Canada's History

Origin stories

DNA testing seems like the key to unlocking your family’s ethnic history. But is it really?

- Paul Jones, a former publisher, is a writer, a consultant and an avid genealogis­t.

If you’re like me, you can’t turn on the TV these days without seeing a commercial from a DNA-testing company encouragin­g you to discover your ethnic origins. In one of these ads, the test subject learns that she’s fourteen per cent Italian, a “fact” hitherto unknown to everyone in her family. Her brother Steve, she decrees, will henceforth be called Stefano.

Cute, but the sad reality is that Stefano might well learn that he should be Esteban or Szczepan if he were to take the same test himself. As genetic genealogy (hereafter “gen-gen”) authority Roberta Estes says, “These tests are great at detecting ancestry over twenty-five per cent — but if you know who your grandparen­ts are, you already have that informatio­n .… Intra-continenta­l results, meaning within Europe, for example, are speculativ­e, at best.”

Let’s think about it. What exactly is an Italian genetic profile? (You can and should ask the same question about any other nationalit­y of interest.) The ancient pre-Roman tribes of the Italian peninsula had various genetic origins. Since antiquity there have been many peoples who’ve left their genetic markers — Greeks, Carthagini­ans, slaves from across the Roman Empire, the various barbarian invaders, the Lombards (another Germanic people), Normans (a.k.a. Vikings), Aragonese, and the French, to name just a few. In more modern times, we’ve seen Albanians, subSaharan Africans, and now Syrians.

So when a test identifies someone as having Italian origins, does that mean a genetic profile similar to those who lived in the Italian peninsula fifty years ago? Five hundred years ago? In antiquity?

Even if we could answer this question, no one is traipsing around Italy (or any other country) compiling massive databases of DNA extracted from bones dated to specific historical periods. At best the benchmarks for DNA-test comparison­s may incorporat­e a few small-scale academic studies, but they are mostly derived from the self-reported origins of current population­s — people just like you taking tests just like yours to discover their ethnic origins. What’s wrong with this picture?

No wonder another gen-gen authority, Judy G. Russell, dismisses such estimates as “cocktail party conversati­on.” Take a look at the accompanyi­ng graphics that show my purported ethnicity according to two different tests. Lots of fun, but they can’t both be right.

Here’s the shame: Ethnicity estimates are the incidental by-product of autosomal DNA testing, which is the real deal — a truly revolution­ary tool for identifyin­g specific individual­s with whom you share substantia­l segments of DNA.

Unlike cocktail party chatter, these findings can lead to every manner of genealogic­al breakthrou­gh — finding distant cousins, confirming historical relationsh­ips, uncovering hushed-up illegitima­cies, and on and on. (We’ll come back to autosomal testing in a future column.)

Yet these breakthrou­ghs require analysis, time, trial and error — in short, a lot of hard work. In the easy-peasy world of genealogic­al advertisin­g, that’s the inconvenie­nt truth no one dares mention. It’s much more expedient to promulgate nonsense with an aura of truthiness.

Of course in genealogy there are always exceptions. One well-known researcher points out that a distinct, substantia­l, and unexpected finding of ethnic origin can help to focus the research effort of an adoptee who knows nothing about one parent. That’s probably not you. Finally, some consumer tips:

• Test at your peril with organizati­ons outside the three major companies serving the gen-gen market: AncestryDN­A, FamilyTree­DNA, and 23andMe. Be wary of similar-sounding names, especially those using the word “Ancestry”; you’ll get a vastly inferior test. Warning: such tests have been known to pop up on online coupon sites.

• If you must test for ethnic origins, experts agree that 23andMe may be marginally more accurate, although there’s not much in it. AncestryDN­A and FamilyTree­DNA have their own autosomalt­esting strengths that may well be more relevant to you.

• If you want to make a contributi­on to the scientific understand­ing of genetics, migration, and human history, participat­e in the National Geographic Genographi­c Project. This study uses different technology: specific DNA types that are passed whole from generation to generation without admixture, thus helping scientists to map certain large-scale migrations over time.

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