Wednesday, June 14, 2017

The Lydia Conundrum

Lydia
Lydia and Inna are second cousins of mine on my mother's mother's side. They are first cousins to one another. Their grandmother, Alta Rosenbloom Kaplan, is the older sister of my grandmother Sarah Rosenbloom Gordon, who remained in Russia when her sisters and brother went to the US before the First World War.

Lydia's DNA results came in two months ago and Inna's this week.

We now have autosomal DNA from thirteen Rosenbloom second cousins: Lydia and Inna from Aunt Alta, Beverly, Beth and Sam from Uncle Hymen and my first cousins Kay and Leonard, my four sisters,  my brother and me from my grandmother Sarah.

I hope to take DNA from two more of Alta's granddaughters when I visit Moscow next month.

Two of Lydia's matches with the second cousins are over 420 cM. Eight more are between 342 and 387 cM. One is 286 cM. Compare these to the ISOGG definition of second cousins - 212.5 cM - and Blaine Bettinger's Shared cM Project's average of 238 cM and we see that Lydia's matches are much higher than expected. If it were just the vagaries of DNA, some would be higher and some would be lower, but that is clearly not the case here.

So the answer must be Jewish endogamy. All Jews, being related multiple ways, have much larger matches than the general population.

Inna with her daughter, granddaughter and a visiting Israeli cousin
Inna's results are less striking. She has over 300 cM with only three of the eleven second cousins, the highest being Leonard with 386 cM. She has six more between 258 and 296 cM. Then me at 224 cM and my brother Dan at 215 cM.

This appears to be a much more normal distribution, with less influence from Jewish endogamy.

With that, Inna has between three and six matches of over 20 cM, on eight segments with the second cousin group, including matching segments of over 50 cM.

It follows that one of Lydia and Inna, daughters of brothers, has a much greater influence from endogamy than the other. And if I were to tell you that one of them has a non-Jewish mother, hence much less endogamy, you would say that it must be Inna.

You would be wrong. As I was.

Inna's mother is from a normative Ashkenazi Jewish family. FTDNA's MyOrigins calls her 93% Ashkenazi Jewish, typical of our family. There should be lots of endogamy here.

Lydia's MyOrigins shows her to be 45% Ashkenazi Jewish and 46% East Europe non-Jewish, plus some fragments. The normal sort of background endogamy is missing, so I fully expected that Lydia's large matches with us were a result of a close cousin relationship between her Rosenbloom grandmother and her Kaplan grandfather.

If that were indeed the case, Inna's matches would be even larger because she has both the supposed cousin grandparents and the standard, garden-variety Jewish endogamy. But she doesn't. So she doesn't.

Why? Beats me! More important, why does Lydia have these big numbers? What else is going on here? It looks much too large and much too skewed to be "the strange ways of DNA." (Lydia's best match with the cousins is with Kay, whose faher also has no Jewish DNA.)

I cannot wait to see what the Moscow cousins have. One of them is Inna's sister, the other a first cousin to Inna and Lydia. So unless anyone has some suggestions, I expect to revisit this at the end of August.

Housekeeping notes
I'll be speaking on the Hebrew version of
Lessons in Jewish DNA – One Man’s Successes and What He Learned On the Journey
on 19 June at 6:30, for IGS Rishon Lezion, Museum of Rishon Lezion, Ahad Ha’am 2.

Also, my son in Chicago is making his next bar mitzvah the first Sunday in May. If any program directors are looking for something around then, please drop me a note.

2 comments:

  1. Hi Israel,

    I think there is an explanation for Lydia's results, and it has nothing to do with endogamy. You wrote, "Two of Lydia's matches with the second cousins are over 420 cM. Eight more are between 342 and 387 cM. One is 286 cM. Compare these to the ISOGG definition of second cousins - 212.5 cM - and Blaine Bettinger's Shared cM Project's average of 238 cM and we see that Lydia's matches are much higher than expected. If it were just the vagaries of DNA, some would be higher and some would be lower, but that is clearly not the case here." The ISOGG/Bettinger numbers are averages for random, unrelated, 2C matches. But comparing Lydia's matches to all of her 2Cs, all having the same great grandparents (Alta's parents) in common, is not a random set of 2C matches. In fact, the amount of matching DNA would be strongly influenced by the amount of Alta's DNA that Lydia happened to inherit. As you know, we each get, on average, 25% of our DNA from each grandparent. But due to the vagaries of DNA, as you call it, we all get more than 25% from some grandparents and less than 25% from others. That's normal, nothing special. My assumption is that Lydia (but not Inna) happened to get a very large dose of Alta's DNA (and, perforce, a correspondingly small dose from Alta's husband). For example, maybe 40% of her DNA is Alta and 10% is Alta's husband (the other 50% from Lydia's mother). This would greatly elevate the amount of matching of ALL of Lydia's 2Cs related through Alta - which is exactly what you see.

    Are there any cousins, related through Alta's husband, that could be tested? If my assumption is correct, they ought to show depressed amounts of matching DNA to Lydia.

    Cheers,

    Russ

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    Replies
    1. Thank you, Russ. You know that I always value your input. Perhaps it's as simple as you suggest. (William of Ockham would certainly think so.)

      I'll continue testing Alta's grandchildren, probably including two in Moscow this summer, one of whom is Inna's sister.

      I shall also have to get after Lydia's brother in New Jersey, though I have been cautioned not to expect much interest from him. Perhaps when I am in the US in late April, I'll factor in some NJ time.

      We know nothing of Alta's husband Berl (or Baruch) Kaplan. He died soon after WWI when we think he was living in Moscow while his own family would have been in Borisov. They tell me that since no one trusted the government, any dates or other facts we find are assumed to me made up.

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