I have a particular case I'd like to ask about please.
I want to try to identify my maternal great grandfather. My grandmother was adopted (in Melbourne, Australia), her birth mother was named on her birth documentation but her father was not.
Using the Leeds method I have been able to separate out my maternal & paternal sides and identify matches descending from my maternal grandmother and grandfather. I was able to find DNA matches that pointed to sisters of my great grandmother and so identify her. But so far no luck on finding usable matches for my great grandfather.
Like others here, I don't give much credence to ethnicity results. But feeling a bit desperate, I decided to try to use ethnicity at FTDNA, My Heritage and Ancestry to try to at least identify where he may have come from. They all have different groupings of course, but results aren't too different in my case. This is how my logic went:
1. My ethnicity is mixed between England, Scotland, Ireland and Scandinavia/Northern Europe.
2. My dad's family migrated to Australia 170 years ago from eastern England, his father's family from Yorkshie where there was once a Viking population. This is roughly confirmed by my having roughly 50% from UK & Scandinavia/Western Europe.
3. If I take those percentages out of my ethnicity, the remainder is about 20-25% Scottish & 25-30% Irish (varies with each company).
4. My known maternal ancestors come from Ireland & Scotland, with the theoretical mix being:
- 31.25% Irish
- 6.25% Scottish
- 12.5% unknown (my missing great grandfather)
5. The only way to achieve something like my actual percentages (in #3 above) is for the missing great grandfather to be Scottish.
Of course the numbers don't add up neatly, but all three companies give (broadly) the same result.
My question is: has anyone else used an approach like this and later (when they had identified their ancestor) found the calculation gave a reasonable result (or didn't)?
Thanks.