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DSC & Hawass(2010) Ancestry ...
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by astenb: [QB] [QUOTE]Originally posted by alTakruri: [qb] What are the alleles for E-M2 haplotype 4? [QUOTE]Originally posted by astenb: [qb] I think its E3a, Or even hap B. Is B in the database that they are pulling from? I would assume it is but.... In any case it is VERY clear to see that this is possibly Haplotype IV. Which is the Southern Haplotype found in the Lucotte et al study: “Y-chromosome (IV) E-M2 is diversified with: -(1.2% )- Lower Egypt, -(27.3%) -Upper Egypt. -( 39.1% ) -in Lower Nubia/Nile Valley.” http://wysinger.homestead.com/haplotypes_in_egypt.pdf [/qb][/QUOTE][/qb][/QUOTE]Thats the thing, they dont list them. The article is quite short. [URL=http://wysinger.homestead.com/haplotypes_in_egypt.pdf]4 Pages[/URL] Materials and Methods [QUOTE] Venous blood was obtained from a total of 274 unrelated adult males, living in Egypt during 1995– 1999. The choice of these individuals was based on their locations in the valley, and in each case their genealogy goes back for several generations of paternally local ancestry. These 274 males included 162 inhabitants of Alexandria and the surrounding region (representating the Delta and Lower Egypt), 66 from Upper Egypt, and 46 from Lower Nubia (Fig. 1). Genomic DNA was extracted from whole blood by the classic method, using proteinase K and several successive phenol-chloroform extractions (Gautreauet al., 1983). We used the informative p49a,f Y-chromosomespecific DNA probes (Lucotte and Ngo, 1985), mapped to the nonrecombinant (NRY) Yq11.2 region (Quack et al., 1988). Using the Southern hybridization method, these probes oligolabeled by random priming revealed 10 male-specific TaqI fragments, at least five of which (A, C, D, F, and I) were polymorphic and determined 16 main haplotypes (I–XVI) in the initial reference population studied (Ngoet al., 1986). [/QUOTE]HAP IV [QUOTE] Haplotype IV is characteristic of sub-Saharan populations in Africa (Torroni et al., 1990; Spurdle and Jenkins, 1992), where its geographical distribution can be an indication of Bantu expansion: for example, in Central Africa (Lucotte et al., 1994), the frequency of haplotype IV is 55.2% in Cameroon, and reaches 80.3% in Zaı¨re and up to 83.9% in the Central African Republic. [/QUOTE]I dont have the time at this moment to dig through the others studies and see if the information is there. [/QB][/QUOTE]
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