Showing posts with label Mothers of Acadia mtDNA Project. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mothers of Acadia mtDNA Project. Show all posts

Monday, March 09, 2009

Mothers of Acadia mtDNA Project... an update


Dear Cousins,

It has been a while since I updated you on the Mothers of Acadia mtDNA Project.

To date there are 83 participants in the project. I am always amazed that just when we think there will be no other participants someone writes to me expressing interest in being tested.

If you are interested don't hesitate to contact me. The results are interesting to say the list.

We are still searching for individuals who descend from some of the Founding Mothers of Acadia for who we still have no test results. Do take a look at the list to see if you are a direct descendant from one of them. For someone who wants to be mtDNA tested, that person should figure out her or his direct maternal line. A direct maternal line means it starts with you to your mother, to her mother and so on as many generations back as you can go.

If you an Acadian descendants, Stephen White would gladly verify your lineage as we have been collaborating together on this project. So you would want to join the Mothers of Acadia mtDNA Project site when you are ready to order your test kit.

Now if you are French-Canadian, you would want to join the French Heritage DNA Project. Doug Miller is the administrator of that project and is very helpful.

The Acadian project was begun because of all the scuttlebutt that was going on with some wanting to believe that all of the first Mothers of Acadia - or the founding Mothers - had to be of Native descent because we had no records to prove otherwise.

Well so many records were destroyed at the time of Deportation by the British while others were buried in the ground by the Acadians who had been told they would be returning. So between those destroyed and those that rotted in the ground, the records that would have given us the origins of our first ancestors was lost forever.

Then along came mtDNA... ta da! When embarking on this project we did so with open minds. All we wanted was the truth and to put the fabrications to rest once and for all.

We really expected that some of the results would and could come back showing Native results. In the end, those women who were thought to have been of European/France origins are and those we already knew were Native have proven to be so. So far there have been no big surprises.

It is important to know that every additional test taken is a huge contribution to our heritage.

One can take what is called the HVR1 test or the HVR2 test. There is now the FGS test. The FGS is the newest and most refined test to date - it is a Full Sequence test.

When I contacted Eileen Krause of Family Tree DNA for a breakdown of what each test tells us as far as how far back people with the same results might be related to a particular ancestor, I received the following informaton:


Matches to just the HVR1 and HVR2 can be more distantly related.

A low resolution match (HVR1 only) has about a 50% chance of being related within the last 52 generations.

A high resolution match (both HVR1 and HVR2) has about a 50% chance of being related within the last 28 generations

An exact match on the FULL SEQUENCE (FGS TEST), based on what is currently known about the mutation rates of mtDNA, is likely related within 2 to 4 centuries. Please note that only limited studies have been performed on mutation rates of mtDNA, so the estimated range in which a common ancestor lived may decrease or increase as the results of more intensive mutation rate studies become available.

Of course the past 400 years is what we are looking at for Acadia. So FGS testing has become very important to us.

If you have any questions about mtDNA testing for our Mothers project, please do not hesitate to post a question or to write to me privately. It is an exciting time to be able to work with science to find our roots at this time in our history.

As an aside, I sent in my test kit last month. The results should arrive pretty soon. Of course, my direct maternal line is on my French-Canadian side and I have been able to research that line into France so I will be very surprised if my results are not European. But.. we don't now for sure until the results are in. Maybe I'll find that "Indian Princess" my grandmother and my mother always talked about yet (Smile>).


Love,

Your Cousin Lucie




Monday, June 23, 2008

Dear Cousins,

It has been quite a while since I've shared information with all of you on the AAH blog but here I am at last.

As most everyone we had a really difficult winter - spring began hot and quickly cooled down with lots of rain. When I was able to check our property we'd had all kinds of winter damage and it actually took all of spring for me to get the lawn back to where it was before winter. We have finally arrived and I cannot believe it is already June 23rd.

For anyone research their Acadian or French-Canadian families, you might be interested in joining the Acadian-French-Canadian RootsWeb mailing list. Just send an email to ACADIAN-FRENCH-CANADIAN@rootsweb.com - type Suscribe in the subject line. Leave the body of the message blank and you'll automatically become a member. Everybody on the AFC list is terrific and helpful to everyone who posts a query. So please consider joining us and being part of a great online "family" ;o)

If this is your first visit to the Acadian Ancestral Home blog then a big warm welcome! You might want to visit the Acadian Ancestral Home web site. It is chuck full of information to help you in your research.

Since I last blogged I have been very busy with the Mothers of Acadia mtDNA Project.

You might want to check out the project site to see if you descend from any of the Founding Mothers of Acadia. The project is progressing well and was only created to obtain direct maternal line mitochondrial dna - for short: mtDNA. If you are interested and have not yet completed your direct maternal line, just drop me a line and we'll help you with that. Both men and women can be mtDNA tested. Mothers pass on their mtDNA to all of their children. Their daughters pass it on to their children but men do not pass on their mother's mtDNA to their children. That is why it is necessary to know your direct maternal line. In brief, that means from you to your mother, to her mother, to her mother and so on as far back as you can go.

This summer I have been invited to speak in Quebec, West Pubnico and Cheticamp. With everything going on with our family this year, I have had to pass at this time - I hated to pass as I love to speak about our heritage as I believe it is always a privilege to speak about our history and our Ancestors.

At the end of April I presented two workshops at the American-Canadian Genealogical Society in Manchester, New Hampshire.

If any local groups are interested in having me as a speaker, please send me a private email.

We have had lots of good news in our family. Our married daughter and son-in-law are expecting their first child so we will finally be grandparents. Our other daughter is engaged to be married next May. So a baby in the fall, the holidays and in no time we will be marrying off our youngest daughter. So much to look forward to on these happy occassions.

I want to take a moment to thank all of you who visit the Acadian Ancestral Home on a regular basis and who read this blog. I appreciate all of the email that I receive encouraging me in the on-going work that I do to help everyone with their family research. If I've not heard from you yet why not join the AFC list - that is an easy way to reach me at all times ;o)

Have a great summer. If you are traveling, keep safe and enjoy.

Should any of you be in the Grand-Pré area at the end of July, Stephen White will be speaking. He will also be speaking at Louisbourg in the fall.

Hugs to all of you dear cousins & Vive l'Acadie!

Your cousin,