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Types of DNA: Which test and why?
There are three types of DNA tests useful for genealogy; Autosomal, Y-DNA and Mitochondrial DNA, each one giving different results and information.
This is the most common (and cheapest) test. It is usually the best one to choose if you are starting DNA research.
You receive approximately 50% of autosomal DNA from your father and 50% from your mother which was made up from 50% from each of their parents and so on. Based on this, the amount of DNA you share with a match will indicate what relationship you might be to that person. And, because DNA is passed down in segments from a particular ancestor, it is possible to identify which line of your tree the match belongs to.
Y-DNA identifies a haplogroup that you belong to and shows matches with others in that haplogroup.
It is handed down intact for many generations at a time. However mutations did (and do) occur and it is these mutations that define which haplogroup a person belongs to.
Mankind can trace its ancestors back to a single group of people living in Africa. From there, members of this group migrated to different areas and unique mutations were developed within each of these separate groups, creating offshoots of the original haplogroup. This continued for many thousands of years. Each new mutation is given a sub-number and, simply put, that is what a haplogroup classification is.
Mitochondrial DNA works in a similar way to Y-DNA, in that mutations at given times define the haplogroup for your matrilineal line.