Doggerland was an area now beneath the southern North Sea that connected Great Britain to continental Europe during and after the last glacial period. It was flooded by rising sea levels around 6,500–6,200 BC.
I know I have around 80% Indian and 20% European genes. (My son had his done, so that's what the percentages told). But I need to have my own done to be more accurate.
The one mystery he's been unable to solve is just who my maternal grandfather was. We knew and loved him but there are no traces of his birth or forebears, he's a total mystery and it feels to us as if he was somehow covering something up. Absolutely no clues anywhere, which is just a tad frustrating............oh well, if he wanted to remain a mystery he succeeded
I have no idea where you live, @missty, but if you're in the UK and can get a copy of your parents' Marriage Certificate, the names of the fathers of the bride and groom should be given, on the right hand side of the certificate, along with their rank or profession, if they were still living when the marriage took place.
Of course, if you already know his full name and so on, the certificate won't help you much. Tracing the marriage of your grandparents would obviously give you more information, but I assume you have already tried that.
I knew it! Himself has had his DNA results - Englander! 87% Englander! 3% French. That will be the Quasimodo bit. And he was born on a Sunday (Quasimodo Sunday the Sunday after Easter, Low Sunday, from Latin quasi modo, the first words of the introit for this day, quasi modo geniti infantes 'as if new-born babes') The rest Welsh & Scottish.
It's a good job the Rugrats have some of my gene pool isn't it!