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Are these kind of discussions especially interesting to Americans? I've been asked that so many times and I do have to wonder. My mother was always telling me I'm x% this and y% that, but I couldn't say it made much difference since I couldn't identify ethnically with any of them. I personally find the practice too reminiscent of eugenics and the US govt's. 'Indian Blood Quantum.'

When I moved out of the US, I was never asked this question...

I could be way off the mark here, but I think it could be due to the US's history. It's a (relativey) new country composed almost entirely of (relatively) recent immigrants. As such, I don't think it's surprising that people might look to their family heritage for a sense of belonging and shared identity.
 
50% German
50% Western European mutt with 12.5% Cherokee

We Americans are funny, it not as much as a melting pot, but more of a experimental, long term, multicultural orgy!
 
I could be way off the mark here, but I think it could be due to the US's history. It's a (relatively) new country composed almost entirely of (relatively) recent immigrants. As such, I don't think it's surprising that people might look to their family heritage for a sense of belonging and shared identity.
No, I don't think you're off the mark at all. Quite well put, in fact. :D
 
Supposedly my father's birth parents were Scottish and Swiss and my mom
is German, but from the part of Germany (Upper Silesia) that was given to Poland after WWII.

It's very difficult for me to trace my father's side since he was orphaned
at the age of 3 and then his adoptive father passed away when he was 12.

To make it worse, his adoptive step mother who he couldn't stand, sold all my father's considerable land entitlements while he was under age of 18.
 
That's so cool about being American: all those different old nationalities mixed up!

I'm just boring 100% Dutch.

Did grow up in England though... makes me feel part English ;)
 
50% Finnish (fourth generation)
37.5 % (German third and fourth generation)
12.5% English by way of Canada (third and fourth generation, although one of my great-great-great grandfather's may have been a royalist who went to Canada after the US Revolutionary War. He was probably English though)

The Finns seem to be mostly Finnish, with possibly some Norwegians and Germans about 8-10 generations back.

The Germans came from Niedersachsen and Mecklenburg-Schwerin, there may be more than a little slavic (Polish/Russian?) blood there but I haven't confirmed it.

One of my English Great-great grandparents came from Cornwall but I have a suspicion that he was originally French.

Of course, if you want to see more, check out my 'tree in my sig.


I've been working on my 'tree for the last 8 months or so and it's really quite fascinating. For those who say their heritage is irrelevant, I highly disagree. We're all a direct result of the quirks and idiosyncracies of our ancestors. Cultural traits can continue on for generations without anyone thinking twice about where they came from.

I'm convinced that the melange of cultures and ethnicities that make up the US are its greatest strength and the source of continued strife.
 
All American Mutt, I guess. Maternal grandparents came from Nova Scotia, Canada. Paternal grandparents came from Germany. I suppose this might explain why I don't mind the winter cold all that much, and why one of my favorite meals is knockwurst, potato, and red cabbage. I like Sauerkraut as well, but everyone else around me seems to hate the stuff.
 
80% Australian (British)
12% Aborigine
16% British
90% crab
2% widget


I'm dual core, you see.

For some reason after seeing this all I could think of was Krusty from the Simpsons declaring that he was no longer a self-hating jew, merely a plain old anti-Semite.

I'm about 50% Scottish, some English, grandmother was French-Canadian and adopted so a dead end there.
 
Im dominican nationality but my heritage is
60% Spanish
20% English
20% African
I have a really strange mix as you can see lol...
 
Do it correctly

If you truly want to know your origin, and help science at the same time participate here.
The Genographic Project said:
The fossil record fixes human origins in Africa, but little is known about the great journey that took Homo sapiens to the far reaches of the Earth. How did we, each of us, end up where we are? Why do we appear in such a wide array of different colors and features?
Such questions are even more amazing in light of genetic evidence that we are all related—descended from a common African ancestor who lived only 60,000 years ago.
Though eons have passed, the full story remains clearly written in our genes—if only we can read it. With your help, we can.
When DNA is passed from one generation to the next, most of it is recombined by the processes that give each of us our individuality.
But some parts of the DNA chain remain largely intact through the generations, altered only occasionally by mutations which become "genetic markers." These markers allow geneticists like Spencer Wells to trace our common evolutionary timeline back through the ages.
"The greatest history book ever written," Wells says, "is the one hidden in our DNA."
Different populations carry distinct markers. Following them through the generations reveals a genetic tree on which today's many diverse branches may be followed ever backward to their common African root.
Our genes allow us to chart the ancient human migrations from Africa across the continents. Through one path, we can see living evidence of an ancient African trek, through India, to populate even isolated Australia.
But to fully complete the picture we must greatly expand the pool of genetic samples available from around the world. Time is short.
In a shrinking world, mixing populations are scrambling genetic signals. The key to this puzzle is acquiring genetic samples from the world's remaining indigenous and traditional peoples whose ethnic and genetic identities are isolated.
But such distinct peoples, languages, and cultures are quickly vanishing into a 21st century global melting pot.
That's why the Genographic Project has established ten research laboratories around the globe. Scientists are visiting Earth's remote regions in a comprehensive effort to complete the planet's genetic atlas.
But we don't just need genetic information from Inuit and San Bushmen—we need yours as well. If you choose to participate and add your data to the global research database, you'll help to delineate our common genetic tree, giving detailed shape to its many twigs and branches.
Together we can tell the ancient story of our shared human journey.
 
I was born in Wales to Welsh parents.

My great-grandparents on my mothers side are from Germany (my grandfather left Nazi Germany & married a Welsh woman).

My great-grandparents on my fathers side are from England (they moved from Somerset to the South Wales valleys to find work in the coal/mining industries).
 
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