Genealogy Wise

The Genealogy & Family History Social Network

Information

Haplogroup U

For people who are in mtDNA Haplogroup U

Website: http://www.workingdogweb.com/U5-Haplogroup-Ursula.htm
Members: 31
Latest Activity: Nov 28, 2012

Discussion Forum

Tracing Your Maternal Ancestry 7 Replies

Started by Barbara Bradley Petura. Last reply by Brownie MacKie Feb 17, 2012.

Testing Your mtDNA 1 Reply

Started by Barbara Bradley Petura. Last reply by Ruth Jul 19, 2009.

Comment Wall

Comment

You need to be a member of Haplogroup U to add comments!

Comment by True! on May 28, 2012 at 10:09am

Hello! I am U5b1c. I am looking forward to learning more of my Haplogroup. Lingo to DNA testing. This is my 1st time. So I'm trying to learn. 

Comment by Sharon Schmidt on April 30, 2012 at 9:19am
My name is Sharon and did the NatGeo test and I am U4. My maternal line comes from Ireland and only know Grandmother was Julia Murtaugh b. 1898 NYC and Bridget Mimmaugh was b abt 1860 and immigrated 1880's. Really interested in where they originated from. I know now I need a full sequence dna to get a more precise picture and guess I will go for that. Any other hints please
let me know what I can do!
Comment by Kristine Olivadoti-Ratajczak on January 26, 2012 at 10:13am

Hi:

 

I'm Kristine and through FTDNA I found out my maternal haplogroup is U1b. Its been fun to connect with some people that share my same haplogroup. Are there any others that share my haplogroup?

Comment by Susan Barnett Gaumer on April 23, 2011 at 12:39pm

Hello - thru FTDNA testing, my mother's haplogroup is U4. 

Susie Jane McGinnis - grandmother 1892 Stone Co., Arkansas

Alice Lancaster - 1870 Stone Co., Arkansas

Laura N. Pritchard - Wayne, Co., TN

Mary Elvia Risner/Risener - 1815 TN

Rachel Unknown - abt 1780 South Carolina married to Thomas Risner/Risener

I have been unable to trace back any further without Rachel's surname

 

Comment by Brownie MacKie on March 8, 2011 at 7:44am
Hi, April!  I'm still learning, but I'm U5b and have been told I may be U5b3.  I'm Northern European.  Have been told my ancestors could have possibly originated in the Orkney Islands.
Comment by April Annis on March 7, 2011 at 10:22pm

Hello, just joined the group. A year or so ago, Nat Geo analyzed my DNA from a kit the network provided in a promo for TV writers. Spoke to him, he said it was an old rare strain of Haplogroup U Sublcade U then a bunch of other things. Wondering what it all means, if anyone has any insight?

Cheers

April

Comment by Barbara Bradley Petura on November 7, 2010 at 4:07pm
Hello Brownie,
Nice to hear from you, and fun to have a U5b match! Actually that does tell us some things about our ancient ancestors. I like this webpage in particular:
http://www.eupedia.com/forum/showthread.php?t=25201

You can see that U5b has been found in in a site that is 4,600 years old in Saxony; in Ancient German DNA; and in Medieval Anglo-Saxons [whose ancestors likely came to England from northern German].

I know from my own traditional genealogy research that my maternal line -- mother's mother's mother's mother etc. -- comes from northern Germany, an area just north of the Elbe River where it nears the North Sea. So for me there's a really good link of genealogy, geography and genetics.

If you follow your maternal line [female side only], where does your earliest known female ancestor come from? Hope this is of interest! Barbara
Comment by Brownie MacKie on November 7, 2010 at 1:50pm
Barbara, you're the only other one I've found with a U5b haplogroup. What have you found out so far?
Comment by Barbara Bradley Petura on November 7, 2010 at 1:02pm
Thanks to everyone who has posted their mtDNA results [mitochondrial DNA test results] that helps them trace their maternal lineage [mother's mother's mother's mother etc.] I hope you can help each other with resources and also spread the word about this GenealogyWise group. Does anyone have mtDNA results that are a good match for the geographical origin of their maternal line?
Comment by Brownie MacKie on August 8, 2010 at 7:05am
Hi, I'm U5b via 23&Me. It's all interesting. But at this point I tend to treat that information kind of like I've treated my blood type info AB +...."So?" I keep thinking blood types should be significant for a variety of reasons...why not Haplo groups, also? So far I've not gathered much information on either. :-)
 

Members (31)

 
 
 

Members

Badge

Loading…

© 2013   Created by Nat Ins for Genealogical Studies.

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service