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Discovering your GeoFather™ using the Y chromosome

The Y chromosome provides a very powerful tool for discovering ancestral male lineages. This is because, unlike other chromosomes, the major part of its DNA does not get changed when it is passed down from father to son.

Occasionally, however, when a Y chromosome is passed on, its genetic code does undergo a very small alteration. The vast majority of these alterations are completely harmless and so are eventually passed on to succeeding generations. Over time, further small alterations occur. In this way, separate male lineages become increasingly different from each other.

Because it is only males that inherit a Y chromosome, analysis based on this genetic material can only be performed on male DNA. However, women may obtain this information by using a sample from a male relative such as a brother or father.

Building a global family tree

By comparing two men’s Y chromosomes, it is possible to judge how closely they are related. If their genetic codes are very similar, we can say that they share a common male ancestor in the recent past. The more differences that have accumulated in their genetic codes, the more generations have passed since their last common ancestor.

Scientists have used this basic principle to compare the DNA from thousands of men living all across the planet. They have used their findings to construct a global family tree of male ancestors.

The journeys that shaped history

This male family tree is rooted some 100,000 years ago, at a time when the ancestors of all modern humans were living in Africa. As some of these early groups of humans took their first tentative steps out of our ancient homeland, their journeys led them in different directions and their family lines gradually began to diverge. It is these different lineages that form the separate branches of the global family tree.

GeoGene has divided the male family tree into 17 unique accounts tracing the most important of these journeys – the ones that would define the course of subsequent human history. The account we send you will reveal the route your own paternal ancestors took as they left Africa, explaining how and when your ancestors arrived at the part of the world in which their genetic inheritance is most visible today. You might, for example, learn that you inherited your Y chromosome from one of a number of groups of hunter-gatherers who arrived in Europe around the time of the Great Ice Age. Or you might discover that you are descended from a group of Neolithic farmers who journeyed into Europe from the Near East after the Ice Age had ended, bringing with them agricultural knowledge that would change our way of life forever. Or perhaps you are descended from another ancestral lineage.


Every man alive today has a Y chromosome that links him directly to one of these epic journeys, but nobody cannot be certain which simply by looking at that man’s physical characteristics or country of birth. Only the latest genetic technology can reveal which of these journeys began your own family’s history.

 
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