ANSWERS: 6
  • First, find out from relatives such as great aunts, uncles, great-grandparents if they have any Indian blood, if so, what tribe. If not, base your source work on where you were born and the tribal Indians that lived in your state of birth and the state of you parent/grand-parent's birth's. Check those state government records for what are known as "Indian Rolls" and start your search there.
  • Have your heritage traced. There are people who do that now-a-days. =]
  • where would i look up to see if i am indian?
  • Well in my case it involved looking at my father... classic Indian profile. Then I asked, and yes, Grandma wasn't pure bread Caucasian.
  • there are sites where you can trace your ancestry.
  • you can order a kit, all you have to do is swab the inside of your mouth, send back the kit and they will send you back a DVD which you can watch, all about your ancestry. very cool! :) its part of the genographic project -->National Geographics--> sounds pretty neat! https://genographic.nationalgeographic.com/genographic/participate.html

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