Y-DNA-838 |
Cornelis "Cees" KLOOSTERMAN | I-FGC15105 |
Most distant ancestor: CLAES, b. Abt 1530, Biezelinge, Nederland d. ?
Ancestral surnames: KLOOSTERMAN, TOL, BOSSELAAR, VERVEER, SLABBEKOORN, WIELEMAKER, MOLENDIJK, GELDER
Relevant links: Media Links: Out of Africa, world view
Out of Africa, Europe view
Notes: My Y-DNA Terminal SNP is I-FGC15105, subgroup of I-FGC15109, which is a subgroup of haplogroup I-M223, which in itself is a subgroup of I-M170.
Age of I-FGC15105: ± 1900 years BCE.
Region: Sardinia and Balkans; one of the first haplogroups in Europe along with haplogroup G.
The paternal line of I-FGC15105 branched off from I-FGC15109 and the rest of humanity about 1900 BCE. The man who is the most recent common ancestor of this line is estimated to have been born around 1850 BCE.
He is the ancestor of at least 4 descendants known as I-BY18, I-BY3802, I-FT137244 and 1 unnamed line.
- I-BY18's paternal line was formed when it branched off from the ancestor I-FGC15105 and the rest of mankind around 1850 BCE. The man who is the most recent common ancestor of this line is estimated to have been born around 800 BCE.
- I-BY3802's paternal line was formed when it branched off from the ancestor I-FGC15105 and the rest of mankind around 1850 BCE. The man who is the most recent common ancestor of this line is estimated to have been born around 1700 CE.
- I-FT137244's paternal line was formed when it branched off from the ancestor I-FGC15105 and the rest of mankind around 1850 BCE. The man who is the most recent common ancestor of this line is estimated to have been born around 1300 CE.
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atDNA |
Cornelis "Cees" KLOOSTERMAN | Y = I-FGC15105 mt = H1C1 |
Most distant ancestor: CLAES, b. Abt 1530, Biezelinge, Nederland d. ?
Ancestral surnames: KLOOSTERMAN, TOL, BOSSELAAR, VERVEER, SLABBEKOORN, WIELEMAKER, MOLENDIJK, GELDER, SINKE, KOLENBRANDER, MARINISSEN, WISSE, BOTHOF, HEER, [-?-], FOORTSE, KREEKE, LEIJDEKKER, BOONE, HARTOG, KORTEKNIE, VELDE, BREKER, STRUIJS, HOLLANDER, BEENHAKKER, SCHRIER, SLABBAERT, JONGH, CLOOSTERMAN, MAET, ADRIAANSE, JANSDOCHTER, LINDEN, OOSTEN, NACHTEGAEL, PIETERSZN, VISSER, KOOLE, MEUS, CLOOSTER, MATTHEUS, CLAESZ, CLAES
Relevant links: Notes: Autosomal DNA tests
atDNA traces a person’s autosomal chromosomes, which contain the segments of DNA the person shares with everyone to whom they’re related (maternally and paternally, both directly and indirectly.
Doggerland
Until the middle Pleistocene Great Britain was a peninsula of Europe, connected by the massive chalk Weald–Artois Anticline across the Straits of Dover. During the Anglian glaciation, about 450,000 years ago, an ice sheet filled much of the North Sea, with a large proglacial lake in the southern part fed by the Rhine, the Scheldt and the Thames.
Doggerland was an area of land, now submerged beneath the southern North Sea, that connected Great Britain to continental Europe. It was flooded by rising sea levels around 6500–6200 BCE. Geological surveys have suggested that it stretched from what is now the east coast of Great Britain to what are now the Netherlands, the western coast of Germany and the peninsula of Jutland. It was probably a rich habitat with human habitation in the Mesolithic period.
Around 7000 BC the Ice Age had ended and Mesolithic European hunter-gatherers had migrated from their refuges to recolonize the continent, including Doggerland which later submerged beneath the rising North Sea. The majority of western European males belonged to Y-haplogroup I and northeast Europeans to haplogroup R1a. Other minor male lineages such as R1b, G, J, T and E would also have been present in Europe, having migrated from the Asian Steppe, the Middle East and North Africa.
The most up-to-date research into these ancient migrations on the European Continent suggests that there were three major groups of people that have had a lasting effect on present day peoples of European descent: Hunter-Gatherers, Early Farmers, and Metal Age Invaders.
My Automal DNA Origins are 100% from Western Europe.
Metal Age Invader 13%, Farmer 39%, Hunter-Gatherer 48%, non-European 0%
- England, Wales, and Scotland 56%
- Central Europe 23%
- Scandinavia 21%
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