DNA Academy 1 – Pulling It All Together

Roberta Estes
Aug 14, 2024
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Content

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Introduction
5m 18s
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Fish in All the Major Ponds
17m 12s
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Matches Are Gold
7m 56s
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What is Triangulation?
7m 48s
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Ancestry
7m 08s
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SideView
2m 48s
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DNA Communities
8m 59s
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ThruLines
9m 39s

About this webinar

In the first part of Tests, Vendors, Tools and You, we will discuss how and where to start your genealogy and DNA testing. Every testing vendor has different tools to help genealogists. We will learn how to best utilize the resources of each vendor. First, we’ll start out by discussing goals, along with an overview and best features of the four major vendors; 23andMe, Ancestry, FamilyTreeDNA and MyHeritage. We will also touch on five third party tools that will be more fully explored in the third session of this series. I’ll introduce the four types of DNA for genetic genealogy, when to use each, and a tried and true methodology to create a genetic pedigree chart. We cover the basics of ethnicity, triangulation, why you’ll want to use a chromosome browser to prove ancestors, and chromosome painting. Ancestry offers a wide variety of genetic genealogy features and tools, and we’ll discuss how to get the most out of your DNA test at Ancestry, including ethnicity, Communities, SideView, matching, shared and parental matches, common ancestors and their flagship tool, ThruLines.

About the speaker

About the speaker

Roberta Estes, MS, a professional scientist and business owner has been an obsessed genealogist since 1978. In 2000, when the infant scientific field of DNA for genealogy emerged, Roberta was one of the early DNA surname administrators and pioneer
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  1. TT
    tina tuttle
    2 months ago

    Thanks for this presentation. You touched on something of concern for me: ancestry’s hints seem based on how many people adopted a particular ancestor to their tree (usually by copying other people’s trees). In several cases, this has facilitated the widespread acceptance of this erroneous ancestor. Someone from Ancestry told me, in a FB group they were using a different approach, but I think the weighting of variables leading to that hint is skewed to how many trees have that person, not on accuracy.

    Reply

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