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    1. Those Danish counties in Utah make so much sense now. First time visiting that area I was surprised at how many blonde people there were never seen so many before.

    2. garden_province on

      Could you please upload a lower resolution image, I can just about make out the legend but it would be better if it was completely blurred out

    3. olracnaignottus on

      Just moved to Minneapolis, and it’s crazy how many Skarsgaard looking people there are.

    4. StoreBrandJamesBond on

      My grandpa harped for years about his proud German heritage. He was from a blue southern Illinois county. He loved everything about Germany and it spread to my mom, who is also proudly claiming German ancestry. I did a DNA test a few years ago and we had zero German heritage. My grandpa passed before I tested but my mom insists the science is obviously broken because we are German through and through. I guess the science showing that my mom has a half-sister she doesn’t know about is broken too, despite that half sister knowing everything about moms side of the family.

    5. EuropeanBattles on

      It isn’t correct, because English nation – no. 4 after Germans, Scottish and Irish. For example Germans in Texas #1.

    6. Oh boy, here we go again posting a white ethnicity map of the U.S., with the atypical addition of Canada.

    7. holytriplem on

      SOURCE.

      We don’t even know if this is based on self-reported ancestry or if it has any genetic basis

    8. austin101123 on

      This really explains why tea is popular in the south and beer is so popular in the midwest

    9. MightBeAGoodIdea on

      Meanwhile somewhere around my great,great grandparents generation I’ve got like 8 different ancestries coming together.

      Which one am I supposed to say is my ancestry? My paternal line and ignore the rest or my maternal line…? Or the other way around? Just pick one?

      Or call myself American at this point? Technically I was born in Germany but they didn’t have birthright citizenship, still don’t, and my parents were fully American stationed there in the military, so it’s not like I’m the first gen immigrant either.

    10. So Appalachia is descendent from the Scots? I’ve never considered that and am interested to read any anthropological work covering this history.

    11. Very surprised that none of NYC would have Jewish as most common ancestry for white people

    12. Charlie2343 on

      I thought most white Canadians and some Americans identify with being American or Canadian. Did you just remove those

    13. Cpt_Morningwood on

      My country Finland punches way above our weight in this one 💪 it ain’t much but it’s beautiful.

    14. According to ancestry.com , I am primarily English/Scottish/German with hints of the Netherlands and Scandinavia.

      But I’m from the American Midwest and I live in Virginia.

    15. Where are Ukrainians? Because the are in the legend of the map, but I cannot find them on the map.

    16. EscapeFacebook on

      100 years ago half of this list wouldn’t have been considered white.

    17. Does it count Hispanics such as Mexicans as white? It’s otherwise puzzling how Spanish would be such a common ancestry among whites outside Florida.

    18. It’s so funny how New England is probably the least English region of the US on this map

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