Proving Native American Ancestry Using DNA

Every day, I receive e-mails very similar to this one.

“My family has always said that we were part Native American.  I want to prove this so that I can receive help with money for college.”

The reasons vary, and not everyone wants to prove their heritage in order to qualify for some type of assistance.  Some want to find their tribe and join to reclaim their lost heritage.  Some want to honor their persecuted and hidden ancestors, undoing some of the wickedness of the past, and some simply seek the truth.  Regardless of why, they are all searching for information lost to them.

I’d like to talk about three topics in proving Native Ancestry.  First, I’d like to do some myth-busting.  Second, I’d like to talk a little about conventional research and third, I’d like to discuss what DNA can, and can’t, do for you.

As you read this blog, please click on the links.  I’m not going to repeat something I’ve already covered elsewhere.

Myth-Busting

Myth 1 – Free College

There is no free college for Native Americans.  There are sometimes scholarships and grants available, mostly by the individual tribes themselves, for their official members.

Myth 2 – Joining a Tribe

Many people think that if they can only figure out which tribe their ancestor descends from, they can join.  This is untrue.  Each tribe is a sovereign nation, and they get to determine their criteria for membership.  Most tribes require a specific percentage of Native “blood,” called blood quantum, in addition to being able to document which tribal member you descend from.  Some tribes require as much as 25% Native heritage, and most require at least 1/16th Native heritage, which is one great-great grandparent.  If you don’t know who in your family was a tribal member it’s unlikely that you would be able to meet the blood quantum requirement.

Myth 3 – DNA Testing Will Reveal my Tribe

Generally, DNA testing does not provide us with the information needed to determine a tribe, although it can clearly tell, using y-line or mitochondrial DNA testing, whether your direct paternal or maternal line was or was not Native.  Sometimes you will be able to infer a tribe based on your matches and their documented history, but the definition of tribes, their names and locations have changed over time.  We are working on improving this ability, but the science simply isn’t there yet and the number of Native people who have tested remains small.

Simply put, most federally recognized tribes aren’t interested in more tribal members.  More members mean a smaller piece of the pie for existing members.  The pot of resources, whatever resources you’re discussing, is only so large and it must be shared by all tribal members.

What is a Tribe?

Tribes in the US fall into two categories.  When most people think about tribes they are talking about federally recognized tribes.  Those are tribes that have some continuity with the past, such as they have always been a tribe, or they still retain tribal lands, etc., and the federal government recognizes them as such.  These are the tribes that qualify for government programs and many own casinos.  As you might imagine, with the influx of casino money, the desire to join a tribe has increased significantly.

The second category is non-federally recognized tribes.  Some are state recognized and others, not at all.  State recognition does not in any way guarantee federal or state funding and there are no universal standards for state recognition.  In other words, your mileage may vary, widely.  Non-federally recognized tribes are often run as non-profit entities.  In many cases, these tribes will help people research and document their genealogy and may be more open to tribal membership for those connecting with their Native heritage.

Be aware that some “tribes” that fall into the non-federally recognized category may be less than ethical.  Some tend to come and go.  In one case, to apply to join, one had to provide information such as social security numbers and a complete family pedigree including your children. In some cases, membership is very expensive, hundreds of dollars, but is available to almost anyone for the right price.  When evaluating tribes that are not federally recognized, if something sounds fishy, it probably is.  Caution is the watchword.

In general, the federally recognized tribes do not feel kindly towards the non-federally recognized tribes and view them as “fake,” interlopers trying to get part of that pie.  Of course, the non-federally recognized tribes feel differently; that they are reclaiming their heritage denied them.  Native American politics is nothing new and is fraught with landmines.

No federally recognized tribes, to the best of my knowledge, have considered DNA testing as a criteria for membership.  No federally recognized tribe has endorsed or participated in DNA testing that I’m aware of.  This does not mean that individuals have not privately tested.

Traditional Genealogy Research

Given the criteria for membership in federally recognized tribes, traditional genealogy is the only way to obtain the type of information required.  If your family history includes a tribal name, and east of the Mississippi, that most often is Cherokee, contact the various Cherokee tribes to inquire about membership criteria.  If the membership criteria is 25% blood quantum, and you must live on the reservation, you’re toast…..no need to continue that line of research if your goal is to join the tribe.

If your goal is simply to find your Native ancestor, that’s another matter entirely.  Begin by using the traditional research tools.

First, look at where your ancestor or that family line was located.  Did they migrate from elsewhere?  How were they listed in the census?  Was someone listed as other than white, indicating mixed race?  Check the records where they lived, tax records and others to see if there is any indication of non-European heritage.  Remember that your non-white ancestor would have retained their “darker” countenance for at least 2 generations after being admixed.  Many Native people were admixed very early.

So first, check the normal genealogy records and look for hints and traces of non-European ancestry.

Second, turn to Native resources that might reflect the Native people in the areas where your family is or was found.  The Access Genealogy site is absolutely wonderful and has an amazingly complete set of records including searchable tribal rolls.  In addition, I add information almost daily to the Native Heritage Project at www.nativeheritageproject.com, which is searchable.  There are many more resources including several collections at Ancestry.com.

Hopefully, these records will help narrow your focus in your family tree to a particular person or two, not just a general branch.  Family rumors like “Grandma was a Cherokee Princess” are particularly unuseful.  What they more likely mean is that there was indeed some Native ancestry someplace in her line.  Cherokee has become a generic word like Kleenex.  It may also have meant that Indian heritage was claimed to cover much less desirable African heritage.  Institutionalized discrimination existed against any people of color in pre-1967 America, but Indians generally retained some rights that people of African ancestry did not.  Laws varied by state and time.  Take a look at my blog about Anti-Miscegenation Laws and when they were overturned.

Now, let’s look at DNA testing to see what it can do for you.

DNA Testing to Prove Native Ancestry

There are three types of DNA testing that you can do to prove Native Ancestry.  Two are very focused on specific family lines, and one is much more general.

  • Mitochondrial for your direct maternal line.
  • Y-line for your direct paternal line – if you are a male. Sorry ladies.
  • Autosomal to test your ethnic mix and one direct marker test for Native ancestors.

On a pedigree chart, these genealogical lines look like this:

adopted pedigree

You can see the path that the blue Y chromosome takes down the paternal line to the brother and the path the red mitochondrial DNA takes down the maternal line to both the brother and the sister.  Autosomal tests the DNA of all of the 16 ancestral lines shown here, but in a different sort of way.

Let’s look at each type of testing separately.

Y-Line DNA – For Paternal Line Testing for Males

The Y-line testing tests the Y chromosome which is passed intact from father to son with no DNA from the mother. This is the blue square on the pedigree chart. In this way, it remains the same in each generation, allowing us to compare it to others with a similar surname to see if we are from the same “Smith” family, for example, or to others with different surnames, in the case of adoption or Native heritage.  Native American genetics isn’t terribly different than adoptees in this situation, because different English surnames were adopted by various family members, into the late 1800s and sometimes into the early 1900s, depending on the location.

Y-line DNA can tell you whether or not you descend from a common male genealogically when compared to another testing participant.  Small mutations do take place and accumulate over time, and we depend on those so that we don’t all “look alike” genetically.  It can also tell you by identifying your deep ancestral clan, called a haplogroup, whether or not you descend from early Native Americans who were here before contact with Europeans.  For that matter, it can also tell you if you descend from those of African, European or Asian ancestry.

Scientists know today that there are only two primary haplogroups indicating deep ancestry that are found among Native American males who were here prior to contact with Indo-Europeans, and those haplogroups are C and Q3.  It is not accurate to say that all C and Q3 individuals exist only in the American Native population, but the American Native population is part of the larger group worldwide that comprises C and Q3.  We find some haplogroup C and Q3 in Europe but none in African populations, although we do learn more every single day in this infant science.

This sometimes becomes confusing, because the single most common male haplogroup among current Cherokee tribal members who have tested is R1b.  How can this be, you ask?  Clearly, one of three possibilities exists:

  1. The Cherokee (or those tribes who were assimilated into the Cherokee) adopted a European male into the tribe or a European male fathered a child that was subsequently raised as Cherokee.
  2. The R1b ancestor was not adopted into the tribe, maintained their European/American identity but married a Cherokee individual woman and their descendants are recognized as Cherokee today.
  3. There is some level of R1b admixture in the Native population that preceded contact with Europeans that we have not yet identified.

Because of the unique haplogroups for Native Americans who preceded European contact, Y-line is the only way to positively confirm that a specific line is or is not of Native American descent.  This obviously applies to all of the individuals in the pedigree chart who directly descend from the oldest known ancestor in this paternal line.

Y-line testing does not indicate anything about the contributions of the other ancestors in this family tree.  In other words, you could be 3/4th Native, with only the direct paternal line being European, and this test would tell you nothing at all about those other three Native lines.

When ordering DNA tests at Family Tree DNA, which is where I recommend that you test, everyone is encouraged to join projects.  There are several types of projects, but to begin with, you should join your surname project.  Not only does this group you with others whom you are likely to match, but this also assures that you receive the project based discounts.  I blogged about how to find and join relevant projects.

You can test at 12, 25, 37, 67 or 111 marker “locations” on the Y chromosome. I generally recommend 37 or 67 to begin which gives you enough to work with but isn’t terribly expensive.  At Family Tree DNA, you can always upgrade later, but it’s less expensive in total to test more initially.

Family Tree DNA provides significant tools for Y-line DNA as well as Mitochondrial DNA. At Family Tree DNA, for all their tests, you are provided with the e-mail addresses of your matches. At Ancestry and 23andMe, you contact matches through their internal message system. My experience has been that direct e-mails have a better response rate.

The person looking for Native Heritage will be most interested in their haplogroup designation.  If your haplogroup is either Q or C, you’ll want to join your haplogroup project, minimally, as well as other relevant Native American projects, and work with the administrators for further testing.  Remember, neither haplogroup Q nor C are always Native, so deeper testing may be in order.  You may also match others with confirmed Native heritage, including a tribe.

If the haplogroup is not Native, then you’ll have to take a look at possible reasons why.

One can never interpret non-Native haplogroup results of any one line to answer the much broader questions of, “do I have Native heritage”, “how much” and “where?”  What you can do at that point is to continue to test other lines in order to discover the identity of your Native American ancestor.

Obviously, the Y-line test is only for males. Ladies, I feel your pain. However, these next tests are for both sexes.

Mitochondrial DNA – For Direct Maternal Line Testing for Both Sexes

Mitochondrial DNA is inherited by all children from their mother only, with no admixture from the father. Women obtain their mitochondrial DNA from their mother, who got it from their mother, on up the line into infinity. This is the red circle on the right hand side of the pedigree chart. Like Y-line DNA, mitochondrial DNA is passed intact from one generation to the next, except for an occasional mutation that allows us to identify family members and family lines.

Unfortunately, it does not follow any surname. In fact the surname changes with every generation when women marry. This makes it more challenging to work with genealogically, but certainly not impossible. Because of the surname changes in every generation, there are no “surname” projects for mitochondrial DNA, per se, but there are other types of projects.  For example, the Mothers of Acadia project is using mitochondrial DNA to reconstruct the Acadian families including those of Native American heritage.

There are three levels of testing you can take for mitochondrial DNA at Family Tree DNA, which is where I recommend that you test. The mtDNA, the mtDNAPlus and the Full Sequence. The mtDNA test is a starter test that will provide you with a base haplogroup, but will leave people searching for Native ancestry needing a more complete test for full haplogroup identification confirming Native ancestry. I strongly recommend the full sequence test, but if the budget just won’t allow that, then the mtDNAPlus will do until you can afford to upgrade. Family Tree DNA is the only major lab that tests the full sequence region, plus, they have the largest matching data base in the industry.

To put this in perspective for you, the mtDNA and the mtDNAPlus tests both test about 10% of your mitochondrial DNA and the full sequence test tests all of your 16,569 mitochondrial locations. You can then compare them with other people who have taken any of those 3 tests.  Pricing for the mtDNAPlus is currently $139 and the full sequence is $199.

MtDNA testing is not as popular as Y-line testing because it’s more difficult to use genealogically as last names change every generation.  When you look at your matches, you have no idea whatsoever if you might be related to these people in a genealogically relevant time frame by looking at their last names.  Those who have invested the effort to collaboratively work on their mtDNA matches, assuming a full sequence match and a shared geographical history as well, have been pleasantly surprised by what they’ve found.

A haplogroup assigning deep ancestry is provided through mitochondrial testing, so like the Y-line, depending on the haplogroup assigned, you will know if your ancestors were here before European contact.  Maternal haplogroups that indicate Native heritage include A, B, C, D and X.  Like Y-line DNA testing, none of these haplogroups are exclusive to Native Americans, so a full sequence level test will be required to confirm a Native American subgroup.

After you receive your results, you can enter the mtDNA and mtDNAPlus portions into public data bases. There are no public data bases for the full sequence segment because there may be medical implications in some of those mutations, so they are not displayed publicly although they are compared privately within the Family Tree DNA data base. You will want to enter your data and check for matches at www.mitosearch.org (upload directly from your matches page at Family Tree DNA), www.smgf.org and www.ancestry.com, although beware of Ancestry’s accuracy issues.

Update: As of 2019, mitosearch and SMGF no longer exist and Ancestry no longer sells Y and mitochondrial DNA tests, having destroyed their database.

Testing the Y-line and mitochondrial DNA individually gives us a great deal of very specific information about 2 lines in your pedigree chart.  The best method of identifying Native American ancestors is indeed to test as many lines on your DNA pedigree chart using this methodology as possible.  Let’s take a minute to look at how to create a DNA pedigree chart.

DNA Pedigree Chart

If your Y-line and mitochondrial DNA have proven not to be Native, that doesn’t mean that the rest of your lines aren’t.

Let’s take a look at how to create a DNA pedigree chart so that you can focus your Y-line and mitochondrial DNA testing for other lines.

The purpose of a DNA pedigree chart is to provide guidance in terms of inheritance and also to provide a way of documenting your progress.  My chart is shown below, as an example.

DNA Pedigree

You can see the Y-line of my father and the mitochondrial line of my mother, on both ends of the pedigree chart.  At the top of each line, I have recorded the haplogroup information for each family.  Color coding each line helps in tracking descendants who would carry the DNA of the ancestor of that line.  For example, my mother’s father’s mother’s line is the yellow Miller line.  I need to find a daughter of my grandfather’s sisters, or their children, or their daughter’s children, to test for that mitochondrial DNA line.  Which reminds me, I need to call my cousin.  Family reunions, picnics and holidays are great for this type of thing.  Sadly, so are funerals.

I blogged about how to put together your own DNA pedigree chart. If you’re Native and adopted, then refer to the adoptee blog instead, or in addition.

But sometimes, we can’t find the right people in order to test, so we move to autosomal testing to help us fill in the blanks.

Autosomal Testing – For Both Sexes – The Rest of the Story 

Autosomal DNA testing tests all of your 23 pairs of chromosomes that you inherit from both of your parents. You get half of each chromosome from each parent. You can see this pattern on the pedigree chart, represented by all of the 16 genealogical lines. Therefore, as you move up that tree, you should have inherited about 25% of your DNA from each grandparent, about 12.5% of your DNA from each great-grandparent, as have all of their other great-grandchildren.

Therefore beginning with your parents, you carry the following approximate amount of DNA from each of these ancestors. I say approximate, because while you do receive exactly 50% of your DNA from each parent, there is no guarantee that their parents DNA was admixed in your parents such that you receive exactly 25% from each grandparent, but it’s close.  You can see the percentages in the chart below.

Generation Relationship % of Their DNA You Carry

1

Parents

50

2

Grandparents

25

3

Great-grandparents

12.5

4

GG-grandparents

6.25

5

GGG-grandparents

3.125

6

GGGG-grandparents

1.56

7

GGGGG-Grandparents

0.78

Given this chart, if the Native percentage is back beyond 6 generations and drops below the 1% threshold, it’s extremely difficult to discern today.

Autosomal testing will pick up relationships reliably back to about the 6th or 7th generations, and sporadically beyond that.

Autosomal testing provides you minimally with two things.  First, with a list of “cousin matches” by percentage and estimated relationship.  Second, percentages of ethnicity.  It’s this second part that’s most important for the person seeking to prove Native American heritage.

Percentages of Ethnicity

As the field of genetic genealogy has moved forward, research has begun to indicate that certain autosomal markers are found in higher or lower frequencies in different ethnic populations.

For example, if someone has the Duffy Null allele, or genetic marker, we know they positively have African admixture.  We don’t know how much African admixture, or from which line, or when that individual with African admixture entered their family tree, but we know for sure they existed.

Attempting to determine the population frequency of varying markers and what that means relative to other populations is the key to this analysis.  Few markers are simply present or absent in populations, but are found in varying frequencies.  Some populations are widely studied in the research literature, and others are virtually untouched.  Thousands have only been recently discovered as part of the National Geographic, Genographic project.

The process of compiling this information in a meaningful manner so that it can be analyzed is a formidable task, as the information is often found in nearly inaccessible academic and forensic research publications.  It’s difficult to determine sometimes if the DNA analysis of 29 individuals in a small village in northern Italy is, for example, representative of that village as a whole, of northern Italy, or more broadly for all of Italy.  Is it representative of Italy today or Italy historically?  These and other similar questions have to be answered fully before the data from autosomal testing can be useful and reliable.

Let’s take a look at all 3 of the contemporary autosomal tests and what they have to offer.

Note: as of 2019, MyHeritage is also a major player in the autosomal DNA testing space.

Family Tree DNA

Family Tree DNA sells the Family Finder test. Right now it is priced at $79 or bundled with attractive pricing with either the Y-line or mitochondrial DNA tests. I often like to use this tool in conjunction with the Y-line and mitochondrial DNA tests to see, if you match someone closely, whether you are actually related to them in a recent timeframe or if it is further back. Family Tree DNA is the only one of the autosomal testing companies that has the ability to do this type of advanced comparison.  Compared to 23andMe and Geno 2.0, they are the only ones to offer traditional Y-line and mitochondrial DNA testing which provides individual marker results and matches.

In addition to a list of autosomal matches, you will receive your breakdown of ethnicity, by percent.  The results below are for the same man with Native ancestry whose Geno 2.0 results are shown in the Geno 2.0 – First Peek blog.

native pop finder

You can read more about the Family Tree DNA autosomal product on their FAQ.

23andMe

Another company that sells autosomal testing is http://www.23andme.com. In addition to a list of cousins, you also receive admixture percentages, and their specialty, health traits.  You also receive a paternal and maternal haplogroup, but with no markers for personal comparison.  These Y-line and mitochondrial results are not as accurate at the Geno 2.0 nor the Family Tree DNA Y-line and mitochondrial DNA full sequence tests.

Be aware that while people who test at Family Tree DNA are interested in genealogy, the typical person at 23andMe tested for the health portion, not the genealogy portion, and may not answer contact requests or may know very little about their family history.

Right now, their test is $99, and you can download your results and upload them to Family Tree DNA for an additional $89, making the total price similar to the Family Tree DNA test. However, you need to be somewhat technically savvy to complete the download/upload process.

23andMe recently released a new version of their software which added quite a bit of resolution after years of being woefully behind.  Native American wasn’t even a category previously.

Ancestry

Ancestry.com recently introduced an autosomal test.  You receive matches and ethnicity percentages.  However, their ethnicity percentages have significant issues and I would not recommend them at this time.  Their cousin matches come with no analysis tools.  So for now, just skip Ancestry and concentrate on the other resources.

One Last Autosomal Test

One marker value in particular, known as D9S919 is present in about 30% of the Native people.  The value of 9 at this marker is not known to be present in any other ethnic group, so this mutation occurred after the Native people migrated across Beringia into the Americas, but long enough ago to be present in many descendants.  You can test this marker individually at Family Tree DNA, which is the only lab that offers this test.  If you have the value of 9 at this marker, it confirms Native heritage, but if you don’t carry 9, it does NOT disprove Native heritage.  After all, many Native people don’t carry it.

To order this test, for existing Family Tree DNA clients, click on the “Order Upgrade” orange button on the right hand side of your personal page, then on “Advanced Test”, then enter “autosomal” in the drop down box, then you will see the list below. D9S919 is the last one and it costs $15.  There may be a $10 one time transfer fee as well if your DNA sample is not in the Houston lab.

native d9s919 order

Swimming in Many Pools

As you can see there are lots of tools available to you that can be used individually or in conjunction with each other.  Like anything else, the more work and effort you are willing to devote to the search, the more likely you are to be successful.

Most people test their Y-line and mitochondrial DNA, not just for Native ancestry, but to learn more about the lines they can test for themselves without reaching out to other family members.

Use your DNA pedigree chart to plan who to ask in your extended family to test for which lines.

Plan to test with multiple autosomal testing companies.  Autosomal testing in particular is still in its infancy. I like to use the results of multiple companies, especially when you are dealing with small amounts of admixture.  They use different markers, combinations, analysis tools and reference populations, so you can expect slightly different results.  One company may pick up slight minority admixture while another may not.  This has happened repeatedly with both my Native and African minority admixture.

GedMatch

After you obtain your results from either Family Tree DNA or 23andMe, you’ll want to download your raw data results and then upload the file to www.gedmatch.com. This is a privately run “donation” site, not associated with any of the testing companies, meaning there is no subscription or fee to use the tools, but they do appreciate and are funded by donations.

After uploading your results you can utilize several admixture tools to compare and contrast your results.

Getting Help

If you’re struggling with working through your family possibilities for who to test, I do offer a DNA Test Plan service.

If you would like a Personalized DNA Report for Y-line or mitochondrial results, those are available as well.

If you have what amounts to a quick question that I can answer in less than an hour, including prep, I offer the Quick Consult service.

For more extensive consulting, contact me.  You can see my services here.

In Summary

Finding our Native ancestors is a way to pay homage to their lives and to the culture that was stripped from their descendants, ironically, by using their own DNA that has been gifted from them to us.  Native people, after contact with Europeans were marginalized, and that’s the best that can be said.  Many were killed, either intentionally or by European diseases, or enslaved.  The results are that Native people left few if any individual records and those that might be available often can’t be identified or linked to them personally.  For those who cannot unearth their Native ancestry using conventional genealogical means, genetic testing is the last hope left.  Fortunately, the tools and our knowledge improve every day.  We’re making great strides with what we can do, enlarging what was a pinhole into a keyhole, allowing us to peer into the past.  So, click your heels, order your tests and let’s see where your DNA takes you.

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1,017 thoughts on “Proving Native American Ancestry Using DNA

  1. Hello, my mother is 50% native American, My Grandmother is 100% native American, my Great Grandmother Is also 100% Native as her mother and so on. As for me I’m wondering if I have enough blood quantram to enroll in my family’s tribe(Omaha Tribe). Being my father was African American(his whole family) what percentage of native would that make me?

  2. my father is 100% seminole indian (florida) How and where can I test. his tribe was in big cypress around near Ft. myers florida where he took us to visit when we were children. I am now 72 yrs old how can I test for proof even though they labeled him negro on his birth certificate because our mother was from nassau before their independance from Britian.

  3. My mother’s grand-mother was 100% Cheek Indian. She has always told me that I am the splitting image of her. Is there any way I can determine what percentage of Native American heritage or DNA I have?

  4. We did an ancestry DNA on my father he’s 57% indigenous American Mexico how can I find out what tribe he’s from and what is the next step in obtaining a tribal number thank for the help

  5. My mom’s grandfather was Cherokee, he was raised by the chief to become the medicine man, born 1865, died when I was 6, said to be 104 or older. He spoke softly and I loved sitting on his lap, he always gave me and my bro. a fifty cent piece. I would love to know more about his life. We don’t know the number that was given, I know his tribe refused to go with what they call the trail of tears, I’ve been told this by my aunt. She researched yrs ago but refuses to tell us anything more. Were there many tribes that refused to follow? I don’t want to take away from what they have but maybe find family that can tell me about their pains and blessings being who they are. My dad’s side is Blackfoot, but that’s all I know. I want to learn more about them to. How do I begin this research. I really want to know.

    • You need to do both the genealogy and test your DNA, or your Mom’s DNA is she is still living.

  6. Aloha, I always knew we had Taíno ( natives of Boriken/Puerto Rico ) blood. Doing a few different types of DNA testing ( for fun ) I found out I have 28% Native Andean blood of the Quechua and Aymara people along with some native Columbian tribes and Mayan or Aztec blood. Does the DNA testing only apply for the North American Natives or for ALL Natives of the Americas. If not, then is there a site which directly focuses on the native tribes from Central and South America and the Caribbean. Mahalo for your time.

    • My mother´s DNA came back with pre Colombian Puerto Rican plus 1,5% Native American , according to some sites it is from the Lumbbe tirbe in North Carolina and the Costonean in San Francisco. I have no idea how she got it but her great grandfather was born in Jamaica and his ancestors were slaves taken from The West coast of Africa sometime in the late 18th century. Her other ethnicities are Indian, Scandanavian , English, Italian and East European so she is quite a mixture. I can only think that the Puerto Rican comes from the African slaves maybe escaping to one of the many Carribean islands. Looking at a photo of my great great grandfather he looks more South American than African as he doesnt have the normal faciial features of an African.

      • Any site that identified you as a specific tribe, like Lumbee, is unreliable. Stick with the major 4 companies for ethnicity results.

  7. Can someone claim tribal benefits based on haplogroup alone? My mother is somehow claiming benefits with almost no actual % of any tribe but we do have the maternal haplogroup and I’m wondering how she managed to do that and how I can make her stop if it’s illegal. Thanks!

    • Not that I’ve ever heard of. Some self-formed tribes have their own rules that are much more lenient than federally recognized tribes.

    • No. In order to do so, you need to be able to find the tribe which means that you’d have to trace the individual via the 5 civilized tribes and then trace them to you.

      I have a percentage of Native DNA and my 2nd cousin has an A2 haplogroup.. my 3rd great-grandmother was Tunica but because Tunica was not recognized until the 1980s and my family did not enroll at that time, we can not enroll.. so even sometimes you still cannot enroll even if you have an ancestor who wad Native American during the time that Native Americans were enrolled if it isn’t from a particular tribe that was enrolled during that time.

      We have cousins (my 3rd great grandmother’s sisters descendants) who are enrolled but we cannot enroll.

  8. I did test for the 9 repeat allele, my results gave me a value of 10-18. Is it true that a value of 10 indicates Mayan heritage?

    I’ve read a few academic papers and it seems like the only known group who carries the 10 are Maya but I want to be sure. I’d also like to learn more if you know of any resources to point me towards.

    • The papers are very old. And the only relevant values were 9-10. I don’t think this was ever corroborated by other academics. I would not put much stock in this.

  9. This was an amazingly great read! I tested with Ancestry and have 41% Indigenous American as my main ethnicity. This is all new to me as I was raised by my Cuban mother but did not know much of my Father’s background. Does this mean anything? Im more curious of my Ancestors and culture more than anything else

  10. My dad tested in 23&me… 1.5% Indigenous American; I tested in 23&me… 1.0% Indigenous American. My dad’s two sisters tested in Ancestry … both showing 1% Indigenous American. Because of the low percentage, I questioned ‘accuracy’ of these tests. But more importantly, I am wondering if this could be the reason for a few brick walls. The 23&me results for my dad projected that his 100% Indigenous Ancestor would have been born in the 1700s (1700-1790) and it showed a region of Northeast (highly likely) and an area towards Oklahoma. That confuses me. And, that time frame is pretty far back.

    DNA testing also shockingly revealed my dad has a different biological father than his sisters so that sort of helped me determine that this native ancestry is most likely on his mother’s side (Oma). As I was growing up with Oma’s mom – my great grandma (who is from Appalachia) – she said their family was Native American. She grew up knowing her grandmother but not sure if that’s where she heard this. I wondered if this Indigenous ancestry was from that part of the family but I hit a dead end with that line of my family tree around the early 1800s in New Garden District, Russell Co, VA. Plus this isn’t the Northeast region as suggested by the 23&me company. Could that be slightly inaccurate?

    Dads paternal haplogroup: E-L241 (my brother did a Y-DNA test with FTDNA and this is narrowed down even further); maternal haplogroup: T2b

    I’ve uploaded raw data DNA to GEDmatch, FTDNA, MyHeritage. I’ve tested in 23&Me and Ancestry.

    I ordered your book and will get it in a few days. I hope I can learn more. I’m simply trying to determine why I have some ancestry composition that I cannot trace to anyone in my tree.

      • My mother tested 1,5% native American which means that one of her common ancestors was 100% N A around 1800, I have put her raw DNA onto about 6 other sites and they all come back with N A and even some South American, Mexican and Canadian indigenous tribes. I have also been in contact with some of her DNA matches who also have Native American ancestors so I suppose it must be true but have no idea how, I do know that manybe some of her Spanish ancestors might have gone to the New world in search of El Dorado around the 1500s and have found a DNA archeological match in Panama around 1590 but if her N A DNA is from around 1800 I suppose it just means that one of my common ancestors was from this ethnicity. As i came to a brick wall around 1857 on one side of my mother´s family I am unable to follow it up.

    • I’m not sure how to help you with your search, other than to encourage you to track the ancestors who correlate to the Native segments. You mention Oklahoma, which is the destination of the removal acts of 1832, which does make sense since that’s where the testers are found today. Sounds like you have a lot of mysteries to solve. For you Dad’s Y haplogroup, use the Discover tool at FamilyTreeDNA to learn more. Best of luck to you.

    • It’s not that they don’t test there, but it’s likely that there aren’t enough people with Native ancestry to cluster there.

  11. My Father’s family was pushed into Mexico when they made the Texas/Mexico Line. I am 25 percent Native and would like to know my tribe. I have been doing geneology and discovered my Grandmother was full blooded Native her birth certificate states her Race as Native. Both my Grandmother and My Dad are buried on a Reservation area in CA but I can’t get a hold of anyone. I just want to know what tribe and what customs. Money can’t replace what was stolen. I was taken from my birth family and adopted out. I know that this is illegal but I don’t think they knew that. Any help on what to do thanks.

  12. My great grandmother on my dad’s side was 100% Blackfoot Indian and my great grandfather or great grandmother on my mother’s side is 100% Apache, but I can’t remember which of them she said was. I was wondering about how much Indian that would make me?

  13. I was told my great-great grandmother on my fathers side was full Cherokee. Since I am female it appears it’s harder to prove. Which test should I try?

  14. My mother always said we have Native American heritage. But, the family would never talk about it. I was later informed that my father, her husband wasn’t my biological dad. Can you suggest my best options on which test to buy.

  15. It’s kind of a shot in the dark, but I recently took a 23 and Me that showed I have a little NA/Indigenous Amazon from my mothers side. Knowing that she was born in Brazil and is mixed race, It’s likely she has a higher percentage than I do. I was around 3% which I don’t feel is enough for me to claim Amazon heritage and I would never bring it up with indigenous people or try to co-opt my lineage from that far back. However, I know that many Natives are weary of and do not use DNA or Ancestry apps (understandably). I’ve heard this leads to a lack of accurate data. My mother is pretty dark and I’m wondering if I can get more info from her if she takes a DNA test. It would be great to know which Amazon tribe my GGG grandparent was but so far 23&Me only lists that we have ancestors from the Brazilian Amazon.
    I find it fascinating (and of course would never try to personally claim their culture as my own) I just wanted to find more info about my mysterious background as an adoptee.

  16. Would you please send me your mailing address and brochure of your test and cost . So that I can send you a order and check for the amount of money it will cost me.

    • I don’t do testing. If you scroll down to the bottom of any article, you’ll see the link to FamilyTreeDNA which is the test I recommend. The book provides you with step-by-step instructions as well.

  17. I’ve always been told that my great grandfather was Cherokee Choctaw. I would love to learn the history and become a tribal member. To be part of something great with so much history would be such honor. Native Pride
    Candace Coats

  18. My great grandmother on my father’s side was Cherokee. I have a photo of her, name & marriage license (1903), gravesite, & other documents. Does this give me a chance for tribal recognition?

  19. Hello . My question is “if a Native American blood line of more than 1/16 th and when a person passes away , the funeral home will ask if the person was American Indian, what is the answer?”

  20. I did a deep research and found out that my 11th great grandmother on my grandfather’s side is wampanoage her name is Rumaha Jones. Her father or grandfather I can’t remember which was the chief that had 1st encounter with the pilgrims. Is there a way to find out about native american bloodline that far back?

  21. Hello. I’m confused to what test to do. It was suggested I take an autosomal test. My family tree says I’m Ka Okee’s 11th granddaughter. I believe too far back for acurate testing, but the Ka Okee DNA Virginia study is asking I submit this test. I didn’t go looking for this, our family thought we had some kind of indigenous ancestry through my maternal grandfather’s side, (there’s a real family mystery there) instead the tree is coming down through my maternal grandmother’s side. I am female. Can you suggest which test I should get? Ancestry, from what I understand doesn’t let you download your results nor give you all info unless you sign up for their website. Thank you,

    • If you descend from Ka Okee through all females, you should definately take the mitochondrial DNA test. If not, then take an autosomal test. You can test with Ancestry, but you do receive limited information without paying additionally. However, you can then upload your DNA file to both FamilyTreeDNA and MyHeritage, for free and receive matching. They have advanced tools you can unlock, but that’s a LOT cheaper than retesting and you’ll receive matching in all three databases.

      • Thank you!. Not sure what it means through all females, it goes back and forth, daughter, daughter, daughter, son, son, son, daughter, etc. I think I’ll just take both. Autosomal and mitochondrial.

        • Only women give mitochondrial DNA to their children. So you have your mother’s mother’s on up through all females.

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