health Blog on August 17th, 2005 5:10 am

    The Genographic Project

    National Geographic’s The Genographic Project generated some controversy when it was first announced earlier this year. Billed as the world’s largest collection of DNA samples, the Genographic Project…

  3. HealthNex on September 12th, 2005 9:58 am

    Create a National Healthcare Innovation Database?

    Dr. Joseph Jasinski,Program Director, IBM Healthcare and Life Sciences Research Mickey Kaus makes an interesting proposal that we should think about from the perspective of patient-centric longitudinal electronic health records: “Open Source Health Stu…

  4. Best Sentence I Read Today on "Onlineness" : The Personal Genome on August 21st, 2007 5:37 pm

    […] web? Immediate family members have some of the DNA sequence in common. For example, I share much of my Y-chromosome with my father (I didn’t ask his permission to post it […]

  5. Sorting Out Science » Blog Archive » Bloody Vikings! on September 24th, 2007 5:35 am

    […] Project Participation (Paul John Kurf, Y haplogroup M) My Genographic Project Results : The Personal Genome (Jason Bobe, Y haplogroup R1b) Genographic Project Results (K. Rogers, Y haplogroup R1b) Ancient […]

Leave a Reply