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USA Clerical
Genetics
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SERVICES

Clerical Genetics 
Research and Data Analysis

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Package A: $99.00 for a three month subscription of research and basic overview of your Haplogroup HVR1/HVR2 and Autosomal results explained with timeline origins that should be read in reverse as the lower the percentages the further back in time that ancestor was living from that geographical region… And in contrast the higher the percentages the more recent in time you shared ancestry from that geographical region or ethnic group listed… (From Ancestry.com, 23andMe, My Heritage, and Family Tree DNA etc).

Package B: 90 days Clerical Genetics FMS Research MtDNA Full Mitochondrial Sequences $150.00

Package C: 90 days Clerical Genetics Y-DNA Research Y-Chromosome sequences 12-111 Markers $150.00

Package D: WGS Whole Genome Sequencing Research: 90 days Clerical Genetics WGS Research Whole Genome Sequencing $200.00

$300.00 a Forensic look at MtDNA Full Mitochondrial Genome Sequences through HVR1/HVR2/HVR3 Control Región and Coding Región with Haplogroup origins and Haplotype assignment with citations as well as Y-Chromosome 67-111 marker etc..

Package E: $400.00 looks at your WGS Whole Genome Sequences, and Y-chromosome markers 67-111 and FMS of MtDNA Coding Region with Haplogroup Origins and Haplotype assignments..

To Select a Price Plan 
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TESTIMONIALS

This is an EXCELLENT blog! After having received my Y-DNA haplogroup assignment E-186 (and terminal SNP E-U174), I’ve been unrelenting in searching for information regarding this subclade, particularly since I also tested positive for V38, M2, P1 and P2. I quickly noticed that some schools of thought seem to be on a quest to create an artificial demarcation between the two basal branches V38 (E1b1a) and M329 (E1b1b) – the former being tagged as African with overstating or placing hyper-emphasis on its Bantu affiliation and the latter dubbed as “Middle Eastern” suggesting non-African roots. I’ve also observed that since the explosion of genetic genealogy “Bantu” has suddenly engulfed the “Niger-Kordofanian phylum,” which implies the East African origins of this language group. Now, there’s a shift to Niger-Congo – so as to further polarize or dissect it from said East African connection or origins. The final fall-out is the board brush Bantu. These linguistic classifications under the guise of “scientific scholarship” are clearly inventions superimposed from external entities outside of Africa.

ktaldridgerand

Greetings Bileh, I am so excited about being able to know the locations of my mtDNA markers. Thank you so much for your great expertise! Having tested through the Genographic Project, my results for some reason were delayed over two months. I always wondered about 356C since my maternal ggrandfather was possibly Irish and so many other L3b’s and L3b1a’s were missing the 356C marker. When I was a teenager, I always felt my father’s ancestry could be traced to Sierra Leone. He is E1b1a (M2) at first 12 STRs. My father died when I was ten years old, so my brother had to take the Y-DNA test. Hope to be able to identify family tribes on both sides! Both of my parents were listed as Mulatto which could account for certain markers. Your great help is truly appreciated.

Thetruthofhumanity

Greetings, Mr.Gambela

I would like to know if you, would you be willing to walk me through step by step on the DNA testing process? I am very interested, excited and nervous all at the same time about understanding the findings. As soon as you say yes, I would like to begin the process.
I am fully aware that it takes days and even sometimes weeks for your analysis. I am also aware you do this extensive work. Me and my organization would like to make a generous donation through PayPal on behalf of all of the hard work and discoveries you have made thus far.

We truly appreciate your hard work and dedication…

Thanks

Sun Davi

Simply outstanding! 

Wow, that’s more information than I received from 23andme. 

Unfortunately, it doesn’t appear as if they provide HRV1/2 data. 

I may have to test at a company like FTDNA to get that information. 

OH well, that’s more money to throw into my ever-growing DNA pot. Next time I hope to have the information needed. 

I had no idea what I was missing out on not having a full sequence done.

Blessings,

Lana

Uncovering Secret Ancestry

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USA Clerical
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Research & Data Analysis
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