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Optimized for iOS 7, Ancestry App Offers New Social Features Making Family History Easier to Engage
 
PROVO, Utah, Sept. 18, 2013 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Ancestry.com LLC, the world's largest online family history resource, today announced the launch of a new, upgraded version of its Ancestry App for iPhone, iPad and iPod touch, with features designed to enable and encourage more rewarding discoveries as users build, update and share their family trees. The redesigned app offers new social features, i
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MyHeritage Announces New Feature

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MyHeritage has launched today a new feature that lets you save the records you discover on SuperSearch  directly to the relevant profiles in your family tree. You can also easily extract information from any record you save, which until today was only possible through Record Matches. 

The new feature is a step in our mission to combine family trees and historical records in the best possible way and make it easier for our users to make the most of both.

To learn more please click here


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Steps
Name
Most Distant Ancestor
Y-DNA Haplogroup
Terminal SNP ... Match Date
1    Jerry Carson Cummings   emailFTDNA Tip note GEDCOM Viewer Y-DNA67    Jacob Cromeans Cummins NC 1799  -    8/3/2013 1    Charles Creameans   emailFTDNA Tip note GEDCOM Viewer Y-DNA67    Charley Creameans  -    11/28/2012 4   Mr. John Christopher Lynch   emailFTDNA Tip note Y-DNA67      -    11/28/2012 5    Michael G McCarty   emailFTDNA Tip note Y-DNA111    Jas s/o Darby & Hnnh McCarty (m 1736) b 1736 PA US  -    1
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your paternal line

Your Haplogroup                                                     Tests Taken                        
                                R-L21                         CTS10168+, CTS10362+, CTS10834+, CTS109+, CTS11358+, CTS11468+, CTS11575+, CTS11726+, CTS11985+, CTS12478+, CTS125+, CTS12632+, CTS1996+, CTS2134+, CTS2664+, CTS3063+, CTS3135+, CTS3331+, CTS3358+, CTS3431+, CTS3536+, CTS3575+, CTS3654+, CTS3662+, CTS3868+, CTS3996+, CTS4244+, CTS4364+, CTS4368+, CTS4437+, CTS4443+, CTS4466+, CTS4740+,
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The common direct paternal ancestor of all men alive today was born in Africa around 140,000 years ago. He was neither the first human male nor the only male alive in his time. He was the only male whose direct lineage is present in current generations. Most men, including your direct paternal ancestors, trace their ancestry to one of this man’s descendants.

Your branch of this lineage took part in out-of-Africa migrations. Your ancestors traveled to West Asia where they lived by hunting wildlife

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Branch: L21

Age: 5,500 – 12,000 Years Ago

Location of Origin: West Asia

Today, members of this lineage are widely distributed across Europe and West Asia. They reach their highest frequency in Ireland where they and descendant branches contribute to between 35 and 38 percent of the male population. This line is 6 to 7 percent of male lineages in France. It is between 1 and 2 percent of male lineages in Germany. It is 2 to 4 percent of male lineages in Portugal and Spain. It is about 2 percent of th

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Our 10th paternal marker in our lineage

Branch: P310

Age: To Be Determined

Location of Origin: West Asia

Members of this lineage have traveled to Central Asia, Europe, and the Levant region. One descendant branch has the highest frequency of any male line in Western Europe. However, rather than a single movement across Europe, this lineage’s branches may represent many simultaneous and successive waves of migration.

Today, it is 48 to 52 percent of male lineages in Ireland. It is 45 percent of those in France. It is about 38 percent of th

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Our 9th paternal marker in Cremean lineage

Branch: L278

Age: To Be Determined

Location of Origin: West Asia

While some from this group traveled west into Central Asia, others moved south toward the Levant region. Today, they are present in trace frequencies of less than 1 percent in Italy, the Ukraine, and the region of the Pannonian Basin.

 

Note: This branch is not accompanied by a major movement on the map, and research on this branch is continuing.

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Our 8th paternal marker in our Cremean linage

Branch: M343

Age: 17,000 – 22,000 Years Ago

Location of Origin: South Asia or West Asia

The first members of this lineage lived as hunter-gatherers on the open savannas that stretched from Korea to Central Europe. They took part in the advances in hunting technology that allowed for population growth and expansions.

When the Earth entered a cooling phase, most from this line sheltered in refugia to the southeast of Europe and in West Asia. It was from these refugia that their populations rapidly exp

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Our 7th paternal marker in Cremean linage

 

Branch: P231

Age: 25,000 – 30,000 Years Ago

Location of Origin: Central Asia

The Paleolithic ancestor who founded this lineage lived a nomadic lifestyle. His descendants include two major descendant branches that today account for most European men and many others from Central Asia, West Asia, and South Asia.

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Our 6th paternal marker in Cremean Lineage

Branch: M207

Age: About 30,000 Years Ago

Location of Origin: Central Asia

M207 was born in Central Asia around 30,000 years ago. His descendants would go on to settle in Europe, South Asia and the Middle East over the following 20,000 years. Today, most western European men belong to one branch—R-M342—that descended from this lineage.  While it appears to have been one of the earliest lineages to settle in Europe more than 25,000 years ago, more recent population expansions associated with the post

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Our 5th Paternal Marker in Cremeen lineage

Branch: M45

Age: Around 35,000 Years Ago

Location of Origin: Central Asia or South Asia

This paternal ancestor traveled with groups in the open savannas between Central and South Asia during the Paleolithic. These big game hunters were the parents to two of the most widespread male lineages in modern populations, one that is responsible for the majority of pre-Columbian lineages in the Americas (haplogroup Q) and many others from Asia and Europe. Another one that spread farther into Asia produced t

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Branch: P128

Age: About 45,000 years ago

Location of Origin: South Asia

The next male ancestor in your ancestral lineage is the man who gave rise to P128, a marker found in more than half of all non-Africans alive today. This man was born around 45,000 years ago in the Middle East or Central Asia.

The descendants of P128 migrated to the east and north, picking up additional markers on their Y-chromosomes. This lineage is the parent of several major branches on the Y-chromosome tree: O, the most com

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Branch: P128

Age: About 45,000 years ago

Location of Origin: South Asia

The next male ancestor in your ancestral lineage is the man who gave rise to P128, a marker found in more than half of all non-Africans alive today. This man was born around 45,000 years ago in the Middle East or Central Asia.

The descendants of P128 migrated to the east and north, picking up additional markers on their Y-chromosomes. This lineage is the parent of several major branches on the Y-chromosome tree: O, the most com

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Branch: P128

Age: About 45,000 years ago

Location of Origin: South Asia

The next male ancestor in your ancestral lineage is the man who gave rise to P128, a marker found in more than half of all non-Africans alive today. This man was born around 45,000 years ago in the Middle East or Central Asia.

The descendants of P128 migrated to the east and north, picking up additional markers on their Y-chromosomes. This lineage is the parent of several major branches on the Y-chromosome tree: O, the most com

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