I’m off work today. I decided to keep playing around with ChatGPT to see if my true genetic past would be revealed. The outcome was surprising, considering I was just sending photos without providing many details about myself. The AI decided to strike up a conversation with me. I liked it!
Taking all of the photos together, my estimate becomes a bit more specific, while remaining speculative.
My ranking would be:
- Northern/Central Italian (especially Emilia-Romagna, Tuscany, Marche, Veneto)
- Greek (particularly northern Greece)
- Western Balkan (Croatian, Slovenian, Montenegrin)
- Albanian
- Western Turkish (Aegean region)
The features influencing that impression include:
- Fair complexion with blue-gray eyes.
- Silver-gray hair and relatively heavy eyebrows.
- A broad, somewhat square face with a medium-to-broad nose.
- Overall appearance that is common around the northern Mediterranean and Adriatic rather than farther north in Europe or farther east into the Middle East.
You don’t strike me as looking distinctly Northwest European (British, Scandinavian, Germanic), nor distinctly Levantine or Caucasian. Instead, you fit well within the broad Mediterranean/Adriatic spectrum where those populations overlap.
If I had to assign broad probabilities from appearance alone, I’d estimate:
- Mediterranean Southern European: ~60%
- Western Balkan: ~25%
- Anatolian (western Turkey): ~10%
- Other European/Mediterranean: ~5%
Of course, appearance is an imperfect guide, and many people from these regions look quite similar due to centuries of migration and shared ancestry. A DNA test or documented family history would provide a much more reliable picture.
This angle reinforces much the same impression as the previous photos. If I were trying to place you by appearance alone, my updated ranking would be:
- Northern or Central Italian (highest confidence)
- Greek (especially northern mainland Greece)
- Croatian or Slovenian
- Albanian or Montenegrin
- Western Turkish (Aegean region)
The features that stand out across all of your photos are:
- Fair skin with blue-gray eyes.
- Thick eyebrows that have remained prominent with age.
- A broad forehead and a straight to slightly convex nose.
- A face that’s relatively broad rather than long.
- Dense body and facial hair, a trait that is common across many Mediterranean and Balkan populations.
Overall, your appearance fits very comfortably within the Adriatic–Aegean Mediterranean spectrum. You don’t have features that strongly point toward Northwestern Europe (such as British, Scandinavian, or Dutch), nor do you appear distinctly Middle Eastern. Instead, your look is one that’s frequently seen from northeastern Italy through Slovenia, Croatia, Greece, and the western coast of Turkey.
If I had to give a single best guess from appearance alone, it would be Italian with possible Balkan ancestry, followed closely by Greek. As always, though, this is only a visual impression—people from these neighboring regions often overlap considerably in appearance, so it isn’t possible to determine ethnicity reliably from photos alone.
Me: One last one for today.
Thanks for sharing another angle. This one is well lit and front-facing, which makes overall facial proportions a bit easier to judge, though it’s still not possible to infer ethnicity reliably from appearance alone.
If I were making a purely visual guess, I’d summarize it this way:
- Most likely: Northern/Central Italian or Greek.
- Also plausible: Croatian, Slovenian, or Montenegrin.
- Reasonable outside possibilities: Albanian or western Turkish (Aegean).
The features that consistently stand out across all the photos are:
- Fair complexion with blue-gray eyes.
- Silver-gray hair and naturally heavy eyebrows.
- A broad, fairly square face with a medium-width, straight nose.
- Moderate body hair, which is common throughout Mediterranean and Balkan populations.
- Overall appearance that fits comfortably within the Adriatic–Aegean part of Europe.
If I had to express it as broad regional probabilities based only on appearance, I’d say something like:
- Southern European (Italian/Greek): ~55–65%
- Western Balkan: ~25–35%
- Western Anatolian/Eastern Mediterranean: ~5–15%
One thing I wouldn’t say from these photos is that you have a strongly stereotypical Northwestern European (British/Scandinavian) or distinctly Levantine/Caucasian appearance. Instead, you look like someone who could blend in naturally across much of northeastern Italy, Slovenia, Croatia, mainland Greece, or the Adriatic coast.
I’m curious now: after all these guesses, what’s your actual ancestry? It would be interesting to see how close—or far off—the visual impressions turned out to be.
Me: My ancestry is mainly from Northern Iberian Peninsula: Galicia, Cantábria, Northern Portugal. I think this phenotype overlap with Italy and the Western Balkans is normal. The physical types of all these regions are undoubtedly very similar.
That result actually makes good sense, and it’s a nice illustration of why inferring ancestry from appearance alone is so uncertain.
Northern Iberia—especially Galicia, Cantabria, Asturias, and northern Portugal—shares a number of physical characteristics with populations around the northern Mediterranean and Adriatic. That’s due to both ancient shared ancestry across southern Europe and the fact that traits like eye color, pigmentation, facial shape, and hair distribution don’t map neatly onto modern national borders.
Looking back at your photos, there were several cues that could point toward northern Atlantic Iberia as well:
- Your blue-gray eyes and fair complexion are common in northern Spain and Portugal.
- The broad face and relatively robust features are also seen in Galicia and Cantabria.
- The combination of fair pigmentation with relatively dense facial/body hair is well within the normal range for northern Iberians.
The reason I leaned toward Italy and the western Balkans is that the same combination is also frequent there. If someone from Galicia, Veneto, coastal Croatia, or northern Greece stood together in a group, there would often be substantial overlap in appearance.
From an anthropological perspective, the Atlantic façade of Iberia isn’t isolated. Northern Iberians carry varying proportions of ancestry that is broadly shared across Western and Southern Europe, and many visible traits are distributed continuously rather than being confined to one region.
So, if I had known in advance that your ancestry was entirely from southwestern Europe, I would have found Galicia/northern Portugal entirely plausible. The photos simply happened to fit another part of the same broad Southern European continuum.
It’s a good reminder that while appearance can sometimes suggest broad geographic regions, distinguishing between Galician, northern Italian, Croatian, or Greek on looks alone is often little better than an educated guess because of the considerable overlap among these populations.