Explore the genetic ancestry you inherited from your ancestors—on both sides of your family—with your Ancestry Composition Report. Your results reflect which populations your ancestors belonged to before the widespread migrations of the past several hundred years. While paper records might tell you the country an ancestor lived in, your genetics can tell you which regions of the world your DNA comes from—sometimes revealing previously unknown migrations or hidden ancestries. We recommend that you use your genetic reports together with your family history to build a complete understanding of your ancestry.
This article will briefly highlight the different ways the Ancestry Composition Report displays your genetic ancestry. Follow along in your Ancestry Composition Report as we tour each section.
Map View | List View | Recent Ancestor Locations | Ancestry Timeline | Parental Inheritance | Chromosome Painting
Map View
You will see a map highlighting the regions of the world that are associated with your Ancestry Composition near the top of the main page of your report. The map is helpful if you want to quickly view all of the regions where Ancestry Composition was able to detect ancestry in your DNA. Learn more about how Ancestry Composition assigns your genetic ancestry.
List View
To the left of the map, you will see a list of the regions your ancestors likely lived in before the widespread migrations of the past several hundred years. The populations form a hierarchy, which reflects the genetic structure of global populations. For example, Britain and Ireland are part of Northwestern Europe, which is part of Europe.
Click on each population you were assigned to learn more detail about your genetic ancestry. To see all of the different reference populations, click the “See all tested populations” link. Learn more about our reference populations.
Recent Ancestor Locations
As of April 2018, you will see an additional 120+ recent ancestor locations in your Ancestry Composition Report. These regions provide information about the places where your ancestors may have lived during the last 200 years. Learn more about your Recent Ancestor Locations.
Ancestry Timeline
In the Ancestry Timeline section of your Ancestry Composition Report, you can find out how many generations ago you may have had a single ancestor who came from just one population. Located below your map, the Ancestry Timeline section may be helpful for learning about your genealogy, in figuring out from which ancestors a particular ancestry may have been inherited, or in helping to piece together the history of their likely migrations.
When viewing your timeline, start on the left and work your way back in time as you move to the right. Keep in mind that if you inherited a certain ancestry from multiple independent ancestors, the estimated generation may be slightly earlier or later than expected. Learn more about Ancestry Timeline.
Parental Inheritance
If you connect with one or both of your biological parents, you will get an extra result! When you connect with a parent who is also a 23andMe user, Ancestry Composition will automatically update to display which portions of your ancestry came from which parent. Connecting with a parent may also increase the resolution of your assignments: for example, more Scandinavian and less Northern European. Learn more about the benefits of connecting with a parent.
Connecting with a parent isn’t an option for everyone. While a parent is needed in order to display which portions of your ancestry came from which parent, there are some things that you might be able to infer about your parents based on your Ancestry Composition alone.
Chromosome Painting
The Chromosome Painting section, located after the Parental Inheritance section, shows a colorful representation of the 23 pairs of chromosomes that make up your genome. The chromosomes are shown in pairs and labeled with numbers (1 through 22) or the letter X; females will see two copies of the X chromosome, while men only see one copy of the X chromosome.
You can hover over or click on the different ancestries in the menu next to your Chromosome Painting to learn where they’re found in your genome. The gray regions in chromosomes 13, 14, 15, 21, and 22 represent parts of the genome where 23andMe doesn’t test any markers because the DNA sequences in those regions are repetitive and hard to measure. Learn more about using Chromosome Painting to explore your family history.
Common Questions
I received “broadly” or “unassigned”, does that mean you didn’t test me at those regions?
No, everyone is analyzed for every marker on our genotyping chip. The “broadly” and “unassigned” assignments mean we weren’t able to confidently assign the piece of DNA to a subpopulation. Learn more in the Aggregation & Reporting section of the Ancestry Composition Guide.
Do the chromosome numbers (1 through 22) mean anything?
In Chromosome Painting, your chromosomes are shown in pairs and are ordered by the length of the chromosome—chromosome 1 is the longest and chromosome 22 is the shortest. You received DNA on these chromosomes from all of your recent ancestors. Because the DNA on these chromosomes is randomly shuffled each generation, it is the length and the number of segments from a particular ancestry, not the specific chromosome number (e.g. chromosome 1), that is informative about your ancestry. We recommend visiting your Ancestry Timeline to learn how many generations ago you may have had a single ancestor who descended from a single population.