However, I occasionally find what I call “DNA crumbs”, small pieces or fragments of DNA that may point to other origins outside of Puerto Rico somewhere further back in my tree. For example, I have received two cousins that were particular interest to me – one with ancestry in Angola and the other in Zimbabwe which tells me that my ancestors, specifically my slave ancestors, might have been from those regions themselves. What’s even more interesting is when these DNA fragments also match other people in my list of DNA cousins that also aren’t Puerto Rican!
For example, I have been able to find a cousin who matches me exclusively through my maternal side. Though he doesn’t not match my mother, he does match my maternal uncle, my maternal grandfather, and even my maternal great grandfather, therefore my mother did not receive this specific piece of DNA. This cousin is mainly descendant from Ashkenazi Jews and it definitely show in his DNA. So I wanted to see if where we matched had any pieces of Ashkenazi traces. The chromosome in question was Chromosome 12.
Taking a look at my own Chromosome 12 I could tell that I had no Jewish DNA there, and neither did my mother.
Chromosome 12- Luis [23andMe] |
However, when I checked my family members who matched this cousin I noticed that they all had inherited this piece of DNA, and all in the exact same spot!
Ashkenazi DNA Chromosome 12 [23andMe] |
As you can see, this cousin has ancestry mainly from Ukraine and Poland while my family comes from Puerto Rico. That same piece that my great grandfather had my grandmother inherited and passed it to her son but not her daughter. Below you can see how this cousin compares to the maternal members of my family.
Cousin #4 vs. Maternal Family [23andMe] |
Though I’m not sure where this DNA came from exactly in my family, I’m not surprised to see I have Jewish ancestry. My historical guess would be that this match has a Sephardic Jewish ancestor who traveled to this region and was absorbed by the local Ashkenazi Jewish community there, just a guess of course based on what I know about my own family’s countries’ of origin histories.
Chromosome 1 Comparisons [23andMe] |
Of course, the connection of the surname “Ross” could be a coincidence, but I thought it was interesting that these cousins not only matched each other and my family but also had this surname associated to them as well. Not sure that I would ever be able to find this connection and/or triangulate how I am related to them but I think it’s interesting that DNA does allow this sort of analysis.