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Are there limits to genealogical research?

Several recent conversations concerning genealogy have ended rather
suddenly, on my part, when the person claimed to have his or her
genealogy "back to Adam." I really don't have any polite way to respond
to that conclusion. I have written before about the physical
impossibility of obtaining such a lengthy pedigree, but recent
conversations have caused me to return to the subject. The real question
is where does genealogical research end as a practical and reasonable
endeavor?

Part of the complication of a discussion in this area, is the issue of
the infamous genealogical "brick wall." Anytime further research is
characterized as a brick wall, there is an unspoken assumption that some
kind of further research involving hitherto unavailable records, will
continue to extend the pedigree. The literature is replete with
anecdotal examples of researchers finding the long lost relative. I have
no reason to doubt that there are circumstances when additional records
become available or a different research approach leads to an extension
of an existing line. Often, the brick wall situations involve looking
for the wrong person, or in the wrong place or at the wrong time.
However, by looking at research as always open ended, you could argue
that given the proper circumstances, someone really could extend their
family line all the way back to Adam.

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Comment by William S Dean on July 30, 2010 at 11:12am
I have said many times in discussions of genealogy that anything beyond the 17th century becomes extremely sketchy, to say the least. So many documents were lost in the periods before that -- not to mention the fact that many simply never existed in the first place -- that I find dubious any linkages that claim Viking, Spanish Moor, Irish/Scots kings, etc in the line. Adam is simply laughable, I agree. On what basis can people track lineages before surnames were used, for example? There are tentative and certainly speculative "possibilities" but -- on the whole -- I cannot agree to any circumstances wherein historically accurate lineages can connect the genealogical dots to periods where no records were kept.
Comment by William Douglas on July 30, 2010 at 7:14am
A sword, apparently originating from the 14th century, commemorating an event in 1330, was sold at auction yesterday. It appears to have been in the family throughout that time, and was purchased by a Douglas. So, in some families it is possible to track back over many generations.

OK, the 14th century is rather more recent than Adam, but I can trace my line back to Ghengis Khan (as can many others). Again, Ghengis Khan is rather more recent than Adam. But my point is that this is just down one line.

Are we happy if we can trace just one line back? I think not.

I have been wondering how many ancestors I might have...
Two parents, four grandparents, eight great grandparents... If I continue this series back at 3 generations per century, I find I have over a billion Viking-era ancestors. And 10^18 in the Roman era.

I think it might have been yourself that mentioned the 10 generation challenge? Certainly, it has given me a target - to get all lines back to my 8x great grandparents.

Whichever target I give myself, there are still a lot of people to find - even if I do not actually have a billion Viking ancestors!

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