Interesting. I know a few people who've gotten those results.
They don't have enough samples, for the paternal (I think it's like 8 markers) nor maternal tests (HVRI only). Not only that but they don't actually give you your results. I know this because I heard them say this, themselves. Take my friend for example: her HVRI results at FamilyTreeDNA found like a dozen different individuals from various peoples. What African Ancestry does is give you 1-3 of these, arbitrarily..based on perceived likelihood. You're taking it to the bank, when you may not be directly related to those people at all or have a similar ancestry. Granted, they're sometimes accurate, in individual cases.
I like FamilyTreeDNA and 23andme because you don't only get an ancestry painting, but relative matches directly comparing your DNA with other individuals. If you read the forums, there people finding out they were born via sperm donor/other men...once mom or mom/dad are forced to come clean, adoptees finding their families either thru their parents testing or via cousins who's tested.You get a bunch of cousin matches which include everything from 1st cousins to a few generations back. So between myself and a couple of other family members, we share DNA with several continental Africans several of which I've had conversations with, so I know exactly where they're parents/grandparents are from. No need to speculate on sample size and accuracy.
African Ancestry gives a lot of Bamileke results. Yet, groups that make up darn near half of our ancestry hardly get any. They have a serious sample issue, which is why Cameroon gets more hits than can be accounted for, a lot (not all) of these people were actually in Nigeria, the Congos, and Angola, before the slave trade. These Y and mtDNA matches account for about 1 or 2 percent of your DNA, whereas the type I mentioned are autosomal (DNA on the 22 non-sex chromosomes).
Actually knowing who you are?.
great post. you should take off the spoiler. repped.
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