Learn more about BigY testing: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6I0SXBSIVjM NMGS Quarterly Talks: Lee Martinez: "Enabling the genealogy citizen scientist" New Mexico Genealogical Society
Dec 2023: GlobeTrekker Mapping in Discover Reports.
Globetrekker estimates geographical ancestor locations and migrations across the world based on the largest database of high-coverage Y-DNA sequences, ancient DNA results and archaeological remains.
Roberson YDNA Surname Project, BigY Results: Haplogroup SNP I-FT223253
Roberson YDNA BigY SNP Migration of about 4,000 years across Europe, England, Scotland to the US
I-M253>DF29>Z58>Z59>Z2041>Z2040>Z382>FGC24333>S26361>S16414>S22349>FGC24357>FGC24347>FGC24356>S10350>BY19383>Y125947>S14393>BY149414>BY101763>BY78405>FT223253 > FT224850
Complete FTDNA YDNA Haplotree: . https://www.familytreedna.com/public/y-dna-haplotree/I;name=I-FT224850 The Big Tree: I-Z58
I-YP2191 > P305 > L413/PF1409/V31 > M168/PF1416 > P143 > M89/PF2746 > F1329/M3658 > F929 > L15/M523/S137 > M429/P125/PF3535 > M170 > Z2881 > DF29 > Z58 > Z59 > Z2041
. http://www.ytree.net/DisplayTree.php?blockID=3461 SNP Tracker: http://scaledinnovation.com/gg/snpTracker.html
James Roberson b. abt. 1737 Scotland m. Mary Fuqua abt. 1756 d. 03 January 1828 Marion Co TN Mary Fugau dau of Ralph Fuqua and Priscilla Owen b. abt. 1740 Lunenburg Co VA d. aft 1822 Bledsoe Co TN Sequatchie Valley, Bledsoe Co, TN
Children of James Monroe Roberson and Mary Fuqua:
1. William Roberson, b. 07 November 1759 (Rev War SAR#94856 by:Ralph Kendall Roberson 1921-1994)
2. Elizabeth Roberson, b. 1765-1766
3. Roysden Roberson, b. 1757 m. Mary Lou Stovall
4. James Roberson, b. abt. 1770
5. Littleberry Roberson, b. abt. 1772
6. John Roberson, b. abt. 1770
http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~fuqua/Main%20Database/mdb245.htm
David Boyett, DNA Surname Project Coordinator (Boyett, Ballard, Hooks, Langston, Howell)
Roberson Family History - Thackerville Love Co, OK (Click 162946)
Norse: European
: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haplogroup_I1_(Y-DNA) Haplogroup I1* is an indigenous European group and is hypothesised to have spread out from the Iberian refugium after the last glacial maximum 18,000 years ago. I1 reaches its highest frequency in Scandinavia and has a decreasing gradient in frequency to the East and to the South and West. I1 is relatively common in the British Isles, having been taken there by Norse and Danish Vikings as well as Anglo-Saxons.