Ha, you're lucky I ended up finding this thread.
I just bruteforce this the dumb way. Just put 100 samples into dnatools with the proportions you want.
>I just bruteforce this the dumb way. Just put 100 samples into dnatools with the proportions you want.
Lol I literally just figured this out right before reading your post, but I wasn’t sure that’s how you were doing it. I’ve been just using estimates, ie 12% I’d put just 1 sample and use it as 10%
Thanks anyways, without your posts in the other threads I probably wouldn’t have this figured out since information online is not clear enough.
It took me ages to find Vahaduo and G25 when I first got into genetics and I learned how to use it by myself through sheer autism. It's fundamentally quite simple but I also drew a lot of moronic conclusions in my first couple years when I wasn't too experienced with it.
Very glad to be of help.
West Finnish + Norwegian ends up closest to Swedish, but this would be northern Swedes at best. Swedes still have a lot less foreign admixture than that on average. East Finns are already too far away.
Finnish_Central has a pretty tight radius of 0.018. Finns as a whole are 0.037, and up to 0.041 if you include Karelians.
3 weeks ago
Anonymous
To elaborate, Finns are somewhat heterogenous because West Finns and East Finns are essentially two different profiles. I'm not sure how internally mixed Finns are nowadays but you could argue they are basically two ethnicities originally.
3 weeks ago
Anonymous
What about more homogeneous populations like Norwegians or Portuguese?
3 weeks ago
Anonymous
You can check the individual samples that make up the averages. They are found in one of the sheets.
3 weeks ago
Anonymous
Portuguese are 0.037 and Norwegians are 0.035. Most European nation-states have an inevitable degree of diversity.
3 weeks ago
Anonymous
>West Finns and East Finns are essentially two different profiles.
There's somewhat different paternal origins for these two groups. Western Finns originate from Finnic expansion from Baltic, while eastern Finns originate from different Sami-like lines. However, due to Savonian expansion 500 years ago and modern technology, people are most likely close than what they originally were, like it's the case everywhere. In simple terms, eastern Finns basically have little bit larger Sami admixture than western Finns. There's also some strange variations like that it looks like south-east Finns have more Germanic ancestry than south-west Finns, even though "Germanic" paternal lines aren't that prominent.
He didnt asked that ESL-sister.
He asked you if shes more or less related than latvians to english or irish people.
Not if shes more related to irish or latvians.
3 weeks ago
Anonymous
His own sentence is ESL, so even if that were what he asked, it cannot be grammatically deduced from his post. Literally have a nice day.
3 weeks ago
Anonymous
Fricking moron
>closer or further from say, english or irish people than pure latvians?
Its gramatically well displayed >Is x closer or further from Z than Y?
Is not the same as >is X closer or further to z than to y?
3 weeks ago
Anonymous
"closer from" is ungrammatical. You are literally an ESL as well.
I don't know what you mean but you can make custom averages and splice samples in genoplot.
Like if I want my target to be 70% X population, 20% Y population, 10% Z population, etc.
https://discussions.genoplot.com/topic/61/how-do-i-create-a-ghost-sample
What does 3 quarters central finnish 1 quarter norwegian look like?
Ha, you're lucky I ended up finding this thread.
I just bruteforce this the dumb way. Just put 100 samples into dnatools with the proportions you want.
Basically changes nothing
>I just bruteforce this the dumb way. Just put 100 samples into dnatools with the proportions you want.
Lol I literally just figured this out right before reading your post, but I wasn’t sure that’s how you were doing it. I’ve been just using estimates, ie 12% I’d put just 1 sample and use it as 10%
Thanks anyways, without your posts in the other threads I probably wouldn’t have this figured out since information online is not clear enough.
It took me ages to find Vahaduo and G25 when I first got into genetics and I learned how to use it by myself through sheer autism. It's fundamentally quite simple but I also drew a lot of moronic conclusions in my first couple years when I wasn't too experienced with it.
Very glad to be of help.
Is it true half finnish and half norwegian creates swedish?
West Finnish + Norwegian ends up closest to Swedish, but this would be northern Swedes at best. Swedes still have a lot less foreign admixture than that on average. East Finns are already too far away.
Do you know how much does the native population deviate from the average?
Finnish_Central has a pretty tight radius of 0.018. Finns as a whole are 0.037, and up to 0.041 if you include Karelians.
To elaborate, Finns are somewhat heterogenous because West Finns and East Finns are essentially two different profiles. I'm not sure how internally mixed Finns are nowadays but you could argue they are basically two ethnicities originally.
What about more homogeneous populations like Norwegians or Portuguese?
You can check the individual samples that make up the averages. They are found in one of the sheets.
Portuguese are 0.037 and Norwegians are 0.035. Most European nation-states have an inevitable degree of diversity.
>West Finns and East Finns are essentially two different profiles.
There's somewhat different paternal origins for these two groups. Western Finns originate from Finnic expansion from Baltic, while eastern Finns originate from different Sami-like lines. However, due to Savonian expansion 500 years ago and modern technology, people are most likely close than what they originally were, like it's the case everywhere. In simple terms, eastern Finns basically have little bit larger Sami admixture than western Finns. There's also some strange variations like that it looks like south-east Finns have more Germanic ancestry than south-west Finns, even though "Germanic" paternal lines aren't that prominent.
Anonnn could you do me? My mom is half latvian half chechen and my dad is 3/4 norwegian 1/4 swedish
Chechens are so exotic that they frick this up, but it could be worse.
Eh not that off.
Would my mother be closer or further from say, english or irish people than pure latvians?
He didnt asked that ESL-sister.
He asked you if shes more or less related than latvians to english or irish people.
Not if shes more related to irish or latvians.
His own sentence is ESL, so even if that were what he asked, it cannot be grammatically deduced from his post. Literally have a nice day.
Fricking moron
>closer or further from say, english or irish people than pure latvians?
Its gramatically well displayed
>Is x closer or further from Z than Y?
Is not the same as
>is X closer or further to z than to y?
"closer from" is ungrammatical. You are literally an ESL as well.