Majority of Mexicans are mix of indigenous American and European
@EatBailaTravel2 ай бұрын
Yep that includes us!
@americawalk115426 күн бұрын
Native Americans great ancestors migrated from Asia😊
@nounnoun26 күн бұрын
Lol! Reassuranc post...Kindly tell me why almost every time I see a Mexican/Latina take a DNA test, and it invariably shows they have some African DNA, there is a racist and paranoid poster that tries in vain to downplay and dismiss that 'dreaded' African DNA like it's tainted and contagious! Africans were brought to Mexico as slaves, you know, and they suffered with the Native population. Mexicans have European blood, even though it derives from Spanish Conquistadors, who raped, slaughtered, and plundered an entire continent, and you have pride in that?
@kudjoeadkins-battle25022 күн бұрын
@@americawalk1154 tens of thousands of years ago.
@fishsticklunch2 ай бұрын
I love how I can see the love for your mother. It's beautiful and warms my heart. Thank you for the great videos.
@Peter-m5n7m2 ай бұрын
Your mom and you share the same smile and mouth.
@EatBailaTravel2 ай бұрын
😁
@dialogarconlahistoria82292 ай бұрын
❤ Tu mamá y tú comparten mi admiración.
@ToddBinNM2 ай бұрын
@@EatBailaTravelyou and your mom are both lovely ladies. I can now see where your natural beauty comes from. BYW: can you have Kevin tell me where he got those sirloin tacos from? Looked around but couldn't find the place. The Churros in Coyocan are awesome. Thanks for the recommendation. Nutella.
@EatBailaTravel2 ай бұрын
@ToddBinNM Kevin’s favorite sirloin tacos are from El Remolkito and from Los Pastorcitos 🌮
@juanhuizar56072 ай бұрын
IMO… anything under 3-4 percent you have to take with a grain of salt.. not saying it’s not accurate but those dna tests do have error and difficulty assigning very small amount. Basque was heavy in northern Mexico with the settlement of the silver mines by Juan de Tolosa. Lot of people don’t know that Cortes did in fact have basque conquistadors especially after the conquest. I was surprised that i did not have any basque according to my dna test because my last name is a variation from a basque surname (Juareguisar). It’s amazing how one’s pre suppositions are dramatically challenged when you investigate.. I was only 30 percent indigenous and 60 percent European. Think about 55 percent was from Spain.. rest was combo of North African.. Arabian..and Levantine. I was very surprised to not have any western African or far East Asian. I was very surprised to have such a low amount of indigenous. Your mom has more than me and she is much more white than me.. Excellent video to show how much of difference parent to child and sibling to sibling because of how diverse our genetic structure has become. My family has the same thing going on with one kid coming out darker and the other coming out super white.. ironically, I’m like the second or third darkest out of 8 with only 30 percent indigenous. I recommend using family search.org to see if you have a family tree already set up where you just put like your last 3-4 generations and it will link you to an already established tree and you will see the richness of your line. I can bet you, your ancestors were part of establishing the silver mines in Zacatecas.
@jpdj2715Ай бұрын
Grain of salt - we often don't see the forest through the trees. Here's a bit about the forest. Being genetically from different origins in my book simply means, less inbred - which should be felt as better. Yur ancestors may have done a better job than mine ;) What we call "genes", and collectively "genome", is a tiny fraction of our DNA. The rest we call "epigenes" (the classical Greek word "epi" means "away from", implying "not"). The genes define the assembly order in the construction of proteins from building block molecules collectively called "amino acids". While we have 23 pairs of chromosomes (46 DNA super molecules) in each cell, we pass on half of that to sex cells. When a normal cell has worn out through ageing, disease or physical damage it gets replaced by a copy of a cell, hopefully. In the creation of egg cells and sperms, genes get swapped randomly between the chromosomes in a pair. A woman has 2 X chromosomes and her egg cells (should) contain one X chromosome that has a random mix of the X genes of her father and mother. In the case of a son, this X gets paired with (hopefully) just a Y and the Y does about nothing, even when it has a passive selection role. Interestingly, while the mechanism above works for all chromosome pairs, a father passes on, to their sons, their Y chromosome unaltered (except for the incidental accidental mutation) and they pass on, to their daughters, their unaltered (except for...) X chromosome. The X chromosome carries important things like the anatomy of the brain, (colour) vision and more. Mutations can be the alteration of a gene, the disappearance of a gene, and moving to another place in the DNA string. Each of these have a different impact. Just the change of place can mean the gene never gets expressed, expresses less, or expresses too often or too fast. I lack the gene on both chromosomes in one of the pairs, to metabolise (in that activate) the essential chemistry in NSAID medication. The substance not being converted means it retains a level of toxicity and it doesn't feel good. None of the NSAID meds give me relief of pain, though, and all make me feel upset. Another mutation in my case, is that I lack the gene to activate THC on one chromosome. And hence trials with substances obtained from the "Mary Jane" plant have never worked, because between chromosomes in one pair, each exposes half of its length to the cell in order to regulate cell chemistry. The CYP gene that should activate THC must be in the rolled up half of the chromosome that has the gene, while the other chromosome in this pair exposes the half without the gene to its cell. The "genes" define "what", the rest defines, "why, when, how often". With genes, "we" (humanity, science) has become so good that we know where a gene starts and ends, and we can relate the letters in a gene to the exact structural design of a protein. I don't think that we have progressed much farther in the case of epigenes, beyond the principle outlined here. The simple middle school biology example of how genes work is blue versus brown eyes. We then are taught that we need to distinguish the genes (our genotype) from how these get expressed (how we look, work, our phenotype). We can have a brown iris gene B or a blue one b. We get one from father one from mother. The B is dominant over the b, so the b is recessive. The dominant one gets expressed in the phenotype. So we can have BB individuals, Bb, or bb. Each one with B then should have brown eyes (irises) and only the bb should have blue eyes. Parents both with bb should have children with blue eyes only and a child with brown eyes means that mother sought outside help. If you know mother and father's genotype then you can make a 2*2 table with her two genes on one side (say X), his on the other (say Y) and in the 4 cells pair the related ones. This also gives chances of how children will be phenotypically. Blue eyes are a mutation, and a similar mutation can happen in different places at different moments in time. And, a mutation can get mutated later. While we have our DNA and genes, each of our healthy cells also contain minuscule other cells with their own DNA. You could consider those things as bacteria that we live in symbiosis with. A healthy cell contains some 200 of these. Genetically, our ancestors of, say, 1 million (billion?) or more years ago got infected with these and maybe lost their own capacity, genetically, of doing what these tiny buggers (at the time) are doing. Now we cannot live without them. Each mitochondrion carries out essential metabolic processes related primarily to energy. Some conversions provide energy that keeps us warm, other conversions fuel our muscles. The Inuit-related variant (genetically in mitochondria) makes more heat and less muscle fuel, the Ethiopian/Somali variant makes little heat and a lot of muscle fuel (ideal to win a marathon). We can predict here that the mixed son from a Somali father marathon winner can never win a marathon - likely. These mitochondria (-a the classical Greek plural of -on) have their own DNA that is in a ring-form and not really DNA on a fundamentalist level but RNA. This is passed on without gene shuffle and in the case of humans, from mother to child. Mutations in the Y chromosome rarely happen and in the mitochondrial RNA also rarely happen. This enables the classification of male humans into paternal tribes based on their Y chromosomes and of all humans into mitochondrial tribes through their female-only ancestor hierarchy. In your humane genes (excluding the mitochondria) of, the genes of 1 ancestor of "n" generations ago, would relate to 1/2^n of all genes, excluding the X and Y, if all ancestors had equal chances, and if all ancestors occur only once in the tree. Both are unlikely at the individual level, but at the population level it sorta works. This implies that the main talking points in the interwebs about who our ancestors are, to place us genetically on earth, 10 generations back, about 1/2^10 = 1/1,024, for each of the 1,024 ancestor positions in your family tree. In the case of the 22 chromosomes that behave normally. When men talk about the Y chromosome of 10 generations back, that may be meaningless today. The English-language scientists' choice to call the Y chromosome "why?" seems well chosen. Well, it helps filter out X chromosome mutations that are not viable, or have ill chances to their carrier. When we talk about the mitochondrial genes, this is relevant to our energy system today, but again, we may not have a lot of humane genes passed on from that female ancestor of 10 generations ago, while we have all her mt-RNA in our mitochondria. When we now shift to "ethnicity" or tribalism - inbreeding on a larger scale than incest - then we have to be aware that our mutations make us more or less unique at that level. Those mutations are hopefully few and far between. Several years ago, I saw a historic documentary about Genghis Khan that reported that, today at the time, some more than 32 million men on earth have a couple of the Khan's mutations on their Y chromosome. Imagine that these would define those men and we had more than 32 million killing bullies who have an urge to go raiding, thieving, stealing, occupying, besieging, slave taking, and raping. More than 10 generations again and it is totally meaningless. The question then is, something to be proud of or ashamed of. As there are 2,047 positions in your family tree until, including, 10 generations ago, it is likely that e.g. one male can be found on more than one position, so his presence in your genes today would be higher. It's also likely that more than one female in these 2,047 positions voluntarily or involuntarily got impregnated by another man than the legal father. For the UK, guesses are that today more than 25% of children have another biological father than their legal father. In other cultures this is quite common, but, in Japan, should not be asked about. There, mothers communicate to their child, the hypothesis of another than legal dad being bio dad, by labelling that man with a variant of the "uncle" word. "Genes" (our genome) are a tiny fraction of our DNA. Mutations used to relate us to ethnicity or regions are a tiny fraction of the genome. As the gene-testers build family trees from their databases, together with archaeological finds, we can relate branches in our ancestry better to regions and ethnicity. It's not as easy as it seems, though. Many humans have a fraction of Neanderthal DNA. Science opines that Neanderthals never got to Asia, but the Neanderthal fraction in Asians can be higher than in Germans living around the ~Neander (the meandering river is called "Düssel" and this gives its name to the big city of Düsseldorf) valley today. If you have an "overbite" (your upper front teeth don't land on the lower ones but over, in front of the lower ones) then science can relate you to researched remains of an Egyptian pharaoh who had the mutation. Do you descend from that guy? We couldn't say - more likely from an ancestor of his who already had the mutation yet who's remains never were found.
@dianapulido1807Ай бұрын
On Ancestry, you can see what DNA you inherited from each parent even if they haven't tested. I was adopted and didn't know who my biological parents were. I actually still don't know who my biological father was. I know who my biological mother was because my half-sister tested, and she was raised by our maternal grandmother. With information that she gave me, I was able to able my maternal side of the graph, making the other my paternal side. If your graph has a lot of the same countries, focus on something that is only on one side. For example, the Basque, if it shows only on one side, then you know that that is your maternal side. The worst case if you can't tell the difference, one will be labeled parent one and the other parent two.
@StephenandAndieАй бұрын
Whoa, Basque! Portugal! Italy?! Norway?! This is so interesting and cool! Hi, Jenny's mom! ❤
@EatBailaTravelАй бұрын
Yea fascinating stuff right? I mean the Iberian peninsula stuff not so surprising but the rest? Unexpected!
@susandevinenapoli7649Ай бұрын
French explorers, you might look
@LongieR8erАй бұрын
My family is from Both sides of Sierra Morones Hwy 23 from (Fresnillio to Guadalajara) and Hwy 54 from (Jerez to Moyahua de Estrada)and everywhere in between….i remember you mentioned in the other video you’re looking for a Covarrubias last name(I’m also looking for my Great-Granpa with same last name) around Tlaltenango area.
@michelleg7Ай бұрын
Yeah that percentage is pretty normal for Nueva Galicia region cause my family comes from that area also and I have the african ancestry but less indigenous so your mom being Guera is not a surprise to me for that area of Mexico as my family are Gueritos too. The basque there was a lot that settled in Mexico especially in Zacatecas as three founders were from there, then there was a famous navarrese family who settled in Aguascalientes called the Esparza family so there is more basque right there. So your mom has like total percentage of 44% Iberian ancestry. There were a lot of italian ancestors from Genoa who settled in Nueva Galicia too. The last name Lomelin, Morfin are to name a few of Italian ancestry.
@cindyk30762 ай бұрын
I always enjoy DNA results, they are always interesting, like in your mom's case!
@EatBailaTravel2 ай бұрын
I did not expect hers to be so different from mine! It was fun
@SOCORROSOSA-k1e2 ай бұрын
Hey girl. I’ve been watching you for a while now. I when I saw your mom, she looked so familiar, but couldn’t put my finger on it. I just realized I know her, and whole family. Haha hope everyone is doing great.
@EatBailaTravel2 ай бұрын
Wow that's so cool! Small world! Where did you meet my family??
@SOCORROSOSA-k1e2 ай бұрын
My cousin was married to your Tia Chelo
@EatBailaTravel2 ай бұрын
@SOCORROSOSA-k1e oooohhh snap! Me saludas a mi padrino! 😅 Haven’t spoken to him since he and mi tia split 😆
@SOCORROSOSA-k1e2 ай бұрын
Will do! Take care and keep traveling, you are our eyes around the world!
@SOCORROSOSA-k1e2 ай бұрын
Oh and say hi to Kevin!
@intruzione2 ай бұрын
Es importante saber como interpretar los resultados, no mires paises, mira areas, por que las fronteras han cambiado atra vez de los años y siglos. Por ejemplo a tu mami le sale 2% de Francia, tal vez pueda ser mas Vasco, ya que el Pais Vasco comparte ADN y tiene similitudes con esa area sur de Francia.. Lo mismo pasa con Portugal, el ADN de los Portugueses es muy parecido a la de los Españoles, es posibe que si tengas ancestros Italianos, varios Italianos trabajaban para el imperio Español y se asentaron en la Nueva España y en la Nueva Galicia (Como la familia Brambila, Lomeli).... El resto de paises Europeos, es posible que si descienda historicamente ya que la peninsula iberica fue habitada por muchos grupos Europeos, y esos poquitos puede que sea muy antiguo. El de los paises Africanos, ellos se mezclaron con la poblacion desde que llegaron a la Nueva España, asi es como muchos obtuvieron su libertad, hoy en dia, tenemos poco rasgos de ellos, pero si su ADN... Si, tu obtuviste mas indigena por parte de tu papa, EL ADN de tu mami, es muy parecido a muchas personas de esa region... El area de Durango, Zacatecas, Aguascalientes, Jalisco, llegaron muchos Vascos. Muchos de ellos fueron mineros. Seria interesante que armaras tu arbol genealogico en familysearch.org y tal vez puedas rastrear a todos tus ancestros y aprender como se dio tu mezcla... La mayoria de documentos estan microfilmados, y puedes buscarlos gratuitamente.
@ranitabarrios1065Ай бұрын
De casualidad caí en este video y he visto otros de personas nacidas en los Estados Unidos descendientes de mexicanos y tristemente ninguno habla español a veces entienden pero no pueden hablar no saben desgraciadamente sus padres no sé por qué razón no les enseñaron hablar español me imagino que para protegerlos de la discriminación y que se integrarán perfectamente a la vida allá pero perdieron una gran oportunidad de ser bilingües que es magnífico pero la sangre llama y qué bueno que Que tu amiguita hables español tú hablas muy bien se ve que tienes un magnífico lenguaje articulado muy preparada te felicito sigue así y cuando tengas hijos enseñarles español que Dios las bendiga a ti a tu madre bye saludos desde Acapulco
@EatBailaTravelАй бұрын
Hola amigo muchas gracias por escribirnos. Lamentablemente así cómo describes sucede mucho en EEUU, no es que se avergüencen describes su herencia sino para salir adelante en el nuevo país. Tengo la fortuna de que desde muy pequeña mi cultura mexicana ha sido gran parte de mi vida y así seguiré con mis hijos 🤍 Nosotros hoy estamos en Acapulco!! 😄 venimos un par de días a “despiojarnos” 😅 pero ya nos vamos mañana. Un saludo!!!
@CATAGUILAR21 күн бұрын
The regions that ancestry shows in Mexico are where people with similar dna are concentrated . That doesn’t necessarily represent where your indigenous roots are . Your indigenous ancestors may have migrated to those zones . That African dna is from slaves taken into Mexico to work on the ranches , mines and haciendas .
@seaneendelong80652 ай бұрын
It might be helpful to know the majority of Portuguese heritage comes from sailors- and they travelled on extensive trade routes for hundreds of years where they met local women, had children. Since MANY of those ports were in Portuguese colonies their children were the same, and sons may well have become sailors like their fathers, traveled the same routes, and started families far from where they were born- even back in Portugal.
@jo100Ай бұрын
I Was Expecting Your Mom To Have A very very very High European In Her DNA 🧬 For Real, because I can see The European very very very Strong In Your Mom For Real.
@EatBailaTravelАй бұрын
We were so excited to see her results and her European DNA was quite high and very similar amount to her mesoamerican indigenous DNA. How cool right!?
@jo100Ай бұрын
@@EatBailaTravelYes.
@kickmcconnell2 ай бұрын
You made me go look at my DNA report again. I’m not sure it’s possible I could be any more white than I am 😂 99.7% Northwestern European, 98.9% of that is British/Irish 0.6% Finnish and the rest just says “Broadly Northwestern European”. My last name gives me away! McConnell. My mom’s maiden name, “McDaniel”. Checks out! 😂
@EatBailaTravel2 ай бұрын
Hahaha glad we could confirm that you are, in fact, still very white 😆😁👍🏽
@asan10502 ай бұрын
Muchas gracias.
@EatBailaTravel2 ай бұрын
A ti ☺️
@kimberlyp.p2 ай бұрын
Mexicans are diverse ❤️…. If I can make a video request or ask for your experience about getting things like products or clothes from the states delivered to cdmx.
@EatBailaTravel2 ай бұрын
Hola 😊 sure thing, actually, you might actually be interested in our video about furnishing our apartment in Mexico City. We talk about where we bought everything plus how we shipped things from Chicago to CDMX. kzbin.info/www/bejne/fZe4nXuNhdeigposi=Q4CH3_5fngaSYR3M
@kimberlyp.p2 ай бұрын
Oh yes! I watched that. I guess I’ll re-watch. I’m especially wondering if you get taxed before your items are delivered thanks
@EatBailaTravel2 ай бұрын
Oh oh you mean like online shopping from the US and shipping to Mexico? I have done that a couple times but usually try not to because the delivery times are usually long and there’s a chance your product could get held up at customs. I’ve heard horror stories of people getting charged import taxes on things like that that end up costing more or as much as the item itself. I don’t have a lot of experiences with that but I’ve read stories on the Mexico expat facebook group pages
@kimberlyp.p2 ай бұрын
@@EatBailaTravelthat’s all I needed to know thank you so much for that prompt response!!
@EatBailaTravel2 ай бұрын
Oh you’re very welcome! 😊
@KuKoMotoАй бұрын
What part of Mexico are you parents from?
@EatBailaTravelАй бұрын
My family is from Zacatecas and Kevin’s parents are from San Luis Potosí & Veracruz
@KuKoMotoАй бұрын
@ very cool, my mom is from Valparaiso Zac and my dad is from Mezquitic Jalisco, it was interesting to hear that a good percentage of your ancestors were from the same region.
@EatBailaTravelАй бұрын
@@KuKoMoto cool! yea it was really nice to see that show up on the ancestry results. It makes me wonder about their lives and all that led to me being born..
@LeonorDavila-y3x2 ай бұрын
Gracias hermosa hija por esta información tan valiosa para mi 😘
@EatBailaTravel2 ай бұрын
@@LeonorDavila-y3x gracias mami por participar en nuestros videos ❤️🫂🤗
@LeonorDavila-y3x2 ай бұрын
😍
@titon732 ай бұрын
Damm I did mine cz of your and yes it is very interesting . I have Jew and basque and Yucatán peninsula too and North Africa wow
@rookiecookchick2 ай бұрын
❤
@EatBailaTravelАй бұрын
Thank you
@rockyracoon32332 ай бұрын
You got Basque in you, you ought to visit Boise ID. It has many people of Basque descent and birth.
@EatBailaTravel2 ай бұрын
I’d love to visit Boise for exactly that! Fellow KZbinrs, Tourist to Local, made a great travel vlog on Boise and highlighted the Basque culture. They made me want to visit!
@rockyracoon32332 ай бұрын
@@EatBailaTravel. As with obtaining your Mexican citizenship, look upon visiting Boise as your sacred duty.😊
@seaneendelong80652 ай бұрын
There is also a well established Basque community south of Carson City NV- I think they followed the mountains and river channels north and settled in good areas to raise sheep....
@partyboy03192 ай бұрын
Antes de que se establecieran paises como los que estan nombrados y establecidos. En que se vasavan los estudios alli esta el misterio.
@apalomares91712 ай бұрын
En la sangre
@chorks232 ай бұрын
Your sister looks like your mom
@EatBailaTravel2 ай бұрын
She definitely does! Much more than I do haha
@Lane969313 күн бұрын
Translate for us, lol !
@EatBailaTravel13 күн бұрын
😅 the captions/subtitles should work!
@MarioLopez-xu5zc2 ай бұрын
Pero por que te sorprende?, en el pais hay 500 años de mezcla de sangre y culturas
@EatBailaTravel2 ай бұрын
Porque hay casi 200 países en el mundo
@MarioLopez-xu5zc2 ай бұрын
@@EatBailaTravel lo que quiero decir es que es normal que un mexicano tenga ascendencia indigena, euro-iberica, afro etc. eso es asi por que en mexico hay 500 años de historia de mezclas de culturas desde 1521 hasta la actualidad hubo mestizje por lo que es normal que en las familias mexicanas exista ese tipo de asendencia.
@dinaflores2 ай бұрын
Same mouth and eyes
@pageegap12 ай бұрын
interesante. No eres adoptada entonces.. yo crei qe si.. es broma jejej. Buen video!!
@EatBailaTravel2 ай бұрын
Por fin se aclaró la duda 😅
@mazatlifootwear2 ай бұрын
In both cases the majority is indigenous... Let's celebrate that... Not the maybe 1or 2% traces of French etc...
@apalomares91712 ай бұрын
Borrate a ti mismo te crees 100% Indigena y te pones nombre Español y Ingles que contradictions las tuyas . Ponte nombre otomie,Azteca tarasco, tolteca. Ni tu te la crees. Ya supera tu color y Cara de Indigena
@jesssmalls66232 ай бұрын
True , true
@Lucien234-i2zАй бұрын
What is wrong with you! They should embrace all of themselves
@davidabad469Ай бұрын
Please check on the meaning of majority. Summing 39% and 1% yields 40%, which is not a majority.
@mazatlifootwearАй бұрын
@@davidabad469 compare to 1%... Why hold on to that 1%... 1% versus 40% ???
@gman93532 ай бұрын
1% on a DNA is just noise on a DNA test. In other words, it could or could be not an ancestor at all. Not accurate at all.
@EatBailaTravel2 ай бұрын
Out of all the parts of the world, why would they show up then? 🤔
@seaneendelong80652 ай бұрын
This is tricky, because often they are trying to find a CLOSEST match from other people in their database already... And so they kind of toss the 1% or less at that category. For now. Now if you have a NUMBER of 1% that sort geographically close, now that is a much better marker to a tue to that region. Probably from a very far back ancestor ir
@ThePickles9232 ай бұрын
You have the same eyes..
@fourthdeconstruction2 ай бұрын
I don't know but it seems that you're trying to find some African population in Mexico that was brought by the Spaniards. Well, the Spaniard didn't take many slaves to Mexico when they arrived. The Africans that Mexico allowed to settle, came years later, the Mexican gov then sent most of them to settle in the coastal towns of Veracruz, Guerrero, Oaxaca, Chiapas & Tabasco. It seems that your mom has also that African and European DNA both could've came straight from her European side of her family before they arrived into Mexico. Also, Horchata is actually Spaniard not from African. Yes, there is some influence of African culture in Mexico for example the use of the marimba which comes from Veracruz. But I'm sorry to say but the influence is less than you might think. You are not alone on thinking of relatives of other continents, there are some millions of Mexicans that have Philippine DNA and there is not data on Philippines in Mexico but there is a trade relation for many years so they are in the same boat as you. Concentrate in your big percentages your 51% and 29%; and be proud.
@springbreeze712 ай бұрын
Son todos mentiras - no pongas confianca en eso - todo plata
@marissaalonzo79972 ай бұрын
The African % is from the Spanish. The Moors inhabited Spain for 800 years. Most of us will show 1-3% of African or North African. Its just built into the Spanish bloodline.
@Wwasgud2 ай бұрын
Scientists also say we have African because that’s where we are all originally from
@olg062 ай бұрын
Senegal & Nigeria is NOT North African. Mexicans have sub-saharan afrucan blood because Black slave were brought to Mexico and mixed into the Native population.
@seaneendelong80652 ай бұрын
@ww That Would be a fraction so tiny that 1/1000 of a percentage would be too high. It would never show on a genetic test.
@lalolanda6872Ай бұрын
The Spanish, like the English, brought Africans as slave labor. It is more likely that the African gene comes from the interbreeding of Africans in the American continent than from the Moors. Keep in mind that the Moors were multiethnic, Arabs and Africans, and not precisely Africans.
@Ander114PLАй бұрын
Remember african slaves were brought to hispanic-america to😅
@emafrodo2 ай бұрын
Que tan frecuente les da cancer de mamá q ustedes?
@TheTwoTravelersInMexico2 ай бұрын
The African blood makes sense since the Moors had conquered much of Spain between 900 and 1500 AD. The Moors where from Africa. -Marc
@olg062 ай бұрын
No. It's because black slaves were brought to Mexico and they mixed with the Native population creating "Zambos" some zambos mixed into the mestizo population which is my mexicans have tiny bit African blood.
@TheTwoTravelersInMexico2 ай бұрын
@@olg06 I forgot about that. -Marc
@seaneendelong80652 ай бұрын
Turns out there is startlingly little Moor OR black genetics in Spanish lines. Outside a couple tightly limited spots they left almost no trace behind when the Reconquest was done... Most mixed families fled, some to the New World and many to N Africa. Portugal is where a strong and lasting genetic heritage was created.
@JcBautista012 ай бұрын
Está gente deberás. A fuerza quieren ser europeos a la fuerza hombre. Yo soy 1000% indígena oaxaqueño puro. Nada de pinchi mezcla. Más vale ser un digno y puro representante indígena a ser una copia barata de un mal intento de un europeo que jamás será igual a un Europeo original. Mi lengua primera es el mixteco. Soy Oaxaqueño puro y orgulloso de no tener sangre europea ni querer serlo. Ay mi México malinchista.
@MSanz-jc2bg2 ай бұрын
I think your mommy has a very low concept of what being an indigenous is.Debe estar mas orgullosa de sus raices mestizas,viva la raza.
@EatBailaTravel2 ай бұрын
Perhaps, yea. I’m working on educating myself on the mesoamerican civilizations and want to make more of an effort to share that with my mom. She didn’t get to learn about a lot of things since her parents pulled her out of school after the second grade to help feed the family.
@MariaGasca-Reyes2 ай бұрын
@@EatBailaTravel Hi 👋 just for your information the Aztecs Mexicas We're originally from Utah The Natives always were a nomadic Peoples. And before Europeans invaded the Americas their were No countries or borders Mexico Wasn't even a country . Their is so much to Native history It will blow your mind . hello 👋 from michigammi.
@EatBailaTravel2 ай бұрын
@MariaGasca-Reyes yesss thank you for pointing this out!!
@worldobserver35152 ай бұрын
@@MariaGasca-Reyes Utah? You need to read more. Utah, geez...
@MariaGasca-Reyes2 ай бұрын
@@worldobserver3515 The Utoh Aztecan PEOPLES to be exact !. Pialli Quema ma Cualli yohualli .