quote:And
summary:
"Genetic kinship analyses revealed identical haplotypes in both mummies (table 1⇓); using the Whit Athey’s haplogroup predictor, we determined the Y chromosomal haplogroup E1b1a. The testing of polymorphic autosomal microsatellite loci provided similar results in at least one allele of each marker (table 2⇓)."
--Hawass et al 2012. Revisiting the harem conspiracy and death of Ramesses III. British Medical Journal, BMJ2012;345:e8268
Haplogroup E1b1a (now known as E-M2) is an
African DNA group, most commonly found in sub-Saharan Africa QUOTE:
"Haplogroup E1b1 now contains two basal branches, E-V38 (E1b1a) and E-M215 (E1b1b), with V38/V100 joining the two previously separated lineages E-M2 (former E1b1a) and E-M329 (former E1b1c). Each of these two lineages has a peculiar geographic distribution. E-M2 is the most common haplogroup in sub-Saharan Africa, with frequency peaks in western (about 80%) and central Africa (about 60%)."
--Trombetta et al 2011. A New Topology of the Human Y Chromosome Haplogroup E1b1 (E-P2)
PLoS ONE 6(1): e16073.
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
That is one of the reasons why I decided to ignore the village idiot. After that brief discussion on People of Lerna it is clear he doesn’t know what he is talking about. To suggest that Cro-magnon man morphed into Caucasoids then these Caucasoids entered Africa through Iberia, populated North Africa and East Africa, then formed ancient North/East African civilizations then re-entered Europe creating Crete(Greece) and Estrucia(Rome) is not only laughable but downright twisted. Delusional.
The Language, Culture, Morphology and Archeology tells the opposite. Now modern genetics has aligned with the said Language, Culture etc.
This table tells the story.
V-88 (Rib1b1c) is not only African, it is much older than R1b1b2a(European lineage). So when you read these studies about R1b lineage the first question you have to ask yourself as an intelligent reader is “what is the resolution and what branch of R1b tree is the test subject”? Because it is only through high resolution one can tell the African R1b and the European R1b. Euronuts purposely cite R1b, the tree, to confuse the reader into thinking it is European. They purposely refuse to cite the branch. It is all trickery and lies. Some of us are now catching and exposing them.
When they are cornered they then try to wiggle their way out of it and talk about Eurasian back migration yet there is no evidence of such ancient migration activity. Why??? The North African have a higher frequency of African R1b(V-88) than European R1b(R1b1b2a2). Using THEIR hypothesis of age combined with frequency, It looks like there was an ancient population of R1b*that existed in maybe the Sahel region (Cameroon/Mali). These people migrated out from there. Some lineage died out. Even the modern Egyptians carry more R1b (African) than R1b (European). See table. I am not making this shyte up!!
So, no, Cro-Magnon did not enter North Africa. Try it the other way around; the older lineage entered Southern Europe from North Africa. This is why eye ball anthropology is unreasonable and bizarre, and should be ignored. Eye-ball anthropology is for those with limited reading comprehension. Some North African groups did not get their ‘features’ due to admixture from Europeans but most likely the other way around. Europeans are decedents of North Africans and maybe East Africans. WAIT!!! LOL! That was published already(Sergi, Smith, Angel, Evans etc)!!!
That is why genetics is now changing the way we view evolution and migration of humans out of Africa.
No! Caucasoids did not enter Africa, but the other way around, Caucasoids entered Europe from Africa!!!!!!!!!
quote:It's interesting to have an genetic study confirming what we already knew. The original inhabitant of North Africa were black Africans we can see in the early Tassili rock painting. They were followed by back to Africa migration from people from the Levant/West Asia a long time ago. This movement back to Africa (obviously) postdate the out of Africa migration.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
Conclusion
Our genome-wide dense genotyping data from seven North African populations allow us to address outstanding questions regarding the origin and migration history of North Africa. We propose that present-day ancestry in North Africa is the result of at least three distinct episodes: ancient “back-to-Africa” gene flow
quote:Again, it speaks of the Fezzan isolation, based on founder effect.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
^^^^^^
________________________________________________
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20234393
The above-mentioned studies have thus revealed a dual influence in the genetic make-up of this African people. In this study, we provide new mtDNA and Y chromosome data sets of three unrelated Tuareg groups from three different countries (Niger, Mali and Burkina Faso). At the same time, we try to unravel the questions of their genetic origin, the mutual relationships among their sub-populations as well as possible links to neighbouring populations. The genetic heritage of the Tuareg population is analysed within the context of the West Eurasian versus sub-Saharan contributions to their gene pool.
A total of 48% of the mtDNA haplotypes observed in the Tuareg populations could be ascribed to sub-Saharan haplogroups. Another 39%, however, were of West Eurasian ancestry (non-L types in Table 1), which is a substantial proportion considering the sub-Saharan geographical location. In fact, it has been observed that in typical North African populations there is a gradient of increasing frequency of West Eurasian lineages ranging from around 50–75% in the northernmost locations.34 The Tuareg's neighbours, however, have a markedly smaller proportion of West Eurasian haplotypes (22% in Western Chad Arabs, 8% in Shuwa Arabs from North-eastern Nigeria, 7% in the Buduma from South-eastern Niger and 6% in the Kanuri from North-eastern Nigeria).35 The remaining 13% of Tuareg haplotypes belong to the typical East African haplogroup M1.
Furthermore, we noticed some differences in the distribution of West Eurasian mtDNA haplogroups between Tuareg groups. Most of the West Eurasian haplogroups (30 out of 35 sequences, amounting to 6 out of 9 HVS-I haplotypes) and the East African M1 (11 out of 12 sequences but amounting to only 2 out of 3 HVS-I haplotypes) are observed in the two Tuareg populations – TGos and TGor – located within the bend of the Niger. Tuareg from the Republic of Niger, TTan, have much higher proportion of sub-Saharan (81%) haplogroups than of West Eurasian (16%) and East African (3%) ones. These differences in haplogroup distribution led to statistically significant genetic distances when comparing HVS-I haplotypes between Tuareg from Mali (TGos) with those from the Republic of Niger (TTan) (FST=0.048; unadjusted P-value=0.009), as well as Tuareg from Burkina Faso (TGor) with those from the Republic of Niger (TTan) (FST=0.064; unadjusted P-value=0.000), whereas Tuareg from Mali (TGos) and from Burkina Faso (TGor) are not statistically different (FST=0.012; unadjusted P-value=0.234). Similarly, analysis of MDS based on FST distances and using a large database of West Eurasian and African mtDNA sequences has shown a very good separation of the sub-Saharan and West Eurasian-North African gene pools (Figure 2). Only some East African populations are closer to the West Eurasian samples, respectively, to the North African populations analysed here. This picture is a good representation of FST values as the normalized raw stress is very low (0.01165). However, the analysed Tuareg populations are divided between two gene pools: like the sample from Libya,5 the groups located within the bend of Niger (TGor and TGos) fall into the West Eurasian gene pool, whereas the Tuareg from the Republic of Niger (TTan) and the Tuareg sample from the Watson's data set3, 4 are permeated by the sub-Saharan mtDNA gene pool.
The West Eurasian component observed in the Tuareg is highly interesting. A major proportion (94%) could be allocated to haplogroups H1, H3 and V, West Eurasian lineages of Iberian origin that spread to Europe7, 10, 17, 26, 29, 36 and most probably North Africa30, 31 with the improvement of the climatic conditions after the retreat of the ice sheets 15000–13000 years ago. The interpolation maps of these lineages across North Africa and Europe (Supplementary Material SM5) clearly place the Tuareg population in the path of the southern African edge of post-Last Glacial Maximum expansions. The H1 haplogroup (Supplementary Material SM5A and SM5B, with and without the outlier Norway, respectively) is as frequent in our southern Tuareg groups as in Libya and the centre of the dispersion within the Iberian Peninsula. The H3 haplogroup is almost vestigial in Tuareg (Supplementary Material SM5C), having the highest observed frequencies outside of Iberia in Algeria and Tunisia. Again for haplogroup V, Tuareg present frequencies as high as in the Basque country (Supplementary Material SM5D)
quote:
A complete mandible of Homo erectus was discovered at the Thomas I quarry in Casablanca by a French-Moroccan team co-led by Jean-Paul Raynal, CNRS senior researcher at the PACEA(1) aboratory (CNRS/Université Bordeaux 1/ Ministry of Culture and Communication). This mandible is the oldest human fossil uncovered from scientific excavations in Morocco. The discovery will help better define northern Africa's possible role in first populating southern Europe.
A Homo erectus half-jaw had already been found at the Thomas I quarry in 1969, but it was a chance discovery and therefore with no archeological context.
This is not the case for the fossil discovered May 15, 2008, whose characteristics are very similar to those of the half-jaw found in 1969. The morphology of these remains is different from the three mandibles found at the Tighenif site in Algeria that were used, in 1963, to define the North African variety of Homo erectus, known as Homo mauritanicus, dated to 700,000 B.C.
The mandible from the Thomas I quarry was found in a layer below one where the team has previously found four human teeth (three premolars and one incisor) from Homo erectus, one of which was dated to 500,000 B.C. The human remains were grouped with carved stone tools characteristic of the Acheulian(2) civilization and numerous animal remains (baboons, gazelles, equines, bears, rhinoceroses, and elephants), as well as large numbers of small mammals, which point to a slightly older time frame. Several dating methods are being used to refine the chronology.
The Thomas I quarry in Casablanca confirms its role as one of the most important prehistoric sites for understanding the early population of northwest Africa. The excavations that CNRS and the Institut National des Sciences de l’Archéologie et du Patrimoine du Maroc have led there since 1988 are part of a French-Moroccan collaboration. They have been jointly financed by the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs(3), the Department of Human Evolution at the Max Plank Institute in Leipzig (Germany), INSAP(4)(Morocco) and the Aquitaine region.
quote:Who is "we". And it wasn't covered already. All you do it post the same articles over and over again. You have posted this same thing at least 5 times. With lacking sufficient interpretation.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
we already covered Libyan Tuaregs look at the main Genomic Ancestry article at the top of the thread
quote:Each time it was posted people including you had the opprtunity comment and did. That's why it has been covered already.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
quote:Who is "we". And it wasn't covered already. All you do it post the same articles over and over again. You have posted this same thing at least 5 times. With lacking sufficient interpretation.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
[qb] we already covered Libyan Tuaregs look at the main Genomic Ancestry article at the top of the thread
quote:Many Copts are a shade of brown and looked mixed.
Originally posted by xyyman:
[QB] Since you don't get it, let me break it down for you.
Identification/Population Affinity can be determined by several genetic methods.
(Keep in mind in the old days there were other methods – which are still valid. Cranoimetrically, dentition, limb proportion etc)
Genetically, there are three primary methods.
1. Lineage ie Y-DNA, Mt-DNA
2. STR – Tells what geographic region of the world the individual is from.
3. SNP – still being formalized. But criss-crosses geographic boundaries.
1. Lineage is still the most reliable. Why? Most people still live where their ancestors have lived for thousands of years.
quote:Lioness, show info on the basal clade Hg H and it's frequencies. And a summation of the alleles.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:Each time it was posted people including you had the opprtunity comment and did. That's why it has been covered already.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
quote:Who is "we". And it wasn't covered already. All you do it post the same articles over and over again. You have posted this same thing at least 5 times. With lacking sufficient interpretation.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
[qb] we already covered Libyan Tuaregs look at the main Genomic Ancestry article at the top of the thread
I posted Libyan Tuareg again it for xxxyman because he wasn't in those threads commenting on it
A lot of the details in this Genomic Ancestry article have not been discussed as much and I posted a lot more of it.
quote:
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
[QUOTE]ry of Cultural Affairs.
Dental Evidence from the Aterian Human Populations of Morocco
http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~bioanth/tanya_smith/pdf/Hublin_et_al_2012.pdf
quote:I covered (2) that I said "or intermediate"
Originally posted by xyyman:
[QB] Tsk! Tsk Tsk! Are you listening to yourself?
Quote: "Many Copts are a shade of BROWN and LOOKED mixed". Ha! Ha!
Still don't get how nature/evolution works? I assumed your crew had a higher level of education maybe I am mistaken.
I will make it simply. How a person LOOK could be a result of (1) admixture or (2) they evolved to look that way. That is their natural look.
quote:It gets more surprising,
Originally posted by xyyman:
Interesting paper....this is the only scenaro that makes geographic sense. I always contend that the forest belt was primarily inhabited by Biaka type peoples. Newer Africans eg E1b1a are recent arrivals from the North. Wasn't it Gatto et al who showed the so-called Bantu type occupied the Green Sahara along with the Berber type.
Quote: "However, the
extant geographical conditions present a biased picture of
the situation before and during the last out-of-Africa
movement. Much emphasis has been placed on Sub-Saharan
populations, who live in areas that are often regarded to be
where non-African modern humans originated. In fact,
some of the extant sub-Saharan populations might be displaced
populations whose hunter-gatherer ancestors lived
further north."
quote:
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
[QUOTE]ry of Cultural Affairs.
Dental Evidence from the Aterian Human Populations of Morocco
http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~bioanth/tanya_smith/pdf/Hublin_et_al_2012.pdf
quote:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1040618212031813
The Aterian is a frequently cited manifestation of the Middle Stone Age (MSA) of North Africa, yet its character and meaning have remained largely opaque, as attention has focused almost exclusively on the typology of ‘tanged’, or ‘pedunculated’, lithics. Observations of technological similarities between the Aterian and other regional technocomplexes suggest that the Aterian should be considered within the wider context of the North African MSA and not as an isolated phenomenon. This paper critically reviews the meaning and history of research of the Aterian. This highlights a number of serious issues with definitions and interpretations of this technocomplex, ranging from a lack of definitional consensus to problems with the common view of the Aterian as a ‘desert adaptation’. Following this review, the paper presents the results of a quantitative study of six North African MSA assemblages (Aterian, Nubian Complex and ‘MSA’). Correspondence and Principal Components Analyses are applied, which suggest that the patterns of similarity and difference demonstrated do not simplistically correlate with traditional divisions between named industries. These similarity patterns are instead structured geographically and it is suggested that they reflect a population differentiation that cannot be explained by isolation and distance alone. Particular results include the apparent uniqueness of Haua Fteah compared to all the other assemblages and the observation that the Aterian in northeast Africa is more similar to the Nubian in that region than to the Aterian in the Maghreb. The study demonstrates the existence of population structure in the North African MSA, which has important implications for the evolutionary dynamics of modern human dispersals.
quote:Lioness,(since you have covered it) show info on the basal clade Hg H and it's frequencies. And a summation of the alleles.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:I covered (2) that I said "or intermediate"
Originally posted by xyyman:
[QB] Tsk! Tsk Tsk! Are you listening to yourself?
Quote: "Many Copts are a shade of BROWN and LOOKED mixed". Ha! Ha!
Still don't get how nature/evolution works? I assumed your crew had a higher level of education maybe I am mistaken.
I will make it simply. How a person LOOK could be a result of (1) admixture or (2) they evolved to look that way. That is their natural look.
quote:http://www.egyptsearch.com/forums/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic;f=8;t=007697;p=1#000000
Originally posted by Amun-Ra The Ultimate:
This show the peopling of the Sahara during the Holocene (green Sahara) thus before the back to Africa movement of west asians population.
Is is from this study:
http://www.pnas.org/content/108/2/458.full.pdf
The Barbed Points (aqualithic) and Ounanian culture are both ancient indigenous African culture. According to the study, the Aqualithic African culture spread following the expansion of aquatic resources in the Holocene which made the Sahara attractive to populations with existing fishing and riverine hunting skills. The Ounanian culture (Niger-congo speakers) from North West Africa would have spread southward following big land animals with their bow and arrow hunting skills.
quote:Thank you. I actually have taken the link to the full document from your thread. I just took out the map and posted it here because it was very interesting.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
quote:http://www.egyptsearch.com/forums/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic;f=8;t=007697;p=1#000000
Originally posted by Amun-Ra The Ultimate:
This show the peopling of the Sahara during the Holocene (green Sahara) thus before the back to Africa movement of west asians population.
Is is from this study:
http://www.pnas.org/content/108/2/458.full.pdf
The Barbed Points (aqualithic) and Ounanian culture are both ancient indigenous African culture. According to the study, the Aqualithic African culture spread following the expansion of aquatic resources in the Holocene which made the Sahara attractive to populations with existing fishing and riverine hunting skills. The Ounanian culture (Niger-congo speakers) from North West Africa would have spread southward following big land animals with their bow and arrow hunting skills.
quote:Then the studies Holocene period back-to-Africa conclusions stand in particular to coastal parts of North Africa
Originally posted by zarahan- aka Enrique Cardova:
![]()
quote:A chicken wrote this article I tell you a CHICKEN!!!
Originally posted by the lioness,:
PLOS Genetics 2012
Genomic Ancestry of North Africans Supports Back-to-Africa Migrations
Brenna M. Henn
quote:So, non-black African population in North Africa comes from migrants outside Africa (postdating the Out of Africa migration movement).
In summary, although paleoanthropological evidence has established the ancient presence of anatomically modern humans in northern Africa prior to 60,000 ya [edit:indigenous black Africans], the simplest interpretation of our results is that the majority of ancestry in modern North Africans derives from populations outside of Africa , through at least two episodes of increased gene flow during the past 40,000 years [Figure 1, Figure 2, Figure 3].
quote:Obviously they have hand picked non-black African North African population living close to the coast and they also ignored black African population much close to those population to compare their DNA with. That created a exaggerated distance between the North African population sampled and black African population in general. Sampled "coastal" North African populations are more likely to share DNA (thus ancestry) with black African population close to them than further away from them.
Conclusion
Our genome-wide dense genotyping data from seven North African populations allow us to address outstanding questions regarding the origin and migration history of North Africa. We propose that present-day [edit: non-black African] ancestry in North Africa is the result of at least three distinct episodes: ancient “back-to-Africa” gene flow prior to the Holocene, more recent gene flow from the Near East resulting in a longitudinal gradient, and limited but very recent migrations from sub-Saharan Africa. Population structure in North Africa is particularly complex, and future disease or phenotypic studies should carefully account for local demographic history.
quote:Raw results comes from sampling values obviously (the SNP alleles values). How can you say sampling got no impact of the raw results?
Originally posted by Swenet:
I cringe when I read some of the critiques of Henn et al 2012. What the hell does sampling have to do with the raw results?
quote:That's ridiculous. Some probable Ks (population) have separated from other Africans in West Africa and Kenya (their used samples for the study) to stay (or settle) in North Africa and their DNA was excluded from the study.
Aside of the fact that its patently false that no near Sahara folks have been sampled, there are only so many Ks in Africa, so throwing in more near Saharan populations will only result in more populations along a cline of the already identified Ks, as demonstrated by the Ks of the used near Saharan Fulani, Hausa and Bulala samples.
quote:As usual, you got it all jacked up. 'Ks' aren't populations.
Raw results comes from sampling values obviously (the SNP alleles values).[quote]
Now you're just talking out of your neck as always. SNPs aren't short tandem repeats, that they would comprise of ''values''. What exactly is your point? Of course raw results come from samples, but how exactly would inclusion of more populations affect the results?
[quote]That's ridiculous. Some probable Ks (population)
quote:And that would affect the results in a major way, that you'd describe it as a drawback, how?
have separated from other Africans in West Africa and Kenya (their used samples for the study) to stay (or settle) in North Africa and their DNA was excluded from the study.
quote:All the more evidence that you don't know how studies work or what a hypothesis is. The goal of the paper wasn't to map the affinities of African populations in general.
What you do is like making conclusion about the ancestry of Finnish people (North African indigenous black population in our example) by using sample from Basque people (in eastern Europe) because they are all Europeans after all.
quote:I find those studies interesting but you did a good job avoiding all my main points and blowing some air. For a guy who says sampling got no impact of the raw results, I would take it with a grain of salt. (Ks are indeed "postulated ancestral populations" btw).
Originally posted by Swenet:
quote:As usual, you got it all jacked up. 'Ks' aren't populations.
Raw results comes from sampling values obviously (the SNP alleles values).[quote]
Now you're just talking out of your neck as always. SNPs aren't short tandem repeats, that they would comprise of ''values''. What exactly is your point? Of course raw results come from samples, but how exactly would inclusion of more populations affect the results?
[quote]That's ridiculous. Some probable Ks (population)
quote:And that would affect the results in a major way, that you'd describe it as a drawback, how?
have separated from other Africans in West Africa and Kenya (their used samples for the study) to stay (or settle) in North Africa and their DNA was excluded from the study.
quote:All the more evidence that you don't know how studies work or what a hypothesis is. The goal of the paper wasn't to map the affinities of African populations in general.
What you do is like making conclusion about the ancestry of Finnish people (North African indigenous black population in our example) by using sample from Basque people (in eastern Europe) because they are all Europeans after all.
quote:That's what I said earlier on this thread. But the study goes beyond that and make some reference (conclusion) about the relationship between current coastal North Africans and black Africans (called Sub-Saharan Africans in the study, a bit of a misnomer). Like if every "sub-saharan Africans" were Nigerians or Kenyans and had similar SNP values to them. For a population study it's strange that the study avoid an important part of the population which are part of the genetic make up of the region.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
Amun-Ra they found some early back migrations in North Africa.
That doesn't mean every North African. You can't dismiss the whole study because it doesn't apply to all North Africans. It applies to the ones they are talking about
quote:That doesn't mean in part of North Africa there was not back-to-Africa gene flow more than 12,000 years ago.
Originally posted by zarahan- aka Enrique Cardova:
[QB] Indeed. The sampling is primarily coastal, and thus
will skew results. Its like those studies that sample
the far north of Egypt and use the data as "representative"
of Egypt as a whole. Its a game some researchers run time
and time again. It's a problem specifically noted in the literature
re "North Africa."
quote:Who are the ones they are "talking about"?
Originally posted by the lioness,:
Amun-Ra they found some early back migrations in North Africa.
That doesn't mean every North African. You can't dismiss the whole study because it doesn't apply to all North Africans. It applies to the ones they are talking about
quote:
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
quote:Who are the ones they are "talking about"?
Originally posted by the lioness,:
Amun-Ra they found some early back migrations in North Africa.
That doesn't mean every North African. You can't dismiss the whole study because it doesn't apply to all North Africans. It applies to the ones they are talking about
quote:Yeah, like equating a SNP with a STR, or referring to Ks as ''populations''.
Originally posted by Amun-Ra The Ultimate:
and blowing some air.
quote:My reference to the low impact of sampling was obviously meant as in sampling more populations than they already have. But taking stuff horribly out of context is what you're known for here on ES.
For a guy who says sampling got no impact of the raw results
quote:You have absolutely no idea what you're talking about. Its literally oozing from everything you say. And I'm not just talking this thread.
(Ks are indeed "postulated ancestral populations" btw).
quote:And that they're referring to the under-sampled Saharan proper populations when they say that, is evidenced by what?
that's why it's surprising to see the study make reference to them (for example, saying "North African populations are distinct from sub-Saharan Africans").
quote:You're too much of an ignoramus to have noticed that both the Fulani, Hausa and Bulala samples qualify for what you're stating above. The very populations you go at lengths to say weren't sampled, are actually sampled, as I've tried to point out earlier (but, to no avail).
For example, it's possible that some Berber (or other coastal North African groups) share more affinities (SNP alleles values) with black Africans groups close to them geographically but much less with Nigerians or Kenyans.
quote:LMAO at ''SNP alleles values'', when the 'S' in SNP means SINGLE. Does ''single'' strike you as compatible with values? You're a walking caricature, not to be taken serious, not even by the Euronut trolls.
share more affinities (SNP alleles values)
quote:Again, you simply don't understand what you're discussing. The Fulani, Hausa and Bulala already qualify for what you're stating above.
Also the North African population include indigenous black African population (usually in the south of those countries)
quote:You say I'm wrong but you give no explanation why. We suppose to believe you without explanations? Let's exchange information not hot air.
Originally posted by Swenet:
quote:Yeah, like equating a SNP with a STR, or referring to Ks as ''populations''.
Originally posted by Amun-Ra The Ultimate:
and blowing some air.
quote:My reference to the low impact of sampling was obviously meant as in sampling more populations than they already have. But taking stuff horribly out of context is what you're known for here on ES.
For a guy who says sampling got no impact of the raw results
quote:You have absolutely no idea what you're talking about. Its literally oozing from everything you say. And I'm not just talking this thread.
(Ks are indeed "postulated ancestral populations" btw).
quote:And that they're referring to the under-sampled Saharan proper populations when they say that, is evidenced by what?
that's why it's surprising to see the study make reference to them (for example, saying "North African populations are distinct from sub-Saharan Africans").
quote:You're too much of an ignoramus to have noticed that both the Fulani, Hausa and Bulala samples qualify for what you're stating above. The very populations you go at lengths to say weren't sampled, are actually sampled, as I've tried to point out earlier (but, to no avail).
For example, it's possible that some Berber (or other coastal North African groups) share more affinities (SNP alleles values) with black Africans groups close to them geographically but much less with Nigerians or Kenyans.
quote:LMAO at ''SNP alleles values'', when the 'S' in SNP means SINGLE. Does ''single'' strike you as compatible with values? You're a walking caricature, not to be taken serious, not even by the Euronut trolls.
share more affinities (SNP alleles values)
quote:Again, you simply don't understand what you're discussing. The Fulani, Hausa and Bulala already qualify for what you're stating above.
Also the North African population include indigenous black African population (usually in the south of those countries)
quote:so were the first white people Atlas Berbers?
Originally posted by xyyman:
Remember STR proves Berbers are indigenous Africans.
Selective SNPs is the lastest tool used to carve out North Africa from Africa.[/QB]
quote:It isn't strange. They are doing it on purpose to fool those who don't know better into believing they aren't biased..... But common sense says that if you can see they skipped over a big chunk of the population and I can see it and we aren't scientists, then of course they could see it as well. In their minds North Africa is supposed to be for white folks and any blacks there came as slaves recently. This the same bull crap they have been saying for the last 100 years or more and we know why.
Originally posted by Amun-Ra The Ultimate:
quote:That's what I said earlier on this thread. But the study goes beyond that and make some reference (conclusion) about the relationship between current coastal North Africans and black Africans (called Sub-Saharan Africans in the study, a bit of a misnomer). Like if every "sub-saharan Africans" were Nigerians or Kenyans and had similar SNP values to them. For a population study it's strange that the study avoid an important part of the population which are part of the genetic make up of the region.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
Amun-Ra they found some early back migrations in North Africa.
That doesn't mean every North African. You can't dismiss the whole study because it doesn't apply to all North Africans. It applies to the ones they are talking about
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:so were the first white people Atlas Berbers? [/QB]
Originally posted by xyyman:
Remember STR proves Berbers are indigenous Africans.
Selective SNPs is the lastest tool used to carve out North Africa from Africa.![]()
quote:I didn't twist your word I asked in question form
Originally posted by xyyman:
[QB] Why are twisting my words. I am not annoyed just amused.
I said LIGHT skin is indigenous to parts of Africa.
quote:1)
Originally posted by Amun-Ra The Ultimate:
1) Nigerian and Kenyan populations are not the same than black African in North Africa. They have different SNP DNA values. They are more likely to have interacted other people in North Africa since they are geographically closer and are more likely to share DNA with them (among other thing).
2)Even if SNPs are *single* nucleotide polymorphism they still have different alleles values that's why we're making the study. The values correspond to the different nucleotides it could have (A, T, C or G). Obviously, there must be at least 2 different alleles values in a population to be considered an SNP.
At a single site on the DNA strand people (a population) can have many different allele values depending on their ancestry (or mutation). In fact each person can even have 2 values at the same site (one in each chromosome passed from the mother and the father).
This is from Wiki:
For example, two sequenced DNA fragments from different individuals, AAGCCTA to AAGCTTA, contain a difference in a single nucleotide. In this case we say that there are two alleles.
That's pretty basic, it's funny you don't understand that. You're the one making a fool out of yourself you will pardon me to say.
3) If you don't consider Ks "postulated ancestral populations" then I want to know what do you consider the Ks are? [/qb]
quote:Great way to start off the New Year lioness. How 'bout a better question for the authors of the article.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:I didn't twist your word I asked in question form
Originally posted by xyyman:
[QB] Why are twisting my words. I am not annoyed just amused.
I said LIGHT skin is indigenous to parts of Africa.
"were the first white people Atlas Berbers? "
I think it's an interesting concept. I don't care what the politics are
Also why is light skin indigenous to those parts and how does it relate to the Egyptians?
I leave it to you to answer these questions.
-unless you're scared
quote:Laughable is an understatement. More like pitiful. Most Tunisians are pure what? Do they know what most Tunisian Berbers look like? Like night and day.
Originally posted by xyyman:
After re-reading this paper I have to admit this is much to do about nothing. It is all extreme speculation. Almost laughable. In fact the title is mis-leading and written out of context of what is documented in the paper. I guess it was titled like most things these days with the intent to create controversy and draw attention. The conclusion section says it all. The authors don’t really believe this back-migration nonsense. See highlighted sections.
Note their non-African reference population- Basque and Qatari.
I needed to read this several times to get it. Some of you may understand. But let me break it down.
Please read and understand before replying. Sage, Swenet..maybe Lioness..others give me some feedback.
Key things that jump out at you.
1. Tunisian Berbers are 100% pure indigenous. Minor “recent” near east input in other groups.
2. They used an “outlier” reference populations. Basque that are known to have Berber admixture. And Qatari which is on the other side of the Arabian peninsular.
3. The admit the result is inconclusive. They recommend that ….STR!!!…studies be performed to confirm their speculation. STRs were posted by me already.
4. They are suggesting that the Qatari came from a similar but DIFFERENT source population.
5. They are suggesting that the Berber ancestral population left Africa spent ~1Kyrs in Arabia returned to Africa for another 38-40,000yrs!!! That is like someone spending first 25yrs of their life in one city, left and spent 1 yr in the neighboring city, then returned to their home town and spent another 40yrs. Does that make them non-African?
6. They confirmed there were NO migration from the Middle-East since then ie that initial OOA, short stay and back.
7. They confirmed a decreasing West to East gradient of genetic material. Nothing new here.
8. They confirmed the initial ancestral source MAY be along the Nile. No Shyte!! Can anyone say E1b1b or Sergi.
9. They admit other Africans were in the North Africa since 65,000ya. As posted by Troll Patrol, Hublin et al. Yet they BS!! LOL!
[i]
Genomic Ancestry of North Africans Supports
Back-to-Africa Migrations
Brenna M. Henn1
quote:.
Originally posted by dana marniche:
quote:Great way to start off the New Year lioness. How 'bout a better question for the authors of the article.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:I didn't twist your word I asked in question form
Originally posted by xyyman:
[QB] Why are twisting my words. I am not annoyed just amused.
I said LIGHT skin is indigenous to parts of Africa.
"were the first white people Atlas Berbers? "
I think it's an interesting concept. I don't care what the politics are
Also why is light skin indigenous to those parts and how does it relate to the Egyptians?
I leave it to you to answer these questions.
-unless you're scared
What happened to the majority of slaves brought into Morocco which as is well known were FROM BRITAIN before the 17th century and the 100,000s of Andalusians that settled in the riff and other parts of north Africa.
Who were these "Moors" mentioned below in the mountains north of the Atlas, and where did they come from. Hint - this has already been answered for you elsewhere.![]()
“ They [i.e. the Syrian Arabs] decided on their own initiative to hasten to the sea, crossing the territory of the Moors to attack Tangiers with the Swords. But the army of the Moors, realizing this immediately burst forth FROM THE MOUNTAINS to the battle naked girded only with loin-cloths covering their shameful parts. When they joined with each other in battle at the Nava river, the Egyptian horses immediately recoiled in flight, as the Moors on their beautiful horses revealed their repulsive colour and gnashed their white teeth. Despairing, they launched another attack, the Arab cavalry again instantly recoiled due to the colour of the Moors’skin.”
“…the Latin Chronicle of 754 is the earliest record of the Arab defeat by the Syrian commander Kulthum b. Iyad al Qushayri. “ p. 71 Ibn Garcia’s Shu’ubiyya Letter: Ethnic and Theological Tensions in Medieval by Goran Larsson 2003 published by Brill.
Why do these genetic studies never mention the Scythic (Alanic) settlement of North Africa as well. Yes, of course there was a back migration of Europeans to Africa. No need to confuse that with the early Berbers though.![]()
“The population of Vandal North Africa was made up of Vandals, Romans and Moors..... Nevertheless the description of Vandals in the wider of two senses still included some Alans and others conscious of their own non-Vandal origins. The king's title remained 'King of the Vandals and Alans'." From the Book Regna and Gentes The Relationship between Late Antique and Early Medieval History, by H. Goetz,: p. 68 (2003)
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
quote:^Essentially the same as Henn et al 2012's solid reasoning for why the predominant Maghrebi component detected in Berber populations doesn't predate the Holocene (they have alleles that are unique to them and bespeak divergence times from Eurasians that are >10kya):
Sensitive detection of chromosomal segments of distinct ancestry in admixed populations.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19543370
Although care should be taken in interpreting these values, they
indicate that the ancestral segments of Mozabite are significantly
diverged from extant Bantu-African and European related populations.
... the Mozabite are not perfectly modeled as a linear combination
of European and African ancestry.
A scenario where North African Maghrebi ancestry is the result of in situ population absorbing Near Eastern migrants would likely need the following premises to explain the results here and elsewhere: a) an Out-of-Africa migration [concurrent with bottleneck] occurs 50–60 Kya, geographically dividing North African and Near Eastern populations; b) North Africans experience a separate bottleneck; c) gene flow maintains similarity between the two geographically distinct populations; d) the gene flow then ceases or slows roughly between 12–40 Kya in order to allow sufficiently distinct allele frequency distributions to form.
--Henn et al 2012
^Berber populations have Eurasian ancestry that is clearly unaccounted for by the confused ''historic female slave trade'' fairytale pushers, who are motivated only by their hidden agenda to not have to admit that the Eurasian genetic component in Berbers--which is embodied by what's left over when historic Arab and historic European and slightly older West African ancestry is subtracted--can be traced back to Ibero-maurusians.
The afronut bogus ''female Eurasian slaves'' excuse, when applied to what's CLEARLY prehistoric, non-recent ancestry in Berbers, needs to be called out for the crackpot emotion-driven quackery that it is. As pointed out by Price et al 2009, Henn et al 2012, Achilli et al 2005, Kefi et al 2005, Frigi et al 2011, and many others, Berbers are NOT a blend of a Sub-Saharan component and a recent (common era), Eurasian component.
quote:That's the most stupid post I ever read. It's like you're not even answering my points just inventing your own points to counter mixing it with being a pompous ass. Bottom line is that population in Nigeria and Kenya are not the same as the indigenous black Africans in North Africa. Each SNP can have multiple alleles (2 minimum) hence the word polymorphism. So it can be plural as in the Wiki definition (and everywhere else). And each Ks are indeed postulated ancestral population.
Originally posted by Swenet:
quote:1)
Originally posted by Amun-Ra The Ultimate:
1) Nigerian and Kenyan populations are not the same than black African in North Africa. They have different SNP DNA values. They are more likely to have interacted other people in North Africa since they are geographically closer and are more likely to share DNA with them (among other thing).
2)Even if SNPs are *single* nucleotide polymorphism they still have different alleles values that's why we're making the study. The values correspond to the different nucleotides it could have (A, T, C or G). Obviously, there must be at least 2 different alleles values in a population to be considered an SNP.
At a single site on the DNA strand people (a population) can have many different allele values depending on their ancestry (or mutation). In fact each person can even have 2 values at the same site (one in each chromosome passed from the mother and the father).
This is from Wiki:
For example, two sequenced DNA fragments from different individuals, AAGCCTA to AAGCTTA, contain a difference in a single nucleotide. In this case we say that there are two alleles.
That's pretty basic, it's funny you don't understand that. You're the one making a fool out of yourself you will pardon me to say.
3) If you don't consider Ks "postulated ancestral populations" then I want to know what do you consider the Ks are?
Either you're too dumb to realize that Bulala, Hausa and Fulani histories are historically culturally and genetically intertwined with Saharan populations, or you're just trying to save face. Neither of these populations originate at the latitude of Nigeria, and are, in fact, the very populations you falsely claim are undersampled in Henn et al 2012. The supposed drawbacks you attribute to Henn et all 2012 are figments of your own imagination.
2)
Nucleotides aren't values and have nothing to do with values. You're just a troll on repeat, who just now realizes that SNPs aren't STRs, after I corrected you. Nucleotides aren't groups of nucleotides, but rather, the constituents of STRs, and, as such, they, nor SNPs, can be assigned amounts/values. The longer you keep on dragging this retarded argument on, the more you're exposing your ignorance for everyone to see.
3)
Ks are merely brackets to which distinct pieces of ancestry can be assigned membership, on the basis of affinity. The more brackets scientists introduce to their analysis, the more room there will be for discrimination (hence, why more colors appear). This has nothing to do with populations, whatsoever. However, ancestral populations can be inferred from Ks, but Ks are not ancestral populations in and of themselves. That's just retarded. [/QB]
quote:According to the study the Berbers sampled are not pure indigenous. They are the products of a back-to-Africa migration movement like any other non-black people in North Africa, albeit very long ago.
Originally posted by xyyman:
Key things that jump out at you.
1. Tunisian Berbers are 100% pure indigenous. Minor “recent” near east input in other groups.
2. They used an “outlier” reference populations. Basque that are known to have Berber admixture. And Qatari which is on the other side of the Arabian peninsular.
quote:Their study and interpretations are very speculative indeed.
3. The admit the result is inconclusive. They recommend that ….STR!!!…studies be performed to confirm their speculation. STRs were posted by me already.
quote:It's strange that they've chosen a population so far removed from other coastal North Africans to represent west asia/middle east. It's obvious their population have diverged a long time ago after the ooa migration movement (possibly living outside Africa, in Arabia, Levant,etc, as geographically distant populations from Qatar with limited interactions with them for a while).
4. They are suggesting that the Qatari came from a similar but DIFFERENT source population.
quote:Their DNA could have diverged in Arabia and still stay there for a while, migrating just a bit further west and north of Qatar into Saudi Arabia, for example.
5. They are suggesting that the Berber ancestral population left Africa spent ~1Kyrs in Arabia returned to Africa for another 38-40,000yrs!!! That is like someone spending first 25yrs of their life in one city, left and spent 1 yr in the neighboring city, then returned to their home town and spent another 40yrs. Does that make them non-African?
quote:That's the contrary to what they say. As the title say they indeed support a Back-to-Africa migration from the middle east of coastal North African population taken in their samples. They propose multiple distinct phases instead of steady migration from the middle east.
6. They confirmed there were NO migration from the Middle-East since then ie that initial OOA, short stay and back.
quote:Along the Nile? I'm curious to know where do you see that in their study.
8. They confirmed the initial ancestral source MAY be along the Nile. No Shyte!! Can anyone say E1b1b or Sergi.
quote:Yes, there's a continuous occupation of black Africans in North Africa since the beginning of time. People must remember that the Sahara was green before. So there was no natural obstacles between Africa and North Africa. It's strange those populations where ignored in the study.
9. They admit other Africans were in the North Africa since 65,000ya. As posted by Troll Patrol, Hublin et al. Yet they BS!! LOL!
quote:That's about it, I agree. The rest is speculative interpretation of results (still interesting).
Originally posted by dana marniche:
Here's one part everyone can agree with "the simplest interpretation of our results is that the majority of ancestry in modern North Africans derives from populations outside of Africa"
quote:You weren't one of the three birds, It was Tuk, xxxy and dana
Originally posted by -Just Call Me Jari-:
[QB] LMAO, Please. Copy-N-Pasting Swenet wont do you **** against me.
quote:You know what they say:
Originally posted by Amun-Ra The Ultimate:
That's the most stupid post I ever read.
quote:None of your points have been answered because they're rightly recognized as desperate face saving attempts. You're been shifting your points ever since I started addressing them. You went from calling Ks ''populations'', to calling them ''postulated ancestral populations'' (which, in the sense that literate people use that phrase, isn't contested by anyone). You went from calling SNPs ''values'', to claiming they have at least two alleles (which, outside of the fact that that wasn't what you originally meant, a no-brainer, otherwise they wouldn't be polymorphic). You went from claiming that Saharan or near Sahara populations were under sampled, to repeating like a broken record that Nigerians and Kenyans aren't the same as Saharan populations (which isn't contested by anyone).
Originally posted by Amun-Ra The Ultimate:
It's like you're not even answering my points just inventing your own points to counter mixing it with being a pompous ass.
quote:No, the bottom line is that there were only two populations with long histories in Equatorial Africa in Henn et al 2012. The rest of the populations that were sampled there originated at higher latitudes and only migrated to lower latitudes recently. You're too much of a jackass to admit that your criticisms of Henn et al 2012 are due to your ignorance of how things work in population genetics, mixed with a hard time understanding what it is that you're reading and little to no knowledge about African populations (no one in his right mind would think of Nilo-Saharan and Chadic speaking populations [Hausa, Bulala and Maasai] as having their genesis in the Nigerian & Kenyan area, nor would anyone with sense think of them as devoid of history in/near the Sahara).
Originally posted by Amun-Ra The Ultimate:
Bottom line is that population in Nigeria and Kenya are not the same as the indigenous black Africans in North Africa.
quote:^^ Excellent summary. I had just a vague idea of
Originally posted by The Explorer:
I've said it before, and will say it again, possibly to the dismay of those who are literacy-challenged...
Many of the so-called Eurasian markers that contemporary coastal Maghrebi populations carry do look to have come from female slaves!
That is not to say that such could have been the only source, but a significant one nonetheless.
This mirrors observations I've made known elsewhere:
Then comes into equation, that observation just mentioned in the Cherni et al. piece above, about the African-European asymmetrical lineage among Maghrebi populations. Much of that asymmetrical ancestry very likely comes from institution of historic slavery enterprise involving mostly European females in the Maghreb. Of course, a lot of devout Eurocentrists balk at such a prospect, but it is a fairly reasonable explanation for the aforementioned asymmetric parental pattern, and importantly, it is backed by history.
The skeptic-wisdom is, after all, that European male contribution seems all but negligible in the Maghrebi gene pool, and yet, that the slave enterprise in the Maghreb would have included European males. For one, slave-male genetic exchange with any preexisting local maternal gene pool would have been strongly discouraged by slave-holders, as was the case with many locations that have put in place institutions of slavery, while the Maghrebi male population would have had a freer hand in exchanging genes with enslaved European females. Additionally, Maghrebi enthusiasm for European male slave market would have been relatively modest compared to that for the European female slave counterpart, since the Maghrebi would have then had firsthand access to preexisting slave trade with "western African" polities just geographically beneath them, where a labor pool of more physically-robust males could have been extracted than that from European counterparts.
In an ironic twist, devout Eurocentrists like to portray any so-called "sub-Saharan" African contribution in Maghrebi gene pool as "slave"-mediated, when in fact, it appears to have been the other way around: the asymmetric African male-to-European female ancestry speaks more to a European contribution that was mediated by and large through slavery than the case is for the "sub-Saharan" contribution in coastal Maghrebi gene pool, which Frigi et al. (2010) for example, determined to have been around since prehistoric times.
Now it's time for those crippled by idealism, who merely dismiss anything that does not agree with their personal belief systems, or simply put--anything they can't understand, as some supposed fantasy, to take off their emotional blinders, and consider that these observations rely on several identified factors:
Contemporary Maghreb populations essentially lack the common European-specific NRY markers, in contrast to the often made reference to lopsided southwest European mtDNA input. This is the sort of pattern one would expect of...
1) a situation wherein slavery favoring females results in a net higher gain of female gene flow than male counterparts of the source-population from which slaves were attained. Add to this, accumulative impact of the culture of polygamy permissible in many Muslim societies.
Or alternatively...
2) a situation wherein the male segments of the source population of the emigrant community were effectively exterminated, leaving the female counterparts to become available to the exterminators, who would obviously have to be male in sex orientation.
Or yet...
3)assume some extraordinary scenario wherein emigrants were overwhelmingly females, while the reverse was true for a preexisting group on the destination side of the emigration.
Whatever the scenario may be, the question is, where's the evidence?
Of note: Historic accounts of slavery have already been accounted for, and so, there is little to doubt about its prospect. The other scenarios above, however, will require substantive materialization.
No archaeological proof of mass emigration of Franco-Cantabrian refugees into coastal northwest Africa in the Upper Paleolithic.
No osteological proof of contemporary EpiPaleolithic Maghrebi-types outside of the African continent, particularly the Iberian peninsula, that has been brought to immediate attention.
No unequivocal DNA proof of primary "Eurasian" origin of EpiPaleolithic Maghreb series.
Lineages which are partially suggestive of the preexisting genetic landscape, like say U6 and M1, generally occur in relatively small incidences in contemporary Holocene-derived populations of the Maghreb, from both maternal and paternal standpoints.
quote:
At k = 6 through 8, all North African populations except
for Tunisians have sub-Saharan ancestry, present in most
individuals, though this ancestry varies between 1%–55%.
quote:But see what Tunisian mtDNA sequence analysis says
Our sample of Tunisian Berbers retains the highest
amount of Maghrebi ancestry, without substantial
evidence of admixture with sub-Saharan, European
or Near Eastern populations.
quote:
quote:How did Henn's ~280 K SNP genome comparison
Originally posted by xyyman:
Repeat after me....
lineage!, lineage! lineage!, lineage! lineage!, lineage!
PN2, PN2, PN2, PN2, PN2, PN2, PN2, PN2, PN2
L2*, L1*, L3*, L0*,L2*, L1*, L3*, L0*,L2*, L1*, L3*, L0*
quote:are you refering to Kushites?
Originally posted by alTakruri:
[QB] Having earlier pointed out the impossibility of
Henn's late dates for sub-Sahara African entries
into supra-Saharan Africa as there are text and
art documents preceding 1250 CE Egypt and texts
before 800 CE south Morocco where they appear,
quote:I never mentioned the "extermination" factor which
Originally posted by The Explorer:
Contemporary Maghreb populations essentially lack the common European-specific NRY markers, in contrast to the often made reference to lopsided southwest European mtDNA input. This is the sort of pattern one would expect of...
1) ...
2) a situation wherein the male segments of the source population of the emigrant community were effectively exterminated, leaving the female counterparts to become available to the exterminators, who would obviously have to be male in sex orientation.
Or yet...
3)...
quote:which ethnic groups or cultures are you referring to?
Originally posted by the lioness,:
[QUOTE]Originally posted by alTakruri:
[QB] Having earlier pointed out the impossibility of
Henn's late dates for sub-Sahara African entries
into supra-Saharan Africa as there are text and
art documents preceding 1250 CE Egypt and texts
before 800 CE south Morocco where they appear,
quote:
Originally posted by alTakruri:
quote:I never mentioned the "extermination" factor which
Originally posted by The Explorer:
Contemporary Maghreb populations essentially lack the common European-specific NRY markers, in contrast to the often made reference to lopsided southwest European mtDNA input. This is the sort of pattern one would expect of...
1) ...
2) a situation wherein the male segments of the source population of the emigrant community were effectively exterminated, leaving the female counterparts to become available to the exterminators, who would obviously have to be male in sex orientation.
Or yet...
3)...
may have been shunting off males with no previous
North African maternity.
Knowing the Kikuyu and Maasai conducted death raids
against each other saving alive and taking only younger
females and the lack of nrY hgs expected by South Europe
whole family settlers (unless hidden in E-M78 or whatever)
and rock art of chalk white men with European armaments
but never with women or in family scenes makes one wonder.
Nicky: Gottdamn Libyans welcomed us in, adapted our weapons, stole our wimmens and kicked us out.
Guido: Aw shut your ass up and keep a steppin'! Effin' desert's got plenty hot air without addin' yours.
Nicky: Hey! Where's Stavros? STAVROS...STAVROS...
quote:Why the very ones you are of course.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:which ethnic groups or cultures are you referring to?
Originally posted by alTakruri:
Having earlier pointed out the impossibility of
Henn's late dates for sub-Sahara African entries
into supra-Saharan Africa as there are text and
art documents preceding 1250 CE Egypt and texts
before 800 CE south Morocco where they appear,
quote:From Rock art, tomb paintings, and Fulani clothes
Originally posted by xyyman:
What is the dating on this ....and location ie point of entry?
![]()
quote:European/Eurasian male DNA is reflected in the topic article
Originally posted by zarahan- aka Enrique Cardova:
[QB] Genetic heritage of the Coastal N. African population is due to a long drawn out process rather than recent slave markets, the question becomes..why are European/Eurasian male DNA not reflected?
quote:what articles?
Originally posted by zarahan- aka Enrique Cardova:
Jari's point is the lower prevalence of the male DNA
not its actual existence.
quote:
Originally posted by alTakruri:
quote:From Rock art, tomb paintings, and Fulani clothes
Originally posted by xyyman:
What is the dating on this ....and location ie point of entry?
![]()
also Mission Henri Lhote facsimile fakes qq.v.
Jabbaren in the Tassili (600 miles inland from Tunisia/Libya
Mediterranean coast), dating to c. 2500 BCE per Malika Hachid (link).
She is perhaps 1000 years too early?
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
you brothas got to stop that nonseensical belief that whites are an isloated albino African group.
quote:What about Cucuteni-Trypillian culture?
Originally posted by xyyman:
Remember the first modern European to be civilized, somewhat, were the Myceneans, after the sacking and revolt in Crete.
Geography correlates. Description checks out, but date don't align.
quote:Yes, what about it?
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:What about Cucuteni-Trypillian culture?
Originally posted by xyyman:
Remember the first modern European to be civilized, somewhat, were the Myceneans, after the sacking and revolt in Crete.
Geography correlates. Description checks out, but date don't align.
(c. 4800 to 3000 B.C.)
quote:What's your definition of modern and of civilization?
Originally posted by xyyman:
Remember the first modern European to be civilized, somewhat, were the Myceneans, after the sacking and revolt in Crete.
Geography correlates. Description checks out, but date don't align.
quote:There are some fairly extensive amateur photos
Originally posted by xyyman:
Civilization, to me,
1. Has a means of reliable sustenance ie agriculture.
2. Towns, Arts, Tradesmen, class structure.
3. Maritime fleets, Soldier etc.
600miles into inner Africa is NOT Demic diffusion. That looks more like expedition and exploration. OR!! they are locals.
That is why I am questioning the date and location. 2500BCE would put Europeans on par with AE...which we know is far from the truth.
My knee jerk reaction response would be...FAKE. But the location seems about right. My second reaction is - are we sure they are Europeans. You confirmed that by the apparent clothing.
Next up is date.
Another point of view was ... Saharan view of Death. ie white. But the clothing does not support that view.
quote:Africans have a wide variety of height but as an average I don't think you can support that statement
Originally posted by xyyman:
Also Europeans are no taller than Africans and they are not slender. A few slender TV personalities does not makes them as a group , slender.
quote:On average Africans are shorter than Europeans
Originally posted by zarahan- aka Enrique Cardova:
The statistics lists the entire Dutch nation, but
certain African tribes WITHIN a nation like the
Masai are taller on average than the Dutch or Scandinavians.
The Dutch average of 6 feet is surpassed by the
Masai and other specific East African groups WITHIN
individual nations. Some books list the Tutsi as
the tallest..
"who physically resemble southern Europeans
and Arabs of the Middle East, Africa is the home
both of Pygmies, who inhabit the Congo rain
forest as hunters and gatherers, and of the
tallest people known in the world, the Masai"
-William Hardy McNeill - 1999 -A world history -
Page 472
quote:All populations in North Africa have a long drawn out genetic history. LOL! What we are talking about here is whether or not the genetic information supports the idea that coastal North Africa was primarily populated by NON Africans for many thousands of years as opposed to being primarily populated by black Africans for most of that time with NON African genes only becoming predominant in the last few thousand years.
Originally posted by -Just Call Me Jari-:
You know explorer brings up a good point, that is say me, Al and Swenet are correct in that the Genetic heritage of the Coastal N. African population is due to a long drawn out process rather than recent slave markets, the question becomes..why are European/Eurasian male DNA not reflected? Good question.
quote:
Originally posted by alTakruri:
quote:I never mentioned the "extermination" factor which
Originally posted by The Explorer:
Contemporary Maghreb populations essentially lack the common European-specific NRY markers, in contrast to the often made reference to lopsided southwest European mtDNA input. This is the sort of pattern one would expect of...
1) ...
2) a situation wherein the male segments of the source population of the emigrant community were effectively exterminated, leaving the female counterparts to become available to the exterminators, who would obviously have to be male in sex orientation.
Or yet...
3)...
may have been shunting off males with no previous
North African maternity.
Knowing the Kikuyu and Maasai conducted death raids
against each other saving alive and taking only younger
females and the lack of nrY hgs expected by South Europe
whole family settlers (unless hidden in E-M78 or whatever)
and rock art of chalk white men with European armaments
but never with women or in family scenes makes one wonder.
Nicky: Gottdamn Libyans welcomed us in, adapted our weapons, stole our wimmens and kicked us out.
Guido: Aw shut your ass up and keep a steppin'! Effin' desert's got plenty hot air without addin' yours.
Nicky: Hey! Where's Stavros? STAVROS...STAVROS...
quote:Both you and Zaharan have a point. On the other hand, its also true that slender figures appear in prehistoric European art. ~5k is not an inconsistent date for potentially new Eurasian entries of actual whites in NA, who may or may not have left traces in contemporary Africans.
Originally posted by xyyman:
Just a FYI to all. Europeans are cold adapted. They are NOT
"tall and slender figures painted ".
Also Europeans are no taller than Africans and they are not slender. A few slender TV personalities does not makes them as a group , slender.
This is one of the most popular fallacy.
Anyone who been around white people know they are huge. Big thighs, huge calves, short extremeties, huge trunk, big arms and forearm, broad flat asses, hairy...so please
BTW - this is a scientific fact!!!!
quote:If you went back to Carthage at it's height it had a half a million people and were primarily Phoenicians from what is now Lebanon
Originally posted by Doug M:
Also keep in mind that Tunisia is the location of ancient Carthage which was completely destroyed and repopulated by Romans. So you cannot expect to find an accurate reflection of ancient population structure among modern populations when the ancient populations were relatively small and easily affected by outside influence. [/QB]
quote:But today's Lebanese are mostly Turk immigrants from the Caucasus region being Armenia, Azerbaijan, Tajikistan, etc. They came durning the reign of the Seljuks and Ottoman Turks who settled millions of their brethrens over the course of 400 years in what is today called middle east region including Lebanon.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:If you went back to Carthage at it's height it had a half a million people and were primarily Phoenicians from what is now Lebanon [/QB]
Originally posted by Doug M:
Also keep in mind that Tunisia is the location of ancient Carthage which was completely destroyed and repopulated by Romans. So you cannot expect to find an accurate reflection of ancient population structure among modern populations when the ancient populations were relatively small and easily affected by outside influence.
quote:The figures on the above rock art could be stylized so that their proportions were not realistic.
Originally posted by xyyman:
Just a FYI to all. Europeans are cold adapted. They are NOT
"tall and slender figures painted ".
Also Europeans are no taller than Africans and they are not slender. A few slender TV personalities does not makes them as a group , slender.
This is one of the most popular fallacy.
Anyone who been around white people know they are huge. Big thighs, huge calves, short extremeties, huge trunk, big arms and forearm, broad flat asses, hairy...so please
BTW - this is a scientific fact!!!!
quote:I believe the date is probably 2500 years too early.
Originally posted by alTakruri:
quote:From Rock art, tomb paintings, and Fulani clothes
Originally posted by xyyman:
What is the dating on this ....and location ie point of entry?
![]()
also Mission Henri Lhote facsimile fakes qq.v.
Jabbaren in the Tassili (600 miles inland from Tunisia/Libya
Mediterranean coast), dating to c. 2500 BCE per Malika Hachid (link).
She is perhaps 1000 years too early?
quote:?? the phuck you talking about ??
Originally posted by the lioness,:
Looking at the following Canaanite
Phoenician descended Libyans
quote:
Originally posted by Tukuler:
The Tin Anneuin school paintings have this theme:
* tall and slender figures painted in white
* always in profile
* often white feathers in hair
* usually wearing a neck clasped ocher colored cape
* often handling throw-stick baton, spear, or a small bow
* short sword with scabbard not at the waist but the neck and chest
* ornaments represented by ocher band around the forehead and ankles
* almost always seen standing or walking single file
* never in any other action
* never involved in everyday life
* Women never portrayed.
quote:I retract "Canaanite Phoenician descended Libyans"
Originally posted by alTakruri,:
![]()
quote:lioness: The figures on the above rock art could be stylized so that their proportions were not realistic.
Originally posted by xyyman:
Just a FYI to all. Europeans are cold adapted. They are NOT
"tall and slender figures painted ".
Also Europeans are no taller than Africans and they are not slender. A few slender TV personalities does not makes them as a group , slender.
This is one of the most popular fallacy.
Anyone who been around white people know they are huge. Big thighs, huge calves, short extremeties, huge trunk, big arms and forearm, broad flat asses, hairy...so please
BTW - this is a scientific fact!!!!
The figures could be people of Canaanite descent rather than Europeans.
Looking at the following Canaanite Phoenician descended Libyans and other ethnic groups depicted by the Egyptians they are all shown with similar proportion
![]()
![]()
Libu Libyans, Book of Gates. Tomb of Rameses III
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
You think alTakruti's description of the general context the figures occur in, are consistent with Romans?
quote:
Originally posted by Tukuler:
The Tin Anneuin school paintings have this theme:
* tall and slender figures painted in white
* always in profile
* often white feathers in hair
* usually wearing a neck clasped ocher colored cape
* often handling throw-stick baton, spear, or a small bow
* short sword with scabbard not at the waist but the neck and chest
* ornaments represented by ocher band around the forehead and ankles
* almost always seen standing or walking single file
* never in any other action
* never involved in everyday life
* Women never portrayed.
quote:what was advanced about Saharans 40,000, 30,000, or 20,000 years ago?
Originally posted by xyyman:
The Saharan population was technologically more advanced for 40,000yrs. It is only within the last 600yrs modern Europeans over took Africans.
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
xxyman do you believe that the ancestors of white Europeans were black or do you not believe in that evolution stuff?
quote:that has to be proven with a height average number and compared to Dutch and Serbians as well as sub-populations of Dutch and Serbians
Originally posted by zarahan- aka Enrique Cardova:
[QB] On average Africans are shorter than Europeans
This may well be due to nutrition and other factors, but tropical African
sub-populations are the tallest people in the world nevertheless.
quote:^^^^ avoidance.
Originally posted by xyyman:
What’s this? Small Talk?![]()
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
xxyman do you believe that the ancestors of white Europeans were black or do you not believe in that evolution stuff?
quote:LMAO. Reaching is your full time profession, isn't it? We're now dating rock art using trivial, non-specific, sandal straps? SMH.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
although I'm not sure about Libyan footwear, this looks like the traps of a Roman sandal. Also Libyans typically have two feathers going off on two angles,
quote:http://www.nu.nl/algemeen/962463/nederlanders-langste-mensen-ter-wereld.html
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:that has to be proven with a height average number and compared to Dutch and Serbians as well as sub-populations of Dutch and Serbians
Originally posted by zarahan- aka Enrique Cardova:
[QB] On average Africans are shorter than Europeans
This may well be due to nutrition and other factors, but tropical African
sub-populations are the tallest people in the world nevertheless.
For example you started with Masaai now you're on Dinka
Roberts and Bainbridge reported the average height of 182.6 cm (5 ft 11.9 in)
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ajpa.1330210309
quote:http://nos.nl/video/163559-hoe-lang-is-nederland-nog-het-langste-volk-ter-wereld.html
Nederlanders zijn het langste volk ter wereld, maar hoe lang nog? Uit onderzoek blijkt dat de gemiddelde lengte van Nederlanders de laatste 13 jaar niet is toegenomen en dat is uitzonderlijk. De afgelopen 160 jaar is dit niet eerder gebeurd.
quote:http://lucy.ukc.ac.uk/LOCAL-ONLY/FHC/FHCL1495-6.html
Africans include both the worlds tallest (if not exactly the largest) people and the world's smallest people. The Nuer, Masai, Watusi, and similar peoples of East Central Africa are the world's tallest and among the worlds largest.
quote:Speak to Clyde. he is tha master I am the student
Originally posted by Swenet:
Lioness, dumbass, you're reaching. The depicted feather in hair by itself has much more affinity with ancient Egyptian, and, especially, ancient Nubian and Libyan customs. This observation is strengthened by their sharing of a similar looking headband.
As for the sandals, again, you're reaching. There is nothing specific about the sandal straps under discussion. Sandal with straps above the ankle are as much an innovation as a boot is relative to a shoe. Its an inevitable innovation that no doubt was spread all across the Mediterranean and adjacent areas (as seen in Egyptian depictions of Minoans, or Assyrians in their own artwork), and could have easily been invented independently many times.
quote:maar ook gezegd:
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
[http://www.nu.nl/algemeen/962463/nederlanders-langste-mensen-ter-wereld.html
De volwassen inwoner van Nederland is gemiddeld 173,5 cm lang. Volwassen mannen zijn gemiddeld 180 cm lang, 13 cm langer dan volwassen vrouwen.
quote:groot verschil
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
[http://www.nu.nl/algemeen/962463/nederlanders-langste-mensen-ter-wereld.html
Personen in niet verstedelijkte gebieden zijn gemiddeld bijna 2 cm langer dan personen in sterk verstedelijkte gebieden.
quote:
Swenet, show an adult MALE egyptian with a feather and headband
quote:?
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:maar ook gezegd:
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
[http://www.nu.nl/algemeen/962463/nederlanders-langste-mensen-ter-wereld.html
De volwassen inwoner van Nederland is gemiddeld 173,5 cm lang. Volwassen mannen zijn gemiddeld 180 cm lang, 13 cm langer dan volwassen vrouwen.
quote:groot verschil
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
[http://www.nu.nl/algemeen/962463/nederlanders-langste-mensen-ter-wereld.html
Personen in niet verstedelijkte gebieden zijn gemiddeld bijna 2 cm langer dan personen in sterk verstedelijkte gebieden.
zoals het feit dat de Dinka en de Maasai zijn subpopulaties van Soedan de Nederlanders slechts twee provincies van Nederland en het landelijke Nederlanders zijn een sub bevolking alle Nederlanders met verschillen zo veel als 2 inch
Hier is de beste statistieken bron voor Nederland, hoewel het nog steeds niet de landelijke Nederlandse specifiek
http://statline.cbs.nl/StatWeb/publication/?DM=SLEN&PA=81175ENG&D1=13-24&D2=1-2&D3=a&D4=0&D5=l&LA=EN&VW=T
leeuwin producties
de broer met klompen
quote:^A small sample from a refugee camp in 1995- hardly
Originally posted by the lioness,:
Anthropometric measurements of the Nilotic tribes in a refugee camp.
Chali D.
Source
Yekatit 12 Hospital, Addis Abeba, Ethiopia.
Abstract
The heights and weights of 2,233 randomly selected adult Nilotic immigrants from Southern Sudan (50.8% Dinkas, 43.8% Nuers, 3.4% Anuaks and 2.0% Shilluks) that have settled in Itang, Southwestern Ethiopia were measured. The mean height, weight and body mass index [BMI = weight(kg)/the square of height(m2)] of men (N = 1,1618) were 175.9 + 9 cm) (+/- SD), 59.7 +/- 8 kg, and 19.4 +/- 2, respectively, and those of women (N = 615) were 169.0 +/- 7 cm, 54.0 +/- 8 kg, and 19.1 +/- 3, respectively. The mean height of Dinka men (176.4 +/- 9 cm) and Nuer men (175.7 +/- 9 cm) were significantly higher than that of Anuak men (171.7 +/- 8 cm) and Shilluk men (172.6 +/- 6.1 cm). The Nuer women's mean height, weight and BMI were significantly lower than those of the other tribes'. This study confirms that the Nilotics in Southern Sudan have slender bodies and are amongst the tallest in the world, and may attain greater height if priviledged with favourable environmental conditions during early childhood and adolescence, allowing full expression of the genetic material.
quote:translation:
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
http://www.nu.nl/algemeen/962463/nederlanders-langste-mensen-ter-wereld.html
Personen in niet verstedelijkte gebieden zijn gemiddeld bijna 2 cm langer dan personen in sterk verstedelijkte gebieden.
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
@ TP, great lead was usual!!. That was my knee jerk reaction.
quote:Ottoni 2010
Originally posted by xyyman:
[QB] Take a lot at this guys. Interpret the data!!!! Read the article. Those that have at least a high school education should be able to figure it out.
This notion of White European women slaves as an explanation for the presence of mtDNA hg-H in North Africa is proving to be a myth.
quote:I said either "Libyan" culture adapted turned
Originally posted by the lioness,:
Clyde Winters: Romans
alTakruri: Libyans
Swenet: Egyptians
xyyman: indigenous African Caucasoid
quote:Sorry. I only posted the 2whiteguys behind the
Originally posted by the lioness,:
Folks ..., what ethnic group does the rock art that alTakruri posted look most like?
I don't care. Those two side topics are worn out and not important, let's return to the Genomic Ancestry of North Africa
quote:It was mainly that height supremacy thing. The Dinka may or may not be taller than than the rural Dutch. I'm not losing any sleep over it.
Originally posted by Tukuler:
quote:Sorry. I only posted the 2whiteguys behind the
Originally posted by the lioness,:
Folks ..., what ethnic group does the rock art that alTakruri posted look most like?
I don't care. Those two side topics are worn out and not important, let's return to the Genomic Ancestry of North Africa
extermination point brought up by the Explorer.
Also to correlate with Price's date (> 800 BCE)
for white admixture in the pre-Sahara region.
quote:well I'll put in the correction then, do the figures look more Egyptian than Roman to you?
Originally posted by Swenet:
Since the troll above (Lioness) quotes her synthesis of my views regarding the depicted figures for a second time, I'd like to point out that the poster above me is lying. I never said the figures look like Egyptians, or more like Egyptians than Romans, but, of course, the more astute readers have already caught on to her lie.
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
The depicted feather in hair by itself has much more affinity with ancient Egyptian, and, especially, ancient Nubian and Libyan customs.
quote:Prehistoric Saharan paintings are known fortheir
Originally posted by the lioness,:
^^^^ this is from Africanrockart.org
what's going on here a white man on an animal spearing a black man?
It's hard to say what it really means. The white colored man is sitting in a too casual position for that but then again the artsistry is very crude or highly stylized.
Is it really a white person or is the color symbolic, body paint a mythological character?
Is the white figure sticking the stick into the darker figure or just laying it across his chest?
Nobody knows
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
@Troll Patrol.
Thanks for the link. Casual observation proved this out
1. The predominance of straight hair on a world-wide basis suggests
that it is the original type of hair that the first humans had.
2. If melanin is present in the external layer of the iris then the
eye will be brown. If melanin is lacking, the iris will be colorless but perceived as blue for the same reason that the sky seems blue and a lake seems blue. If melanin is present but unevenly distributed the eye is perceived as a brownish green and is called olive or hazel.
3. Most people in the world have brown eyes
Body size. Heritability estimates for most body size measurements imply that
about 80% of the variability in body size is due to genetic factors (.8 heritiability), and about 20% is due to environmental factors.
A. Sexual dimorphism in body size is typical of humans, with females being
90-95% the size of males in almost all populations.
B. The secular trend. It seems that most of the world's populations are
becoming larger through time. This is part of what is called the secular trend.
Few people think that this is actually a genetic evolutionary trend, and place the cause somewhere in the environment, mostly to diet.
Some biologists have suggested that the secular trend is, in part, the result of selection due to mate choice (called sexual selection).
However, in 1900 I would have served nicely as an 'average' height male in either the US or UK. Now most males are grotesquely taller. In Japan in 1949 the average height of males was not quite 5'4''. Now the average is equal to European males (5'10''). In Pakistan in 1972 the average height of males was just over 5'4'', and is now (for males 18-35) just less than the average for European males. Selection can simply not operate this quickly.
Changes in public sanitation, particularly water supplies may also have an important impact. Most human populations maintain a fairly large disease and parasite load, which compete for the energy produced by the human body. Many of these are transmitted by human waste products which contaminate water, and through water (or lack of it) food.
C. Advantages of large body size. There are some advantages to large body
size.
Big people are stronger.
Bigger people are better predators - a lion can kill a wider variety of prey than a house cat.
Bergman's rule. Large bodies are beneficial in colder climates according to Bergman's rule:
The larger the animal the better it is at retaining heat. That
is why during the glacial times many lineages of animals developed giant forms. Humans follow this rule in a broad way. People living near the poles tend to be larger on the average than those living near the equator, but there are a lot of exceptions. Certainly this is true in the new world where the native americans living in the amazon basin are among the shortest of all native americans.
Larger people are generally faster runners. The fact that their stride length is longer and that they can apply more force with each stride due to larger muscles gives this advantage.
E. Advantages of small body size.
The most important of all selective pressures on body size is that small people require less food and can better survive when food is limited. Famines kill people in size order from largest first to smallest last.
Smaller people are generally quicker and more agile. This is due to the principle of inertia from physics. A larger body takes more force to get moving and more force to change direction than a smaller body does.
F. Distribution of body size.
Europeans have the largest average body size. It is in Europe where Bergman's rule most clearly applies. The largest Europeans are from the far north, and the farther south you go in europe, the smaller the people.
Africans include both the worlds tallest (if not exactly the largest) people and the world's smallest people. The Nuer, Masai, Watusi, and similar peoples of East Central Africa are the world's tallest and among the worlds largest. The Pygmies of West Central Africa and the Khoisan of Southern Africa are among smallest.
Asians and Native Americans usually fall in the middle ranges. Only a few populations could be considered large, maybe the Samoans are one. Many populations could be described as small.
II. Body build. Most of the variation in body build in humans can be reduced
to linear build vs lateral build. Let's contrast an extreme linear build with an extreme lateral build.
A. The extreme linear stereotype would be found in the previously
mentioned tall peoples of East Central Africa. These people are very tall and slender. The chests, shoulders, and hips are very narrow - the narrowest in the world for their height. The limbs are extremely long, especially the legs.
B. The extreme lateral stereotype would be found in some Asian and
Native Americans. Eskimos, Japanese, Samoans, Apache, and many South American Indians exhibit lateral build. A few Caucasoid groups also approach lateral build, especially the peoples of northern Europe. Laterally built people tend to have long and broad trunks, with wider chests, shoulders and hips. The widest hips of all can be found in Europeans. The limb bones tend to be short and the legs make less of a contribution to overall height.
C. Allen's rule. One primary selective force acting on body build
is Allen's rule:
Animals living in colder climates should have shorter appendages
and be more spherical than those living in warmer climates. This says that laterally built people should be found in colder climates and linearly built people in warm climates. This is true for humans on the average. The traditional comparison is between the Inuit and the Masai. The Inuit of the far north tend to be stocky with short arms and legs. The Masai of east africa tend to be very tall and slender, with long arms and legs.
D. These contrasting body builds have definite advantages for
certain tasks. The linear builds seem to have a definite advantage in overall health, especially in that they experience much less heart disease and diabetes than laterally built people. Linear builds have the advantage in running speed - they make great sprinters. The mechanics of long slender legs, as explained in terms of levers and forces, are well designed for fast running. A non-human example is the contrast between cows and antelopes. Cows and antelopes are closely related, but cows are extreme laterals in build and antelopes are more linear. Obviously, antelopes can run faster than cows.
Narrow hips are another advantage in fast running. This is the reason
that most men can run faster than most women. Women have broader hips as an adaptation for childbearing. The muscular arrangements that accompany narrow hips are much more efficient in moving the legs rapidly and powerfully. Since most Europeans have very broad hips you would expect them to be among the world's slowest runners, and this is pretty much what is observed.
E. Lateral builds have an advantage in endurance running, and any
task that requires endurance. This is because the larger rib cage allows more room for a larger heart and lungs. The endurance feats that have been recorded for some Indians are legendary.
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
@ TP, great lead was usual!!. That was my knee jerk reaction.
quote:With all due respect X, but that paper is old (meaning, I, and I'm assuming others as well, already took that paper into account), and you're just making up stuff.
Originally posted by xyyman:
The current view is that the so called European/Eurasian mtDNA Haplogroup H is actually African.
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
The afronut bogus ''female Eurasian slaves'' excuse, when applied to what's CLEARLY prehistoric, non-recent ancestry in Berbers, needs to be called out for the crackpot emotion-driven quackery that it is. As pointed out by Price et al 2009, Henn et al 2012, Achilli et al 2005, Kefi et al 2005, Frigi et al 2011, and many others, Berbers are NOT a blend of a Sub-Saharan component and a recent (common era), Eurasian component.
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
This notion of White European women slaves as an explanation for the presence of mtDNA hg-H in North Africa is proving to be a myth.
quote:If Africans have light skin then why don't Egyptians who live in a country at a similarly distant latidude from the equator have skin as light as some of the Libyans in the anceint Egyptian art?
Originally posted by xyyman:
[QB] I also speculated that light skin is inherently human ie African - H. Norton et al, Blue eye also - Wasserman et al.
Straight hair also.
Modern Europeans are delusional to think they have a monopoly on any of these features.
That is why here are no races. All are Africans adapted to live in their respective ecological niche. Note the Andaman Islanders and New Guineans ahir type.
That is why AEians are black skin, have a combination of hair types, brown eyes, full lips, straight nose and flatish nose, etc. And carry African PN2 E1b1a and I wouldn't be suprised Hg-A AND E1b1b. There is a geographyical reason why. Science is not delusional.
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
.
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
The afronut bogus ''female Eurasian slaves'' excuse, when applied to what's CLEARLY prehistoric, non-recent ancestry in Berbers, needs to be called out for the crackpot emotion-driven quackery that it is. As pointed out by Price et al 2009, Henn et al 2012, Achilli et al 2005, Kefi et al 2005, Frigi et al 2011, and many others, Berbers are NOT a blend of a Sub-Saharan component and a recent (common era), Eurasian component.quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
This notion of White European women slaves as an explanation for the presence of mtDNA hg-H in North Africa is proving to be a myth.
quote:you tooting your own horn again?
Originally posted by xyyman:
As I said. Very few can compete intelligently with me. They just don't have the smarts.
I am out-duelling you in your own forte...pictures.
Point is as seen in the real thing. AEians are black skin. The authentic pics of also show them black/brown skin. As they should be based on their ecological niche.
Want me to find those authentic ancient portrayals of Easterners?
Those portrayals are typical European delusion fantasy. If can't challenge me ....let me know.
I have better things to do.
quote:Simple. Sample bias. Carefully chosen (or ignored) samples can show you anything you want or don't want. It can lead to false results and analysis.
Originally posted by alTakruri:
How did Henn's ~280 K SNP genome comparison
missout on all Tunisian SSA components when
deep ancestry uniparentals reveal significant SSA
contributions as in Cherni 2009 and Ennafaa 2011,
neither of whom are among Henn's references?
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
Libyans are depicted in Egyptian art as lighter skinned than Egyptians
quote:I know you like the fancy illustrations and colors in Ottoni et al, 2010's figs and tables, but there is more to the issue of H1 and H3 in North Africa than just crude hap freqs.
Originally posted by xyyman:
YOU intepret the data(Table) and get back to me.
quote:"Govenors of the Oasis"
Originally posted by -Just Call Me Jari-:
[QB] Lybians of the Egyptian/Lybian Oasis..
Dakhla:
The master of the house ..
Above the front door, travel by boat.
Pilgrimage to Abydos
![]()
quote:
Originally posted by -Just Call Me Jari-:
26th Lybian Dynasty Tomb..
The founder of the dynasty was Psammetichus I, originally a member of the Libyan royal house in Saïs (which is why the period is also called the Saite Period). Psammetichus originally ruled in Egypt with the help of Assyria and ruled over Lower Egypt with other local princes (Herodotus speaks of twelve kings). With the help of Greek and Carian mercenaries he eventually succeeded in ruling alone.
quote:[/QB]
Originally posted by the lioness,:
Libyans are depicted in Egyptian art as lighter skinned than Egyptians
quote:Libyan Dynasty 22-23rd dynasty, of descent 24th
Originally posted by -Just Call Me Jari-:
26th Lybian Dynasty Tomb..
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
^.
high frequencies of the aforementioned uniparentals in Berber speakers mean aren't supported by anything substantial ****either.**** YEAH, they're higher than in Iberia, ****but so what? ****
quote:where is your source on what you call older hg-H and the presence of it in NA?
Originally posted by xyyman:
[
Happy to see that YOU are also agreeing ... female Africans have a higher frequency of older hg-H.
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:where is your source on what you call older hg-H and the presence of it in NA?
Originally posted by xyyman:
[
Happy to see that YOU are also agreeing ... female Africans have a higher frequency of older hg-H.
quote:What is this post supposed to communicate?
Originally posted by xyyman:
And "I" am reaching...I sense a backpadeling coming on...to be continued.
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
^.
high frequencies of the aforementioned uniparentals in Berber speakers mean aren't supported by anything substantial ****either.**** YEAH, they're higher than in Iberia, ****but so what? ****
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
Sighhhh!! Read the article Lioness. There is difference between H and H*. H* in this study is upstream, meaning older. H1 is downstream.
H is the entire haplo-group. That is why it is important to read the Material and Method section of these papers. Also trying to understand the nomenclature. eg ISOGG.
My point of the skin map is to show the anticipated color of indigenous Tunisians. They are expected to be lighter than southern Berbers.,,,no admixture needed. Similar to the people in the Atlas mountains. Sergi comes to mind. He was on point.
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:where is your source on what you call older hg-H and the presence of it in NA?
Originally posted by xyyman:
[
Happy to see that YOU are also agreeing ... female Africans have a higher frequency of older hg-H.
quote:Archaeology is against cultural and demic
... a high female permeability has been deduced
from several mitochondrial studies that pointed
to the existence of an important maternal Iberian
input on North Africa [15,19]. Although there is no
archaeological evidence to justify such a demic
flow from Iberia to North Africa, based on the
phylogeographic range, comparative gene diversity
and ages of several mitochondrial haplogroups such
as V, H1, H3, and U5b1b [25,37,26], the presence of
these haplogroups in North Africa is thought to be
the result of a southward expansion of Palaeolithic
hunter-gatherers from the Franco-Cantabrian refuge
after the Last Glacial Maximum. In fact, coalescence
ages for H1 and H3 subclades estimated in this study
are in good agreement with those previously published
and are congruent with these expansions.
quote:Sensible, especially considering during the
Coalescence ages for H1 (11 ± 2 ky) and H3 (11 ± 4 ky)
in North Africa point to the possibility of a late
Palaeolithic settlement for these lineages similar
to those found for other mtDNA haplogroups.
. . .
Whole mtDNA sequencing of identical H haplotypes
based on HVSI and RFLP information has unveiled
additional mtDNA differences between North African
and Iberian Peninsula lineages, pointing to an older
mtDNA genetic flow between regions than previously
thought.
code:Yet 76% of North African H lineages are unique._________ H1 ____________________________ H3
_________ freq diversity coalescence ____ freq diversity coalescence
NAfrica__ 42%_ 67 ± 6 __ 11,366 ± 2,354__ 13%_ 74 ± 9___ 10,866 ± 4,107
Iberia___ 45%_ 75 ± 3 __ 14,201 ± 2,984__ 16%_ 65 ± 6___ 10,342 ± 2,634
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:If Africans have light skin then why don't Egyptians who live in a country at a similarly distant latidude from the equator have skin as light as some of the Libyans in the anceint Egyptian art?
Originally posted by xyyman:
[QB] I also speculated that light skin is inherently human ie African - H. Norton et al, Blue eye also - Wasserman et al.
Straight hair also.
Modern Europeans are delusional to think they have a monopoly on any of these features.
That is why here are no races. All are Africans adapted to live in their respective ecological niche. Note the Andaman Islanders and New Guineans ahir type.
That is why AEians are black skin, have a combination of hair types, brown eyes, full lips, straight nose and flatish nose, etc. And carry African PN2 E1b1a and I wouldn't be suprised Hg-A AND E1b1b. There is a geographyical reason why. Science is not delusional.
top row, Syrian, Nubian, Libyan
bottom row, Egyptian , Syrian
quote:Anyways those type of studies often contradicts one another as demonstrated in this thread and multiples threads on this site, and often use small sample size and/or limited number of geographical sites (sample bias), so anybody who claims to know *the* truth, is wrong.
Originally posted by Swenet:
I'm done with this thread. Said my piece and I see simple population genetics understandings applied readily to other populations' gene pools when it supports the African cause, are subject to acute amnesia and ES members are obviously struck with the exact same biases they accuse Euronuts of when it comes to the inconvenient coalescence ages and origin of North African mtDNAs. Sad, really. The message: if you want to discuss North African population histories, stay away from ES.
quote:I already posted an example of sample bias and study contradictions in this thread (actually it was alTakruri who did).
Originally posted by Swenet:
How do they contradict each other? Which specific authors of the papers under discussion engage in sampling bias? Of what issues, exactly, can it be said that the truths geneticists' sought to uncover, haven't been uncovered?
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
I'm done with this thread. Said my piece and I see simple population genetics understandings applied readily to other populations' gene pools when it supports the African cause, are subject to acute amnesia and ES members are obviously struck with the exact same biases they accuse Euronuts of when it comes to the inconvenient coalescence ages and origin of North African mtDNAs. Sad, really. The message going out from these acrobatics: if you want to discuss North African population histories, stay away from ES.
quote:You did NOT post an example of sample bias that justify your endless barrage of unfounded complaints at the address of Henn et al 2012. It was not the purpose of this paper to comprehensively map the entire North African genetic landscape, and none of the conclusions that they intended to draw required all samples to be representative, for the conclusions to be sound.
Originally posted by Amun-Ra The Ultimate:
quote:I already posted an example of sample bias and study contradictions in this thread (actually it was alTakruri who did).
Originally posted by Swenet:
How do they contradict each other? Which specific authors of the papers under discussion engage in sampling bias? Of what issues, exactly, can it be said that the truths geneticists' sought to uncover, haven't been uncovered?
http://www.egyptsearch.com/forums/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic;f=8;t=008327;p=4#000179
http://www.egyptsearch.com/forums/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic;f=8;t=008327;p=2#000078
quote:
Originally posted by alTakruri:
If you bow out you do us all the disfavor of a less
rounded thread. Don't worry about winning or losing a
debate. Thorough discussion must include all angles
and every rational possibility. Pointing out myopia
is also very necessary as it is just another form of
bias. We need a factual presentation of African studies.
That said, as long as there are valid sources, even 180°
interpretations both hold weight. Hypotheses are just that
until completely disconfirmed. No one's going to convince
anybody they're wrong but the worldwide ES readership
deserves every interpretation existing or newly analysed.
I can understand avoiding repetition because its weak and
only impresses last worders. But surely there's room for
expansion and precision from everybody on every proposition.
I, for one, relish hardnose critique. Without it how
shall I see what I overlooked or never knew about so
couldn't analyse to incorporate into my interpretations?
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
I'm done with this thread. Said my piece and I see simple population genetics understandings applied readily to other populations' gene pools when it supports the African cause, are subject to acute amnesia and ES members are obviously struck with the exact same biases they accuse Euronuts of when it comes to the inconvenient coalescence ages and origin of North African mtDNAs. Sad, really. The message going out from these acrobatics: if you want to discuss North African population histories, stay away from ES.
quote:xxyman how are you determining African origin for H* ?
Originally posted by xyyman:
[QB] To those that can follow the discussion.
The authors are using frequency to suggest that H originated in the NE/AP(Upstream H*51%). Ignoring the also large 48% H* in central North Africa.
quote:
Originally posted by alTakruri:
If you bow out you do us all the disfavor of a less
rounded thread. Don't worry about winning or losing a
debate. Thorough discussion must include all angles
and every rational possibility. Pointing out myopia
is also very necessary as it is just another form of
bias. We need a factual presentation of African studies
not a reactionary reverse colonialist "Africa uber alles"
Weltanschauung.
That said, as long as there are valid sources, even 180°
interpretations both hold weight. Hypotheses are just that
until completely disconfirmed. No one's going to convince
anybody they're wrong but the worldwide ES readership
deserves every interpretation existing or newly analysed.
I can understand avoiding repetition because its weak and
only impresses last worders. But surely there's room for
expansion and precision from everybody on every proposition.
I, for one, relish hardnose critique. Without it how
shall I see what I overlooked or never knew about so
couldn't analyse to incorporate into my interpretations?
All of us who are willing to learn learn from each other.
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
I'm done with this thread. Said my piece and I see simple population genetics understandings applied readily to other populations' gene pools when it supports the African cause, are subject to acute amnesia and ES members are obviously struck with the exact same biases they accuse Euronuts of when it comes to the inconvenient coalescence ages and origin of North African mtDNAs. Sad, really. The message going out from these acrobatics: if you want to discuss North African population histories, stay away from ES.
quote:Tell us something we don't already know. Coastal North Africa was colonized by the Phoenicians during the Iron Age and then Greeks, Romans, and then came the Arab-Islamic invasion, after which came the Ottoman Turkish Empire, then European Vandals etc. etc.
Originally posted by the lyinass,:
I am not Eurocentric I just think North Africa has been somewhat mixed with Levantine/Med popualtions or intermediate with those populations for a few to several thousands of years...
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
You're not understanding the population histories implied here. The Iberians you're using as comparative samples don't all descend from those hunter gatherers. Have you seen the R1b frequencies in Iberia? They're among the highest in Europe. This wouldn't have been the case in the hunter gatherers 10kya, who were mostly NRY G. Just stop it. Don't embarrass yourself any further.
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
You're not understanding the population histories implied here. The Iberians you're using as comparative samples don't all descend from those hunter gatherers. Have you seen the R1b frequencies in Iberia? They're among the highest in Europe. This wouldn't have been the case in the hunter gatherers 10kya, who were mostly NRY G. Just stop it. Don't embarrass yourself any further.
quote:Please post these researchers because I've never heard of them.
No Lioness the researchers are saying highest frequency = origin
quote:You've already had your mind made up from the onset. You're seeking out evidence that corroborates your pre-conceived notion, while ignoring all evidence to the contrary.
Originally posted by xyyman:
I am willing to embarassing myself...to learn or, expose math short comings (lioness). If you don't understand, festup. Not sure you understand my point. Or may be it is me. I am saying H1 has highest frequency and diverstity in NA compared to Iberia. Tell me I am wrong!!!! I am willing to look a fool. Anyone!!!??? No false pride with this bad boy....
This not a dickfest...you would lose....just kidding. Educate us. Sounds like you stumbling or bsing!!
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
You're not understanding the population histories implied here. The Iberians you're using as comparative samples don't all descend from those hunter gatherers. Have you seen the R1b frequencies in Iberia? They're among the highest in Europe. This wouldn't have been the case in the hunter gatherers 10kya, who were mostly NRY G. Just stop it. Don't embarrass yourself any further.
quote:I know you aren't talking about R1b. Its something your ignorance of the situation caused you to overlook. Do you think R1b carrying males from outside of Europe didn't have mtDNAs that changed the original frequencies of H1? Do you think their women didn't have mtDNAs that changed the European mtDNA landscape?
First – I am talking H1 not R1b. We will get to R1b later.
quote:^All the evidence right here that you simply don't know what you're talking about. I mention the mtDNA demographic changes implied in R1b becoming BY FAR the dominant Y chromosome in post Eneolithic Iberia, and you stumble to see the implications of what I'm saying, as if I just asked you compute the distance between Mars and the Earth in nanometers.
Second – I am not sure what is the point of the R1b comment. Do you mean R1b1a2* is the mate for H1?
quote:
Originally posted by Djehuti:
^ What about both frequency and diversity along with archaeology that disproves your mixed-up theories?
Both mtDNA hg H and U if they really are Eurasian entered Africa the same time as NRY hg R. Yet how come I don't see you claiming West Africans like Cameroonians as mixed??![]()
quote:a remarkable theory, the so called "Caucasian" originated in Africa and only later left Africa
Originally posted by xyyman:
Case in point - News that Rameses III is E1b1a. Here we have a “Caucasoid” mummy having the worst “Negroid” Haplogroup ever. And he wasn’t the only mummy like this, ALL mummies tested so far are genetically sub-saharan; see Amarnas. LOL!! Geography don’t lie. “Political” Scientist do…pun intended. He! He! [/QB]
quote:You challenge people and ask to be proven wrong and then repeatedly run with your tail between your legs when it gets too hot under your feet, as if your name was Roberto ''no mas'' Durán.
Originally posted by xyyman:
Anyone, I hope you understand the question. Provide a study that shows data that Iberia has the higher diversity(age), frequency (amount) and maybe coalescence age combined, compared with populations in North Africa, particularly Tunisia. In other words prove to me H1 is European. Provide the study from any decade. 1980’s to current. Please do not quote that Achilli et al 2004 or Torroni et al 2006. Though relevant, they studies focuses either on Europe ONLY or frequency, not all three..
If you don’t know…stay on the side lines.
quote:Please post these researchers because I've never heard of them.
Originally posted by Swenet:
[QB] [QUOTE]No Lioness the researchers are saying highest frequency = origin
quote:
Originally posted by Tukuler
@ XYYman
Right now I'm charting uniparental hgs and
major subclades by letter, coalesce age,
"assumed" geo origin, and migration eras to
help make sense out of disparent hgs like H1,
U6, and R1b.
.
quote:
Originally posted by Tukuler
@ XYYman
….. disparent hgs like H1,
U6, and R1b.
--------Just because the science is new ****doesn't mean the
geneticists aren't using notions of 19th and 20th
century physical anthropologists***** and even today's
forensic anthropologists.
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
![]()
quote:a remarkable theory, the so called "Caucasian" originated in Africa and only later left Africa [/QB]
Originally posted by xyyman:
Case in point - News that Rameses III is E1b1a. Here we have a “Caucasoid” mummy having the worst “Negroid” Haplogroup ever. And he wasn’t the only mummy like this, ALL mummies tested so far are genetically sub-saharan; see Amarnas. LOL!! Geography don’t lie. “Political” Scientist do…pun intended. He! He!
quote:What!!
Originally posted by xyyman:
What the fyuck are you talking about DJ? Stay on the side lines …….please. U6 is African, U5 Sardinian. Please STFU if you don’ t having anything sensible to contribute…..
Those one line responses don’t cut it. If you want to be involved in the discussion provide and analyze data
quote:
Originally posted by Djehuti:
^ What about both frequency and diversity along with archaeology that disproves your mixed-up theories?
Both mtDNA hg H and U if they really are Eurasian entered Africa the same time as NRY hg R. Yet how come I don't see you claiming West Africans like Cameroonians as mixed??![]()
quote:Nope! The FACT is there is NO such thing as "Caucasian". Your picture of Ramses mummy means nothings since we have actual painted portraits of him showing how he looked liked in real life as well as x-rays of the actual skull which show African affinities. We know you like to post pictures of mummies and then 'jump to conclusions' but it ain't working.
Originally posted by the lyinass:
![]()
a remarkable theory, the so called "Caucasian" originated in Africa and only later left Africa
quote:I agree. I believe H1 was introduced to Europe during the African Muslim expansion into Europe and settlement in Iberia for almost 1000 years.
Originally posted by xyyman:
Any takers...? In case you are wondering? This proves Torrinni's Refugia Theory and the recolonization of Europe is BS ...give them about a year they will come completely around. H1 are recent African migrants to Europe. It is so simple...compare the diversity of H1 in Europe to Africa.
QUOTE:
================
Using mitochondrial DNA to test the hypothesis of a European post-glacial human recolonization from the Franco-Cantabrian refuge.
García O, Fregel R, Larruga JM, Álvarez V, Yurrebaso I, Cabrera VM, González AM.
Source
Basque Country Forensic Genetics Laboratory, Erandio, Bizkaia, Spain.
Abstract
It has been proposed that the distribution patterns and coalescence ages found in Europeans for mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) haplogroups V, H1 and H3 are the result of a post-glacial expansion from a Franco-Cantabrian refuge that recolonized central and northern areas. In contrast, in this refined mtDNA study of the Cantabrian Cornice that contributes 413 partial and 9 complete new mtDNA sequences, including a large Basque sample and a sample of Asturians, NO!!! experimental evidence was found to support the human refuge-expansion theory. In fact, all measures of gene diversity point to the Cantabrian Cornice in general and the Basques in particular, as less polymorphic for V, H1 and H3 than other southern regions in Iberia or in Central Europe. Genetic distances show the Cantabrian Cornice is a very heterogeneous region with significant local differences. The analysis of several minor subhaplogroups, based on complete sequences, also suggests different focal expansions over a local and peninsular range that did not affect continental Europe. Furthermore, all detected clinal trends show stronger longitudinal than latitudinal profiles. In Northern Iberia, it seems that the highest diversity values for some haplogroups with Mesolithic coalescence ages are centred on the Mediterranean side, including Catalonia and South-eastern France.
quote:Ahw hell naww!
Originally posted by Clyde Winters:
I agree. I believe H1 was introduced to Europe during the African Muslim expansion into Europe and settlement in Iberia for almost 1000 years.
quote:A good question for which solid tangible reply, i.e. non-dogmatic and no robo-parroting with little understanding of DNA science, is still wanting.
Originally posted by -Just Call Me Jari- :
You know explorer brings up a good point, that is say me, Al and Swenet are correct in that the Genetic heritage of the Coastal N. African population is due to a long drawn out process rather than recent slave markets, the question becomes.. why are European/Eurasian male DNA not reflected? Good question.
quote:As I noted, the scenario is plausible; what it requires however, is solid evidence, especially in the EpiPaleolithic or pre-EpiPaleolithic Maghrebi context.
Originally posted by alTakruri:
I never mentioned the "extermination" factor which
may have been shunting off males with no previous
North African maternity.
Knowing the Kikuyu and Maasai conducted death raids
against each other saving alive and taking only younger
females and the lack of nrY hgs expected by South Europe
whole family settlers (unless hidden in E-M78 or whatever)
and rock art of chalk white men with European armaments
but never with women or in family scenes makes one wonder.
quote:Name these “male”-specific DNA.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
European/Eurasian male DNA is reflected in the topic article
Genomic Ancestry of North Africans Supports Back-to-Africa Migrations
Henn
quote:What do you think an invasion of tens of thousands of people who remained in the region for almost 1000 years is.
Originally posted by xyyman:
Come on Clyde. .....the distribution pattern does not support that premise. The pattern is not consistent with invasion. It is consistent with demic diffusion and expansion.
quote:This remark is based on the emotional need to find a diversion for lack of an answer grounded on rational thinking.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
^^^^ any haplogroup I would mention you will say is African because all DNA is a branch which eventually leads back to Africa.
quote:To be precise, the point I was making pertains to inexperienced understanding and interpretations thereof, of coalescence ages, that one sees regularly on forums and blogs. But yes, there are some out there who manipulate to deceive the uninformed.
Originally posted by xyyman:
But as I said to Swenet coalescene age is easily manipulated. I believe Explorer is saying the same thing.
quote:
Originally posted by Djehuti:
... I find it curious how in North Africa indigenous E-M35 yet in Sub-Sahara you have alleged Eurasian clades like R and T.
quote:
Originally posted by zarahan- aka Enrique Cardova:
The genetic history of Europeans.
Pinhasi R, Thomas MG, Hofreiter M, Currat M, Burger J.
Source
Department of Archaeology, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland. ron_pinhasi@yahoo.com
Abstract
The evolutionary history of modern humans is characterized by numerous migrations driven by environmental change, population pressures, and cultural innovations. In Europe, the events most widely considered to have had a major impact on patterns of genetic diversity are the initial colonization of the continent by anatomically modern humans (AMH), the last glacial maximum, and the Neolithic transition. For some decades it was assumed that the geographical structuring of genetic diversity within Europe was mainly the result of gene flow during and soon after the Neolithic transition, but recent advances in next-generation sequencing (NGS) technologies, computer simulation modeling, and ancient DNA (aDNA) analyses are challenging this simplistic view. Here we review the current knowledge on the evolutionary history of humans in Europe based on archaeological and genetic data.
^^SO what conclusions do you draw from their analysis xyz?
------------------------------------------------------------------
Using mitochondrial DNA to test the hypothesis of a European post-glacial human recolonization from the Franco-Cantabrian refuge.
García O, Fregel R, Larruga JM, Álvarez V, Yurrebaso I, Cabrera VM, González AM.
Source
Basque Country Forensic Genetics Laboratory, Erandio, Bizkaia, Spain.
Abstract
It has been proposed that the distribution patterns and coalescence ages found in Europeans for mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) haplogroups V, H1 and H3 are the result of a post-glacial expansion from a Franco-Cantabrian refuge that recolonized central and northern areas. In contrast, in this refined mtDNA study of the Cantabrian Cornice that contributes 413 partial and 9 complete new mtDNA sequences, including a large Basque sample and a sample of Asturians, NO!!! experimental evidence was found to support the human refuge-expansion theory. In fact, all measures of gene diversity point to the Cantabrian Cornice in general and the Basques in particular, as less polymorphic for V, H1 and H3 than other southern regions in Iberia or in Central Europe. Genetic distances show the Cantabrian Cornice is a very heterogeneous region with significant local differences. The analysis of several minor subhaplogroups, based on complete sequences, also suggests different focal expansions over a local and peninsular range that did not affect continental Europe. Furthermore, all detected clinal trends show stronger longitudinal than latitudinal profiles. In Northern Iberia, it seems that the highest diversity values for some haplogroups with Mesolithic coalescence ages are centred on the Mediterranean side, including Catalonia and South-eastern France.
^6SO the Franco-Canto refugium theory is shaky?
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
aDNA is proving that ancient Europeans are genetically different to the extant ones.
quote:quote me where I bragged
Originally posted by The Explorer:
lioness, where are those "male" specific European DNA requested of you, that you bragged about? This is the time to demonstrate that this is not just an imagination...like the fictitious drivel you tried to pin onto me as a diversion.
quote:lol you stupid ignorant bitch.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
lioness productions
quote:You are just quibbling with the names they are using.
Originally posted by xyyman:
@ Lioness Production:
I got to admit you can be crafty to the unsuspecting and ignorant. But with me, you are out of your league. As usual mis-reprersentatiion of Hawass’s JAMA report. Ie typical white man deception.
Hawass and JAMA never proposed a Thuya or Akhenaten Gene etc. That proposal was made by a commercial company trying to sell their product.
There is no such thing as a Thuya gene etc sheeeeesh!!. You are a sneaky son of a bythch.. Hawass is a bigot but I don’t think he will make up such a silly lie that he can get caught in.
There is no such thing as a Thuya gene!!!!! Just as there is no such thing as a Neanderthal gene. This is all advertisement by commercial companies to sell their product….DNA Analysis. Shyte mine came back 4% Neanderthal (GTFOH!!)
I am speaking from memory, on the JAMA report, will need to double check, but the only authenticated data(ie facts) that came from the JAMA report was the STRs. DNAtribes was the first to make the connection, take that STR(8) data and affiliate it with a known global population from their database. Now anyone with a computer and the right software can do it.
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
aDNA is proving that ancient Europeans are genetically different to the extant ones.
Distribution map of the Egyptian Gene shows its African origin, partial presence in Coptic populations today (green dots in Egypt) and scattered incidence around the world.
Today, as many as one-fourth of all people on earth would test positive for the Thuya Gene. It is twice as common in Somalia as outside Africa and is found in 40% of Muslim Egyptians.
Citation: Hawass Z, Gad YZ, Ismail S, et al. Ancestry and Pathology in King Tutankhamun's Family. JAMA. 2010;303(7):638-647.
The Akhenaten Gene.
Named for the pharaoh who attempted to convert Egypt to monotheism, this autosomal ancestry marker like most of the Amarna family group’s DNA is clearly African in origin. Akhenaten received it from his mother, Queen Tiye. It is most common today in Copts.
Today, it is the gene type carried by a majority (52%) of the Copts living in the Pre-dynastic site of Adaima near Thebes or Luxor and the Valley of the Kings on the Nile River in Upper (southern) Egypt.
The Egyptian Gene.
Although not carried in the royal mummies whose DNA has been studied so far, this autosomal ancestry marker is also clearly African in origin and enjoys its greatest spread in Egyptians. Quite rare worldwide, it is found in about 1 in 10 Copts, today’s successors to the ancient Egyptians. Less than one percent of European Americans have it, while African Americans preserve it at a rate of three times that of their white neighbors.
Thuya Gene
Today, its highest incidence is in Somalians at nearly 50%. It is found in 40% of Muslim Egyptians. On average, 1 in 3 Africans or African Americans carries it. It crops up in high concentrations in many places around the world such as the Basque region (41%) and in Melungeons (31%, similar to Middle Easterners)
quote:^^^ lowlife fraud who thinks Trayvon Martin got what he deserved
Originally posted by anguishofbeing:
quote:lol you stupid ignorant bitch.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
lioness productions
quote:It is DNAConsultants mapping charts based on JAMA data just like DNATribes used their own propietary charts in their Amarna and Ramesses III reports, stop the nonsense, you are not up on the scoop
Originally posted by xyyman:
[QB] Just checked JAMA. This is NOT from the Amarna JAMA report. Man, you white people are experts at deception and misdirection and mis-representation.. You almost got me. The ignorant can easily get fooled by you.
In fact, the illustration looks like that software developer's from the San Diego Police Dept. I posted the popaffl link on ESR.
Anywho what the pic show. Strongest, greenest, match is SSA and Aframs.
quote:And you deserve all the humiliating ass whipping you've gotn on this board since your dumbass logged on under that name. lol
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:^^^ lowlife fraud who thinks Trayvon Martin got what he deserved
Originally posted by anguishofbeing:
quote:lol you stupid ignorant bitch.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
lioness productions
quote:Is this why you keep replying to me instead backing up your shitty misinformed posts as requested? lol
Originally posted by the lioness,:
^^^ you have no value whatsoever on this site.
quote:Science is about replicity so one really needs
Originally posted by xyyman:
Hawass and JAMA never proposed a Thuya or Akhenaten Gene etc. That proposal was made by a commercial company trying to sell their product.
There is no such thing as a Thuya gene etc sheeeeesh!!.
There is no such thing as a Thuya gene!!!!! Just as there is no such thing as a Neanderthal gene. This is all advertisement by commercial companies to sell their product….DNA Analysis. Shyte mine came back 4% Neanderthal (GTFOH!!)
I am speaking from memory, on the JAMA report, will need to double check, but the only authenticated data(ie facts) that came from the JAMA report was the STRs. DNAtribes was the first to make the connection, take that STR(8) data and affiliate it with a known global population from their database. Now anyone with a computer and the right software can do it.
quote:Your claims are rather exaggerated or overgeneralized though there is some truth to it. For one thing, genetics and archaeology have already shown the Etruscans and Pelasgians to be of Asiatic descent NOT African, however there was no doubt an African presence prior to the migrations of these Asiatic folks both in Crete as well as in Sicily.
Originally posted by xyyman:
Anyone willing to discuss this?
I have gone past the Caucasoid/Negroid nonsense. Or whether the AEians were indigenous Black Africans. They undoubtedly were. What is fascinating and holding my interest is how extensive these Saharan African civilizations reached the shores of the Mediterranean. Using available tools to piece things together; Archeology, geography, aDNA, extant DNA, Osteometry and linguistic(very little knowledge with this).
Always start with the most obvious locations. Sardinia, Iberia, Crete and the Levant. After all these ancient humans did not take airplanes and flew over these connecting points.
Critiquing this paper shows again how deceptive Europeans are. It is obvious the Nuragic(Sardinia) Civilization were African migrants (goes back to Sergi). DNA technology is proving Sergi right. If no takers I will post on ESR.
For those not familiar with the Nuragic civilization read up on it. I just did. And I was shocked with the similarity to the Sahara rock technology and buildings. Another example of Europeans stealing African history. The archeological technology is definitely African. Now I am researching the aDNA studies.
Further more I now see how the Etruscans fit into the migration route. And why Etruscia is on the WESTERN side of the Italian peninsular.
Apparently the Sardinians and Etruscans are from the Tunisian line of North Africans while the Pelegascians and Cretes are from the Egyptian line of North Africans.
Here is the ancient genetic evidence
To the newbies. – understanding geography is really important.
==========
Caramelli and GUIDO BARBUJANI et al Genetic variation in prehistoric Sardinia
Abstract We sampled teeth from 53 ancient Sardinian (Nuragic) individuals who lived in the Late Bronze Age and Iron Age, between 3,430 and 2,700 years ago. After eliminating the samples that, in preliminary biochemical tests, did not show a high probability to yield reproducible results, we obtained 23 sequences of the mitochondrial DNA control region, which were associated to haplogroups by comparison with a dataset of modern sequences. The Nuragic samples show a remarkably low genetic diversity, comparable to that observed in ancient Iberians, but much lower than among the Etruscans. Most of these sequences have exact matches in two modern Sardinian populations supporting a clear genealogical continuity from the Late Bronze Age up to current times. The Nuragic populations appear to be part of a large and geographically unstructured cluster of modern European populations, thus making it diffcult to infer their evolutionary relationships. However, the low levels of genetic diversity, both within and among ancient samples, as opposed to the sharp divergences among modern Sardinian samples, support the hypothesis of the expansion of a small group of maternally related individuals, and of comparatively recent differentiation of the Sardinian gene pools.
quote:that's useless, either you have a specific thing to say about my last post or you don't
Originally posted by xyyman:
Come on Lioness. You claim to be smart...
quote:I don't know how these findings contradict what I said. And yes you are being a bit condescending for someone who seems new to this stuff let alone not an expert. And by the way, my claim was not so much the Nuragic people of Iberia but the eastern Mediterranean as well as the Italian mainland. We all know Iberia has more African influence than Asiatic. Also, I was the first person to point out an African influence if not origin for the Sea Peoples of the Italian Islands like Sardinia as noted in the thread here. Neolithic Malta is a huge clue.
Originally posted by xyyman:
Ahem!! I expect more than just regurgitation. or mindless quotes. Please, read the paper then critique. If you can't... forget about it. I will move on. This is from the study..anyone?
I will make it easy. There are a couple of sentences from the authors that give it all away.
And ...DJ... I prefer not be condescending, but I know you can't help yourself. You said you went to college. Hint: Imagine you are taking an exam. Start with the process of elimination
BTW: The authors conclude that the Sardinians (Nuragic) are probably Iberian and defintely NOT Asian. Do you want me to point it out to you....? They were emphatic about NOT being Asian.
My point is the data shows a different origin. And they even said so within the paper but glossed over it.
quote:Can you cite his work then. The Anatolian origins for the Etruscans are pretty much documented by genetics in the form of paternal lineages associated with Anatolia which was discussed here and here, as well as maternal lineages as shown here, and more recently genetic lineage of cattle also pointing to Anatolia. This along with certain religious traits and customs such as augury and haruspicy just to name a few which are distinctly Asiatic and especially Anatolian, as well as the Etruscans' own legends saying they are from Anatolia .
Originally posted by xyyman:
Guido Barbujani et al concluded the Etruscans are NOT from Asia or Anatolia....do you want me to post it? If you don't know that then don't waste my time.
Achille et al, the bigot, initially claimed Anatolian origin. Barbujani et al debunked that premise.
quote:How come you are grading me a C- for quoting an article YOU posted ?
Originally posted by xyyman:
Quote from Lioness: Most of these sequences have exact matches in two modern Sardinian populations supporting a clear genealogical continuity from the Late Bronze Age up to current times
Grade = C-
Now look at the chart and read the paper again.
We are not comparing the Nuragic population with extant population of Sardinia.
We are trying to determine whence these people came bringing there technology.
The answer is one of the 8 listed. Notice I said 8 and not 10. You know why, don't you?
quote:LOL as if your pretentious dumbass tongue-twisting self ("Will Smith doesnt look Nubian") is an expert. LOL!
Originally posted by Djehuti:
I don't know how these findings contradict what I said. And yes you are being a bit condescending for someone who seems new to this stuff let alone not an expert.
quote:Just shut up xyyman. Shut up with all that wolfing, and read your own phuckn data, crusty eyed nutcase:
Originally posted by xyyman:
Swenet..brotha you are out of your league. You don’t get… reserve your comments for someone else. You remark was already addressed by the Sage. Go someplace else.
This is not a pissing contest. Plus I have a bigger dick…You would never win.
I will tell you what I always tell Lioness…read it several times and you will realize how ridiculous and dumb your remark is…anyone else?
If you have a question to ask ..ask it. Do away with the crust and carrot comment. He!.
quote:xyyman
Originally posted by xyyman:
Translation: That is an outright lie. They hinted at an evolutionary relation ship within the study. They cannot suggest northern Europe because there was no comparable civilization north of Sardinia in Europe. Thus they chose Iberia. Avoiding the geographically closest region ie North Africa, which had a similar civilization. In addition what they are saying is these people later EXPANDED into Europe.
Translation: Sardinians sub-stratum is not European. They are North Africans. Another example of Europeans, yet again, stealing ancient African civilization as their own.
quote:France 4700 BC
Originally posted by xyyman:They cannot suggest northern Europe because there was no comparable civilization north of Sardinia in Europe.
quote:And this is how Euronuts get one step ahead of some Africanists.
Originally posted by Swenet:
I see xyyman is reaching as usual:
Djehuti is right: nothing in table 4 contradicts what he said. Get that eyecrust out ya eye. Not only does the North African sample lag behind most of the modern samples in haplotype sharing with this ancient sample, many of the ancient Sardinians belong to haplotypes that don't even occur in the North African sample.
quote:A rather broad statement since 'Berbers' encompass many ethnic groups. Surely you don't think the light-skinned 'mulatto' types and especially the white types are not pure indigenous African!
Originally posted by xyyman:
Berbers are NOT admixed.
quote:That depends on which genes or alleles. Of course they 'donated' many genes to Europe and the Middle-East but to say the opposite did not happen would be ignoring centuries of history.
Henn et al got it wrong. North Africans are NOT the recipients of Middle Eastern or European genes. They are the donors.
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
And why do you focus on Sardinia when the much shorter over water distance over Gibralter to Iberia?
quote:Also since the sampled modern Sardinians and North Africans
Genetic variation in Sardinia appears limited across time
as well. Six haplotypes observed in the Nuragic sample are
still present in the modern Ogliastra and Sardinia samples,
and they include ... rarer sequences ... AL07, ST16, and
CA14-SE13 ... in North Africa; their presence in both modern
and Nuragic Sardinia suggest the effects of common ancestry
or ancient gene flow, rather than those of gene flow in
historical times.
quote:that is what he has been saying for weeks now in this thread and in the thread
Originally posted by Djehuti:
quote:A rather broad statement since 'Berbers' encompass many ethnic groups. Surely you don't think the light-skinned 'mulatto' types and especially the white types are not pure indigenous African!
Originally posted by xyyman:
[qb]
Berbers are NOT admixed.
quote:(liberating thread from albino obsessed other forum)
Originally posted by Swenet:
quote:^Still haven't read the paper so I don't know if the authors themselves realized it, but this is the real gem to focus on. If the findings of this paper prove true, it could mean two things:
Originally posted by Swenet:
Guess this upsets Stoneking et al's claim that a single OOA migration is implicated by the statistically identical levels of Neanderthal DNA introgressions in modern non-African populations across the globe.
1) East Asians are exclusively descended from the same OOA migration that gave rise to West Eurasian AMHs, but experienced extra archaic human introgressions AFTER the East Asian/European AMH split.
2) East Asians are composed of the same OOA migration that gave rise to West Eurasian AMHs, PLUS additional AMH/Neanderthal (alamgam) source(s), that is older than, and didn't contribute to, the European AMH collective.
If 2 proves to be true, this will have many implications for the Middle/Upper Palaeolithic African populations near the African exit points, and their affinities to contemporary Africans who resided away from those exit points, in inner Africa. Why? Because with more than one OOA migration, butt hurt proponents can no longer use the convenient ''coincidence'' excuse for glaring fact that non-Africans have no mtDNA L, independent of African admixture events.
But, of course, scenario 2 is already supported by things like the lack of Neanderthals in East Asia, the relatively late settlement of Europe compared to places along the Southern migration route, like Australia, despite Europe's closeness to Africa and the fact that non-African AMHs don't look like they belong to a single population, morphologically speaking, even when taking the rather high AMH inter-sample variability into account.
Also, the lack of mtDNA L in Eurasians that diverges from African mtDNA L examples since (before) the earliest AMH exodus, plus the lack of African NRY M89, mtDNA M and mtDNA N examples in black Africans that do the same. The conclusion seems inescapable: black Africans descend from different AMHs than non-Africans do.
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:that is what he has been saying for weeks now in this thread and in the thread
Originally posted by Djehuti:
quote:A rather broad statement since 'Berbers' encompass many ethnic groups. Surely you don't think the light-skinned 'mulatto' types and especially the white types are not pure indigenous African!
Originally posted by xyyman:
Berbers are NOT admixed.
Was the Maghreb really predominantly Eurasian for 30,000 yrs? now on page 2 of Egyptology forum
another thread also
quote:Exactly what are YOU trying to say with this picture spam of yours??
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quote:you were acting suprised he was saying berbers were not admixted. I was saying he has been saying this for the past few weeks so it shouldn't come as a surprise.
Originally posted by Djehuti:
^ Okay??I fail to see how your and Tukuler's conclusion contradicts anything I said. Again for the third time, I never denied African influence from the Maghreb spreading into Mediterranean Europe prior to the expansion of peoples from the Eastern Mediterranean specifically Asia. However, the conclusion of the paper is a far cry from what I believe you are proposing and which is that Nuragic culture is solely a product of Africa.
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:that is what he has been saying for weeks now in this thread and in the thread
Originally posted by Djehuti:
quote:A rather broad statement since 'Berbers' encompass many ethnic groups. Surely you don't think the light-skinned 'mulatto' types and especially the white types are not pure indigenous African!
Originally posted by xyyman:
Berbers are NOT admixed.
Was the Maghreb really predominantly Eurasian for 30,000 yrs? now on page 2 of Egyptology forum
another thread alsoI thought he just said Berbers are NOT admixed, even though Berbers are a variegated group.
quote:Exactly what are YOU trying to say with this picture spam of yours??
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[![]()
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
That's all folks....
quote:Again, please consider the full context of those statements.
Originally posted by xyyman:
@ Sage- it is refreshing to see that some of us can read and intepret data. Yes "common ancestry" is the "gimme".
Thought I was discussing this with dounces.
Yes, they are talking Tunisian Berbers as co-ancestry. Why I think they are suggesting Iberia as the source population?
Quote;
"Nuragic Sardinians appear more related to the Iberians"
and
"However, one can at least conclude that Sardinians and Iberians show a greater genealogical continuity
quote:As ridiculous as your "Asians have no recent African admixture" idiocy. You're the weakest chain in the link Mary. I gotta keep reminding you. lol
Originally posted by Djehuti:
A rather broad statement since 'Berbers' encompass many ethnic groups.
quote:He contradicted himself, something you should know a lot about.
Originally posted by Djehuti:
I thought he just said Berbers are NOT admixed, even though Berbers are a variegated group.
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
BTW – Per DNATribes – the 3 population that has the highest percentage of European SNPs are Algerians, Northern Moroccans and Tunisians. This aligns with Henn Data.
quote:^^^^oops, played yourself
Originally posted by xyyman:
Here we have a people(Tunisians) who may look "Caucasian", LOL!, the men carry African E1b1b*, the women carry a high frequency of supposedly European H1 and other H-sub-clade, (note the majority carry typical U6). They carry autosomal STR that would classify them as negroes per CODIS. As the English would say "what a pickle?"
quote:
Originally posted by Xyyman:
They carry autosomal STR that would classify them as negroes per CODIS.
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
BTW – Per DNATribes – the 3 population that has the highest percentage of European SNPs are Algerians, Northern Moroccans and Tunisians. This aligns with Henn Data.quote:^^^^oops, played yourself
Originally posted by xyyman:
Here we have a people(Tunisians) who may look "Caucasian", LOL!, the men carry African E1b1b*, the women carry a high frequency of supposedly European H1 and other H-sub-clade, (note the majority carry typical U6). They carry autosomal STR that would classify them as negroes per CODIS. As the English would say "what a pickle?"
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
quote:
Originally posted by Xyyman:
They carry autosomal STR that would classify them as negroes per CODIS.![]()
You must've had an oxygen shortage in your neurones when when you perceived that to be what some researcher said.
quote:--Calafell et al
Originally posted by Xyyman:
NW Africans were genetically closer to Iberians and to other Europeans than to
African Americans.
quote:^This is how epically retarded you are. You see a couple of values along that tree and you just assume that they're genetic distance values?
Originally posted by Xyyman:
The result - : Berbers are Negros ie similar to African American – illustrated below.. Notice the distance between closest Berber and EuroAmericans is 77+74+59+72+61= 343. While the distance between the farthest Berber and African American is ONLY= 33.
quote:The result is that the position of the African American sample is the least likely to occur the way it is shown there.
Originally posted by Xyyman:
The result - :
quote:[/QB][/QUOTE]
[/qb]
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
This study is old, and was among the articles that led me to conclude historic slave trade excuse was bogus.
quote:Thanks for pointing that out yourself, and debunking yourself, you halfwitted nutcase. This is consistent with everything I've said in this, and other threads.
It should be noted that the most robust branch (*****77%******) in the tree is that SEPERATING NW Africans from Europeans.
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
BTW – Per DNATribes – the 3 population that has the highest percentage of European SNPs are Algerians, Northern Moroccans and Tunisians. This aligns with Henn Data.
quote:prove to me Europeans aren't Negroes
Originally posted by xyyman:
Prove to me Berbers are not Negros
quote:Do I have to summarize? This conclusion points to an ancient African genes flow to Tunisia (a very coastal North African country) before 20,000 BP.
Ancient local evolution of African mtDNA haplogroups in Tunisian Berber populations.
Frigi S, Cherni L, Fadhlaoui-Zid K, Benammar-Elgaaied A.
Source
Laboratory of Molecular Genetics, Immunology, and Human Pathology, Faculty of Sciences of Tunis, University El Manar, 2092 Tunis, Tunisia.
Abstract
Our objective is to highlight the age of sub-Saharan gene flows in North Africa and particularly in Tunisia. Therefore we analyzed in a broad phylogeographic context sub-Saharan mtDNA haplogroups of Tunisian Berber populations considered representative of ancient settlement. More than 2,000 sequences were collected from the literature, and networks were constructed. The results show that the most ancient haplogroup is L3*, which would have been introduced to North Africa from eastern sub-Saharan populations around 20,000 years ago. Our results also point to a less ancient western sub-Saharan gene flow to Tunisia, including haplogroups L2a and L3b. This conclusion points to an ancient African gene flow to Tunisia before 20,000 BP. These findings parallel the more recent findings of both archaeology and linguistics on the prehistory of Africa. The present work suggests that sub-Saharan contributions to North Africa have experienced several complex population processes after the occupation of the region by anatomically modern humans. Our results reveal that Berber speakers have a foundational biogeographic root in Africa and that deep African lineages have continued to evolve in supra-Saharan Africa.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21082907
quote:That is an improper analogy
Originally posted by Amun-Ra The Ultimate:
Same as some people (*cough* Henn *cough*) want to left out ancient black Africans from the North African history!!
Here's again the very restricted samples set used by Henn:
Table S1:
Details of the dataset used in the present study.
Population Sample Size Country Reference
Morocco - North 18 Morocco Present study
Morocco - South 16 Morocco Present study
Saharawi 18 Western Sahara Present study
Algerian 19 Algeria Present study
Tunisian 18 Tunisia Present study
Libyan 17 Libya Present study
Egyptian 19 Egypt Present study
Basques 20 Spain Present study
Tuscans 26 Italy HapMap3
Qatari 30 Qatar Hunter-Zinck et al. 2010
Yoruba 26 Nigeria HapMap3
Hausa 12 Nigeria Bryc et al. 2010
Bulala 15 Nigeria Bryc et al. 2010
Fulani 12 Nigeria Bryc et al. 2010
Luhya 25 Kenya HapMap3
Maasai 30 Kenya HapMap3
Completely absurd for a population structure study.
If we ignore ancient ethnic minority (or not) as done by the Henn study, Native Americans would be left out of history!!!
[/QB]
quote:When you ignore part of the population in such population structure study, it leads to erroneous conclusion.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
And the Henn article is talking about Maghreb popultions not Sahel populations.
quote:Barbara Henn et. al are not talking about the whole history of North Africa. They are talking about the ancestral backgrounds of the current population. the primary components not every tiny trace detail
Originally posted by Amun-Ra The Ultimate:
quote:When you ignore part of the population in such population structure study, it leads to erroneous conclusion.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
[qb]
And the Henn article is talking about Maghreb popultions not Sahel populations.
For example, Henn doesn't see any African DNA in Ancient time!! He concludes there's no such thing in North Africa. He only sees recent African DNA in North Africa. He attribute all non recent middle eastern DNA mutations to some "native" DNA from some ancient West Asian back migration (but isolated from the rest of west Asia for many years, which he calls "likely autochthonous Maghrebi ancestry"). We know better. While the Frigi study shows us that there was indeed Ancient black African presence in North Africa. Which may be part of the genome of modern coastal North Africans and even explain part of the DNA erroneously attributed to some ancient autochthonous Maghrebi DNA!
quote:I clearly just pointed out to you how even part of the coastal North African ancestry (that is part of their DNA) can be erroneously attributed to some "likely autochthonous Maghrebi ancestry" when you ignore the ancient African ancestry in North Africa.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:Barbara Henn et. al are not talking about the whole history of North Africa. They are talking about the ancestral backgrounds of the current population. the primary components not every tiny trace detail
Originally posted by Amun-Ra The Ultimate:
quote:When you ignore part of the population in such population structure study, it leads to erroneous conclusion.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
[qb]
And the Henn article is talking about Maghreb popultions not Sahel populations.
For example, Henn doesn't see any African DNA in Ancient time!! He concludes there's no such thing in North Africa. He only sees recent African DNA in North Africa. He attribute all non recent middle eastern DNA mutations to some "native" DNA from some ancient West Asian back migration (but isolated from the rest of west Asia for many years, which he calls "likely autochthonous Maghrebi ancestry"). We know better. While the Frigi study shows us that there was indeed Ancient black African presence in North Africa. Which may be part of the genome of modern coastal North Africans and even explain part of the DNA erroneously attributed to some ancient autochthonous Maghrebi DNA!
The theme of the study is back-to-Africa migrations not every aspect of Magreb history from the start.
quote:
Originally posted by Amun-Ra The Ultimate:
Here's an abstract to a genetic study xyyman may like:
quote:Do I have to summarize? This conclusion points to an ancient African genes flow to Tunisia (a very coastal North African country) before 20,000 BP.
Ancient local evolution of African mtDNA haplogroups in Tunisian Berber populations.
Frigi S, Cherni L, Fadhlaoui-Zid K, Benammar-Elgaaied A.
Source
Laboratory of Molecular Genetics, Immunology, and Human Pathology, Faculty of Sciences of Tunis, University El Manar, 2092 Tunis, Tunisia.
Abstract
Our objective is to highlight the age of sub-Saharan gene flows in North Africa and particularly in Tunisia. Therefore we analyzed in a broad phylogeographic context sub-Saharan mtDNA haplogroups of Tunisian Berber populations considered representative of ancient settlement. More than 2,000 sequences were collected from the literature, and networks were constructed. The results show that the most ancient haplogroup is L3*, which would have been introduced to North Africa from eastern sub-Saharan populations around 20,000 years ago. Our results also point to a less ancient western sub-Saharan gene flow to Tunisia, including haplogroups L2a and L3b. This conclusion points to an ancient African gene flow to Tunisia before 20,000 BP. These findings parallel the more recent findings of both archaeology and linguistics on the prehistory of Africa. The present work suggests that sub-Saharan contributions to North Africa have experienced several complex population processes after the occupation of the region by anatomically modern humans. Our results reveal that Berber speakers have a foundational biogeographic root in Africa and that deep African lineages have continued to evolve in supra-Saharan Africa.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21082907
That ancient African genes flow to Tunisia was later diluted by many invasions, conquests, and migrations by Phoenicians, Romans, Vandals, Byzantines, Arabs, Bedouins, Spanish, modern Africans, Turks, French, etc.
Notice how they used samples from Berber in Tunisia, Egypt and East African people to draw their conclusion. All samples simply ignored by Henn. You can't do that when you do a population structure study.
As I said in the other thread: That's the reason it's very important to take samples from African (and Berber) people in North Africa in any genetic studies when we want to know about ancient populations. That is it's very important to take samples from every ethnic groups in a region. Even if they now form a minority (or not) due to foreign invasions, migration and admixture. If that Frigi study (the abstract posted above) didn't took samples from those Berber groups in Tunisia, like the Henn did, we wouldn't know that new corroborating information about the African presence in North Africa dating back to 20,000 BP and it's linkage to the eastern Sahara/Sudanic/East Africa region (aka the Saharan-Sahel-Nile Belt).
If we ignore ancient ethnic minority (or not) as done by the Henn study, Native Americans would be left out of history!!!
Same as some people (*cough* Henn *cough*) want to left out ancient black Africans from the North African history!!
Here's again the very restricted samples set used by Henn:
Table S1:
Details of the dataset used in the present study.
Population Sample Size Country Reference
Morocco - North 18 Morocco Present study
Morocco - South 16 Morocco Present study
Saharawi 18 Western Sahara Present study
Algerian 19 Algeria Present study
Tunisian 18 Tunisia Present study
Libyan 17 Libya Present study
Egyptian 19 Egypt Present study
Basques 20 Spain Present study
Tuscans 26 Italy HapMap3
Qatari 30 Qatar Hunter-Zinck et al. 2010
Yoruba 26 Nigeria HapMap3
Hausa 12 Nigeria Bryc et al. 2010
Bulala 15 Nigeria Bryc et al. 2010
Fulani 12 Nigeria Bryc et al. 2010
Luhya 25 Kenya HapMap3
Maasai 30 Kenya HapMap3
Completely absurd for a population structure study.
quote:Indeed one must look at the population as a WHOLE. Most of the folks shown here are obviously from the coastal areas and even then, they still look mixed or 'mulatto' types. Of course there are peoples in southern Tunisia that are less mixed and blacker in appearance as Doug M. has shown in his pictures of Tunisians.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
what is the ancestry of Tunisians when you look at the whole popualtion and average it?
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xyyman thinks on average Tunisians are primarily African but I suspect that dana believes they are not
This type of thing can confuse parrots
quote:Yes and hg H's sister clade hg V is also bicontinental with hg V having a similar distribution range as H and V showing higher frequencies in North Africa than in Europe and particularly in the Tunisian region as well.
Originally posted by xyyman:
Check!!(not mate..as yet) on ESR. MtDNA hg-H is now bicontinental. H* and H3 are Tunisian but H1 is European. Go figure.
quote:No one would sat the modern nation of Egypt is somewhat Chinese in ancestry.
Originally posted by Djehuti:
IIndeed one must look at the population as a WHOLE. Most of the folks shown here are obviously from the coastal areas and even then, they still look mixed or 'mulatto' types. Of course there are peoples in southern Tunisia that are less mixed and blacker in appearance as Doug M. has shown in his pictures of Tunisians.
Still what modern Tunisians look like has little bearing on how their prehistoric ancestors looked and I seriously doubt they were anything like the light-skinned coastal types today. [/QB]
quote:you are not really understanding xyyman. He says these types, who are very common in the Maghreb ARE primarily indigenous. No more debate, he can speak for himself and clarify. He has said it many times on recent threads.
Originally posted by Djehuti:
^ Yes and we know that even less than 10% ancestry from a different group can influence phenotype. So if this is some attempt to prove 'mulatto' or even white types are indigenous to Africa, it ain't working and that's not what Xyman ever claimed.
quote:I understand clearly what Xyyman is saying and really what he says is not news because folks have been saying the same thing for years now. YES Maghrebis are primarily of African descent but not solely hence their mixed appearance. So don't spin and twist, worm.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
you are not really understanding xyyman. He says these types, who are very common in the Maghreb ARE primarily indigenous. No more debate, he can speak for himself and clarify. He has said it many times on recent threads.
If what he is saying is true your terminolgy "white" or "mulatto" may be irrelevant.
quote:LOL Your comparison of modern Maghrebis with ancient Western Desert Egyptians with faded paint holds no value.
![]()
quote:Depends on what you mean by 'African'. All humans are biologically African but not all populations are ethnically African. And not all ethnic Africans have Eurasian ancestry the way Maghrebis do even if primarily their ancestry is African.
everybody's African
quote:Interesting post man. But I thought the Sardinians were African...
Originally posted by xyyman:
Since there are one or two who can follow.. let’s continue. Back to the study.
I assume they write this with the belief that there aren’t any black people or objective white people who can understand this stuff. Admittedly it took me a few years to get it. There are some gems in the study ie dead give away. Talk about a play on words. Damn these people are crafty. Let’s point them out. I hope Dienkess is reading this…..
Quote:
The Nuragic populations appear to be part of a large and geographically unstructured cluster of modern European populations, thus making it difficult to infer their evolutionary relationships. However, the low levels of genetic diversity, both within and among ancient samples, as opposed to the sharp differences among modern Sardinian samples, support the hypothesis of the expansion of a small group of maternally related individuals,
a
Translation: That is an outright lie. They hinted at an evolutionary relation ship within the study. They cannot suggest northern Europe because there was no comparable civilization north of Sardinia in Europe. Thus they chose Iberia. Avoiding the geographically closest region ie North Africa, which had a similar civilization. In addition what they are saying is these people later EXPANDED into Europe.
Quote:
The population of Sardinia is one of the main European genetic outliers. When compared with populations from all over the world, Sardinians are clearly part of a European genetic cluster. However, they differ sharply from their European and Italian neighbours, SO MUCH SO that they are often excluded from multivariate analyses, lest all other European samples appear identical in comparison and Y-chromosome haplotypes that are rare elsewhere in Europe occur at higher frequencies in Sardinia, and an extensive linkage disequilibrium has been described for autosomal markers. In addition, unusually strong genetic differences are observed among Sardinian communities, both for allele-frequency polymorphisms.
Translation: Sardinians sub-stratum is not European. They are North Africans. Another example of Europeans, yet again, stealing ancient African civilization as their own.
Quote: .
These two sequences find no match in comparisons with 92 Africanfrican samples EITHER (data not given). Six haplotypes are shared between modern and ancient Sardinians, representing 61% of the ancient individuals
Translation: strange choice of words…”EITHER” plus, “data not shown” . Looks like they are trying to prove no connection with Africa. Although the data clearly shows a connection.
Quote:
All outliers are either populations separated by large geographic distances from the other Europeans ([mainly North Africans and Central Asians), or well-known.
Translation: This is an outright lie. Did they look at a world map and calculated geographic distances? Maybe they thought we wouldn’t. Lioness I know you are mathematically challenge. See notes on Fig 3. the CIRCLE – These European regions are further from Sardinia than North Africa. Estonia, Iceland, Holland, Switzland, etc What is astonishing is they included North African Berbers as Europeans to bring the overall European group closer to the Nuragic. After initially admitting the Sardinians are outliers compared to other Europeans. Man, talk about manipulating data.
Quote:
In the multidimensional scaling of Fig. 3, Nuragic Sardinians cluster with the majority of the European populations. Given the small sample size, inevitable in ancient DNA studies, it is at present impossible to infer their evolutionary relationships from mtDNA aYnities. Nevertheless, in relation with ancient samples, Nuragic Sardinians appear more related to the Iberians than to the Etruscans, whose position in the graph is eccentric. Three data points are not enough for a robust generalisation. However, one can at least conclude that Sardinians and Iberians show a greater genealogical continuity with the Bronze-Age inhabitants of the same regions than the Tuscans. To better understand the processes leading to these differences it will be necessary to genetically characterise people who lived in those areas between 2,000 years ago and the present time.
Translation: Enough said, according to the authors they were probably Iberians migrants. Although using the same yardstick …they should be classified as North Africans migrants.
There you have it….any challengers?????
quote:What about this part?
Originally posted by xyyman:
Flawed??? Henn study is not flawed. The title is an attention grabber....sensationalism. That's all. She concluded that NAians has no recent admixture with "Middle East" . Recent - less 500y. If there was any admixture it was over 40,000ya!!!!
quote:the gap between 30K and 12k is 18K
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
What about this part?
"The indigenous North African ancestry may have been more common in Berber populations and appears most closely related to populations outside of Africa, but divergence between Maghrebi peoples and Near Eastern/Europeans likely precedes the Holocene (>12,000 ya)."
^^^What they are saying is since before the Holocene Period, the general overall population of North Africa has remained basically unchanged. Yet we know that before the Holocene that North Africans did not look like modern day North Africans...Especially 30k years ago, with proof with Nazlet Khater Man.
quote:The region they were studying is the Maghreb region including the Atlas Mountains and the coastal plains of Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, and Libya, over 90% of the population of these countries lives near the coast. Their DNA is different from the Sahelains who are much more West African in ancestry. Look at the two photos of groups of protesters in Tunia a few posts back. many of the average Tunisans look mulatto.
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
What do they mean with recent Sub Saharan ancestry? The term Sub Saharan itself is a flawed term, since Africans were traveling back and forth. They seem to be trying to separate North Africa from Africa. I know that the suppose Sub Saharan Africans were enslaved in North Africa, but the most ancient MtDNA Hg in Tunisia is 'sub Saharan' African L3.
Also in the study they seem to only focus on the coastal parts of North Africa. [/QB]
quote:E-M81 is the most common Y-chromosome haplogroup in the Maghreb, dominated by its subclade E-M183. It is thought to have originated in the area of North Africa 5,600 years ago. This haplogroup reaches a mean frequency of 42% in North Africa, decreasing in frequency from approximately 80% or more in some Moroccan Berber populations, including Saharawis, to approximately 10% to the east of this range in Egypt. Because of its prevalence among these groups and also others such as Mozabite, Middle Atlas, Kabyle and other Berber groups, it is sometimes referred to as a genetic "Berber marker".
Originally posted by Amun-Ra The Ultimate[
quote:^ that study is based on lies, an accumulation of lies!
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
quote:What about this part?
Originally posted by xyyman:
Flawed??? Henn study is not flawed. The title is an attention grabber....sensationalism. That's all. She concluded that NAians has no recent admixture with "Middle East" . Recent - less 500y. If there was any admixture it was over 40,000ya!!!!
"The indigenous North African ancestry may have been more common in Berber populations and appears most closely related to populations outside of Africa, but divergence between Maghrebi peoples and Near Eastern/Europeans likely precedes the Holocene (>12,000 ya)."
""We also find significant signatures of sub-Saharan African ancestry that vary substantially among populations. These sub-Saharan ancestries appear to be a recent introduction into North African populations, dating to about 1,200 years ago in southern Morocco and about 750 years ago into Egypt, possibly reflecting the patterns of the trans-Saharan slave trade that occurred during this period"
^^^What they are saying is since before the Holocene Period, the general overall population of North Africa has remained basically unchanged. Yet we know that before the Holocene that North Africans did not look like modern day North Africans...Especially 30k years ago, with proof with Nazlet Khater Man.
What do they mean with recent Sub Saharan ancestry? The term Sub Saharan itself is a flawed term, since Africans were traveling back and forth. They seem to be trying to separate North Africa from Africa. I know that the suppose Sub Saharan Africans were enslaved in North Africa, but the most ancient MtDNA Hg in Tunisia is 'sub Saharan' African L3.
Also in the study they seem to only focus on the coastal parts of North Africa.
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:the gap between 30K and 12k is 18K
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
What about this part?
"The indigenous North African ancestry may have been more common in Berber populations and appears most closely related to populations outside of Africa, but divergence between Maghrebi peoples and Near Eastern/Europeans likely precedes the Holocene (>12,000 ya)."
^^^What they are saying is since before the Holocene Period, the general overall population of North Africa has remained basically unchanged. Yet we know that before the Holocene that North Africans did not look like modern day North Africans...Especially 30k years ago, with proof with Nazlet Khater Man.
quote:The region they were studying is the Maghreb region including the Atlas Mountains and the coastal plains of Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, and Libya, over 90% of the population of these countries lives near the coast. Their DNA is different from the Sahelains who are much more West African in ancestry. Look at the two photos of groups of protesters in Tunia a few posts back. many of the average Tunisans look mulatto.
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
What do they mean with recent Sub Saharan ancestry? The term Sub Saharan itself is a flawed term, since Africans were traveling back and forth. They seem to be trying to separate North Africa from Africa. I know that the suppose Sub Saharan Africans were enslaved in North Africa, but the most ancient MtDNA Hg in Tunisia is 'sub Saharan' African L3.
Also in the study they seem to only focus on the coastal parts of North Africa.
From another article Amun-Ra posted you've seen before.
Note each haplogroup and the percentages
quote:E-M81 is the most common Y-chromosome haplogroup in the Maghreb, dominated by its subclade E-M183. It is thought to have originated in the area of North Africa 5,600 years ago. This haplogroup reaches a mean frequency of 42% in North Africa, decreasing in frequency from approximately 80% or more in some Moroccan Berber populations, including Saharawis, to approximately 10% to the east of this range in Egypt. Because of its prevalence among these groups and also others such as Mozabite, Middle Atlas, Kabyle and other Berber groups, it is sometimes referred to as a genetic "Berber marker". [/QB]
Originally posted by Amun-Ra The Ultimate[
quote:But still the coastal region is not all of North Africa. And back then I doubt that was the region of North Africa that was mostly populated. There wasn't always a Sahara desert.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:the gap between 30K and 12k is 18K
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
What about this part?
"The indigenous North African ancestry may have been more common in Berber populations and appears most closely related to populations outside of Africa, but divergence between Maghrebi peoples and Near Eastern/Europeans likely precedes the Holocene (>12,000 ya)."
^^^What they are saying is since before the Holocene Period, the general overall population of North Africa has remained basically unchanged. Yet we know that before the Holocene that North Africans did not look like modern day North Africans...Especially 30k years ago, with proof with Nazlet Khater Man.
quote:The region they were studying is the Maghreb region including the Atlas Mountains and the coastal plains of Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, and Libya, over 90% of the population of these countries lives near the coast. Their DNA is different from the Sahelains who are much more West African in ancestry. Look at the two photos of groups of protesters in Tunia a few posts back. many of the average Tunisans look mulatto.
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
What do they mean with recent Sub Saharan ancestry? The term Sub Saharan itself is a flawed term, since Africans were traveling back and forth. They seem to be trying to separate North Africa from Africa. I know that the suppose Sub Saharan Africans were enslaved in North Africa, but the most ancient MtDNA Hg in Tunisia is 'sub Saharan' African L3.
Also in the study they seem to only focus on the coastal parts of North Africa.
From another article Amun-Ra posted you've seen before.
Note each haplogroup and the percentages
quote:E-M81 is the most common Y-chromosome haplogroup in the Maghreb, dominated by its subclade E-M183. It is thought to have originated in the area of North Africa 5,600 years ago. This haplogroup reaches a mean frequency of 42% in North Africa, decreasing in frequency from approximately 80% or more in some Moroccan Berber populations, including Saharawis, to approximately 10% to the east of this range in Egypt. Because of its prevalence among these groups and also others such as Mozabite, Middle Atlas, Kabyle and other Berber groups, it is sometimes referred to as a genetic "Berber marker". [/QB]
Originally posted by Amun-Ra The Ultimate[
quote:Can you mind telling how the study is based on lies? Just asking.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
quote:^ that study is based on lies, an accumulation of lies!
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
quote:What about this part?
Originally posted by xyyman:
Flawed??? Henn study is not flawed. The title is an attention grabber....sensationalism. That's all. She concluded that NAians has no recent admixture with "Middle East" . Recent - less 500y. If there was any admixture it was over 40,000ya!!!!
"The indigenous North African ancestry may have been more common in Berber populations and appears most closely related to populations outside of Africa, but divergence between Maghrebi peoples and Near Eastern/Europeans likely precedes the Holocene (>12,000 ya)."
""We also find significant signatures of sub-Saharan African ancestry that vary substantially among populations. These sub-Saharan ancestries appear to be a recent introduction into North African populations, dating to about 1,200 years ago in southern Morocco and about 750 years ago into Egypt, possibly reflecting the patterns of the trans-Saharan slave trade that occurred during this period"
^^^What they are saying is since before the Holocene Period, the general overall population of North Africa has remained basically unchanged. Yet we know that before the Holocene that North Africans did not look like modern day North Africans...Especially 30k years ago, with proof with Nazlet Khater Man.
What do they mean with recent Sub Saharan ancestry? The term Sub Saharan itself is a flawed term, since Africans were traveling back and forth. They seem to be trying to separate North Africa from Africa. I know that the suppose Sub Saharan Africans were enslaved in North Africa, but the most ancient MtDNA Hg in Tunisia is 'sub Saharan' African L3.
Also in the study they seem to only focus on the coastal parts of North Africa.
![]()
quote:http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2515196/pdf/pone.0002995.pdf
Approximately two hundred human burials were discovered on the edge of a paleolake in Niger that provide a uniquely preserved record of human occupation in the Sahara during the Holocene ( approximately 8000 B.C.E. to the present). Called Gobero, this suite of closely spaced sites chronicles the rapid pace of biosocial change in the southern Sahara in response to severe climatic fluctuation.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS:
Two main occupational phases are identified that correspond with humid intervals in the early and mid-Holocene, based on 78 direct AMS radiocarbon dates on human remains, fauna and artifacts, as well as 9 OSL dates on paleodune sand. The older occupants have craniofacial dimensions that demonstrate similarities with mid-Holocene occupants of the southern Sahara and Late Pleistocene to early Holocene inhabitants of the Maghreb. Their hyperflexed burials compose the earliest cemetery in the Sahara dating to approximately 7500 B.C.E. These early occupants abandon the area under arid conditions and, when humid conditions return approximately 4600 B.C.E., are replaced by a more gracile people with elaborated grave goods including animal bone and ivory ornaments.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE:
The principal significance of Gobero lies in its extraordinary human, faunal, and archaeological record, from which we conclude the following: The early Holocene occupants at Gobero (7700-6200 B.C.E.) were largely sedentary hunter-fisher-gatherers with lakeside funerary sites that include the earliest recorded cemetery in the Sahara. Principal components analysis of craniometric variables closely allies the early Holocene occupants at Gobero with a skeletally robust, trans-Saharan assemblage of Late Pleistocene to mid-Holocene human populations from the Maghreb and southern Sahara.Gobero was abandoned during a period of severe aridification possibly as long as one millennium (6200-5200 B.C.E).More gracile humans arrived in the mid-Holocene (5200-2500 B.C.E.) employing a diversified subsistence economy based on clams, fish, and savanna vertebrates as well as some cattle husbandry. Population replacement after a harsh arid hiatus is the most likely explanation for the occupational sequence at Gobero.We are just beginning to understand the anatomical and cultural diversity that existed within the Sahara during the Holocene.
quote:Am J Phys Anthropol. 2011 Sep;146(1):49-61. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.21542.
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
quote:Can you mind telling how the study is based on lies? Just asking.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
quote:^ that study is based on lies, an accumulation of lies!
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
quote:What about this part?
Originally posted by xyyman:
Flawed??? Henn study is not flawed. The title is an attention grabber....sensationalism. That's all. She concluded that NAians has no recent admixture with "Middle East" . Recent - less 500y. If there was any admixture it was over 40,000ya!!!!
"The indigenous North African ancestry may have been more common in Berber populations and appears most closely related to populations outside of Africa, but divergence between Maghrebi peoples and Near Eastern/Europeans likely precedes the Holocene (>12,000 ya)."
""We also find significant signatures of sub-Saharan African ancestry that vary substantially among populations. These sub-Saharan ancestries appear to be a recent introduction into North African populations, dating to about 1,200 years ago in southern Morocco and about 750 years ago into Egypt, possibly reflecting the patterns of the trans-Saharan slave trade that occurred during this period"
^^^What they are saying is since before the Holocene Period, the general overall population of North Africa has remained basically unchanged. Yet we know that before the Holocene that North Africans did not look like modern day North Africans...Especially 30k years ago, with proof with Nazlet Khater Man.
What do they mean with recent Sub Saharan ancestry? The term Sub Saharan itself is a flawed term, since Africans were traveling back and forth. They seem to be trying to separate North Africa from Africa. I know that the suppose Sub Saharan Africans were enslaved in North Africa, but the most ancient MtDNA Hg in Tunisia is 'sub Saharan' African L3.
Also in the study they seem to only focus on the coastal parts of North Africa.
![]()
quote:
When they arrived at Gobero, the Tuareg name they gave to the site, Garcea picked up one potsherd with a “pointillistic pattern” and recognized the markings to be from a nomadic herding culture known as the Tenerians.
quote:http://anthropology.msu.edu/anp363-ss13/2013/02/06/the-lost-tribes-of-the-green-sahara/
Through radiocarbon dating, they were able to roughly estimate the age of each skeleton and learned that the “tightly bundled burials” were about 9,000 years old, which is around the time archaeologists believe the Kiffian were in this area, while the smaller skeletons were about 6,000 years old, which is “well within the Tenerian period.”
quote:--Late Pleistocene Human Occupation of Northwest Africa: A Crosscheck of Chronology and Climate Change in Morocco
Regular Middle Paleolithic inventories as well as Middle Paleolithic inventories of Aterian type have a long chronology in Morocco going back to MIS 6 and are interstratified in some sites. Their potential for detecting chrono-cultural patterns is low. The transition from the Middle to Upper Paleolithic, here termed Early Upper Paleolithic—at between 30 to 20 ka—remains a most enigmatic era. Scarce data from this period requires careful and fundamental reconsidering of human presence. By integrating environmental data in the reconstruction of population dynamics, clear correlations become obvious. High resolution data are lacking before 20 ka, and at some sites this period is characterized by the occurrence of sterile layers between Middle Paleolithic deposits, possibly indicative of a very low presence of humans in Morocco. After Heinrich Event 1, there is an enormous increase of data due to the prominent Late Iberomaurusian deposits that contrast strongly with the foregoing accumulations in terms of sedimentological features, fauna, and artifact composition. The Younger Dryas again shows a remarkable decline of data marking the end of the Paleolithic. Environmental improvements in the Holocene are associated with an extensive Epipaleolithic occupation. Therefore, the late glacial cultural sequence of Morocco is a good test case for analyzing the interrelationship of culture and climate change.
quote:--On the industrial attributions of the Aterian and Mousterian of the Maghreb, Harold L. Dibble et al.
North Africa is quickly emerging as one of the more important regions yielding information on the origins of modern Homo sapiens. Associated with significant fossil hominin remains are two stone tool industries, the Aterian and Mousterian, which have been differentiated, respectively, primarily on the basis of the presence and absence of tanged, or stemmed, stone tools. Largely because of historical reasons, these two industries have been attributed to the western Eurasian Middle Paleolithic rather than the African Middle Stone Age. In this paper, drawing on our recent excavation of Contrebandiers Cave and other published data, we show that, aside from the presence or absence of tanged pieces, there are no other distinctions between these two industries in terms of either lithic attributes or chronology. Together, these results demonstrate that these two ‘industries’ are instead variants of the same entity. Moreover, several additional characteristics of these assemblages, such as distinctive stone implements and the manufacture and use of bone tools and possible shell ornaments, suggest a closer affinity to other Late Pleistocene African Middle Stone Age industries rather than to the Middle Paleolithic of western Eurasia.
quote:They are collecting modern DNA from the Maghrebian countries and then theorizing the ancestral lineage of that DNA for an averaged person form that region.
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
But still the coastal region is not all of North Africa. And back then I doubt that was the region of North Africa that was mostly populated. There wasn't always a Sahara desert. [/QB]
quote:--A history of the Maghrib in the Islamic period, By Jamil M. Abun-Nasr, Cambridge University Press, 1987 - page 5.
..."it is important to bear in mind that over the centuries the Maghreb has been a melting-pot of many other ethnic groups and cultures"
quote:--Coudray et al. 2009; Fadhlaoui-Zid et al. 2004; Khodjet-el-Khil et al. 2008
It is interesting that these “non-African”mtDNA lineages are usually predominant while being diverse
quote:--Fadhlaoui-Zid et al. 2004
"During historic times, Berbers experienced a long and complicated history with many invasions, conquests, and migrations by Phoenicians, Romans, Vandals, Byzantines, Arabs, Bedouins, Spanish, Turks, Andalusians, sub-Saharans (communities settled in Jerba and Gabes in the 16th–19th centuries), and French (Brett and Fentress 1996). During these invasions, Berbers were forced back to the mountains and to certain villages in southern Tunisia"
quote:--Late Pleistocene Human Occupation of Northwest Africa: A Crosscheck of Chronology and Climate Change in Morocco
Regular Middle Paleolithic inventories as well as Middle Paleolithic inventories of Aterian type have a long chronology in Morocco going back to MIS 6 and are interstratified in some sites. Their potential for detecting chrono-cultural patterns is low. The transition from the Middle to Upper Paleolithic, here termed Early Upper Paleolithic—at between 30 to 20 ka—remains a most enigmatic era. Scarce data from this period requires careful and fundamental reconsidering of human presence. By integrating environmental data in the reconstruction of population dynamics, clear correlations become obvious. High resolution data are lacking before 20 ka, and at some sites this period is characterized by the occurrence of sterile layers between Middle Paleolithic deposits, possibly indicative of a very low presence of humans in Morocco. After Heinrich Event 1, there is an enormous increase of data due to the prominent Late Iberomaurusian deposits that contrast strongly with the foregoing accumulations in terms of sedimentological features, fauna, and artifact composition. The Younger Dryas again shows a remarkable decline of data marking the end of the Paleolithic. Environmental improvements in the Holocene are associated with an extensive Epipaleolithic occupation. Therefore, the late glacial cultural sequence of Morocco is a good test case for analyzing the interrelationship of culture and climate change.
quote:--On the industrial attributions of the Aterian and Mousterian of the Maghreb, Harold L. Dibble et al.
North Africa is quickly emerging as one of the more important regions yielding information on the origins of modern Homo sapiens. Associated with significant fossil hominin remains are two stone tool industries, the Aterian and Mousterian, which have been differentiated, respectively, primarily on the basis of the presence and absence of tanged, or stemmed, stone tools. Largely because of historical reasons, these two industries have been attributed to the western Eurasian Middle Paleolithic rather than the African Middle Stone Age. In this paper, drawing on our recent excavation of Contrebandiers Cave and other published data, we show that, aside from the presence or absence of tanged pieces, there are no other distinctions between these two industries in terms of either lithic attributes or chronology. Together, these results demonstrate that these two ‘industries’ are instead variants of the same entity. Moreover, several additional characteristics of these assemblages, such as distinctive stone implements and the manufacture and use of bone tools and possible shell ornaments, suggest a closer affinity to other Late Pleistocene African Middle Stone Age industries rather than to the Middle Paleolithic of western Eurasia.
quote:put up a quote from the Henn article which states the Maghreb has been Eurasian of 30K years
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
^^^I believe it debunks the claim of the Maghreb being Eurasian for 30k years. [/QB]
quote:when you say "we can move on form there" does that mean you will answer the question:
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
^. I first want you to answer my questions, we can move on from there.
quote:Read the other posts on anthropology.
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
@Troll Patrol
Man good posts.
But where did you get this map from?
^^^I believe it debunks the claim of the Maghreb being Eurasian for 30k years.
quote:I didn't say the Hen study said that.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:put up a quote from the Henn article which states the Maghreb has been Eurasian of 30K years
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
^^^I believe it debunks the claim of the Maghreb being Eurasian for 30k years.
In other words what claim? [/QB]
quote:First answer my questions, we can take it on from there. Further more, consult the posts prior to this one. It's helpful! LOL
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:when you say "we can move on form there" does that mean you will answer the question:
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
^. I first want you to answer my questions, we can move on from there.
" Is the average Maghrebian today primarily of African descent?
yes or no"
quote:--Frigi et al.
Our results reveal that Berber speakers have a foundational biogeographic root in Africa and that deep African lineages have continued to evolve in supra- Saharan Africa.
quote:then where is the claim coming from?
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
quote:I didn't say the Hen study said that. [/QB]
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:put up a quote from the Henn article which states the Maghreb has been Eurasian of 30K years
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
^^^I believe it debunks the claim of the Maghreb being Eurasian for 30k years.
In other words what claim?
quote:I just mentioned it. Don't you remember me making a thread on this subject?
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:then where is the claim coming from? [/QB]
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
quote:I didn't say the Hen study said that.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:put up a quote from the Henn article which states the Maghreb has been Eurasian of 30K years
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
^^^I believe it debunks the claim of the Maghreb being Eurasian for 30k years.
In other words what claim?
quote:Yes, that is indeed what some have claimed, un-fundamentally. And I have just cited at least two sources, which dismiss all their claims.
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
quote:I just mentioned it. Don't you remember me making a thread on this subject? [/QB]
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:then where is the claim coming from?
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
quote:I didn't say the Hen study said that.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:put up a quote from the Henn article which states the Maghreb has been Eurasian of 30K years
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
^^^I believe it debunks the claim of the Maghreb being Eurasian for 30k years.
In other words what claim?
quote:I noticed that too. I always asked how did those suppose 'Eurasian' in the Maghreb 30k years ago look like, yet no one can post any fossil records.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
quote:Yes, that is indeed what some have claimed, un-fundamentally. And I have just cited at least two sources, which dismiss all their claims.
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
quote:I just mentioned it. Don't you remember me making a thread on this subject?
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:then where is the claim coming from?
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
quote:I didn't say the Hen study said that.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:put up a quote from the Henn article which states the Maghreb has been Eurasian of 30K years
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
^^^I believe it debunks the claim of the Maghreb being Eurasian for 30k years.
In other words what claim?
The troll Lion'ass knows. Because the troll has cited from these studies last year. When I asked for archeological site scenes and fossil records. There was none. [/QB]
quote:what is called " Northwest African" here is distinct from other African populations.
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
[qb] @Lioness.
I know the average person in the Maghreb is not African and they have mixed origins, but their origins is primary African I believe. Since Africans were the first people in the Maghreb with proof of the Aterian culture. And note this...
BERBERS are predominately ''African'' in admixture and remain an indigenous African group.
Nuclear DNA
Note that Moroccans are the Berbers with the most ‘’Eurasian’’ admixture.
Moroccans = 62% African + 38% Eurasian (20% Asian + 18% European)
41.3% Northwest African
17.9% Mediterranean
16.2% Southwest Asian
14.6% West African
05.6% East African
03.6% Caucasus
00.4% South Asian
00.1% Far East
00.1% Siberian
00.1% Northern European
00.1% Southeast Asian
Source:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/lv?key=0ArJDEoCgzRKedGdRbkxKMDdlZkJWc21tdkpldWxwVmc&type=view&gid=0&f=true&colid0=1&filterstr0=Moroccans&sortcolid=-1&sortasc=true&rowsperpage=2 50
http://www.eupedia.com/images/content/African-admixture.gif [/b]
quote:How would you sum up in a couple of sentences why the study is flawed?
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
But what I really want to know in full details how the Henn study is flawed and I believe Troll Patrol showed me that.
quote:^^^ what is the source here?
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
BERBERS are predominately ''African'' in admixture and remain an indigenous African group.
Nuclear DNA
Note that Moroccans are the Berbers with the most ‘’Eurasian’’ admixture.
Moroccans = 62% African + 38% Eurasian (20% Asian + 18% European)
41.3% Northwest African
17.9% Mediterranean
16.2% Southwest Asian
14.6% West African
05.6% East African
03.6% Caucasus
00.4% South Asian
00.1% Far East
00.1% Siberian
00.1% Northern European
00.1% Southeast Asian
Source:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/lv?key=0ArJDEoCgzRKedGdRbkxKMDdlZkJWc21tdkpldWxwVmc&type=view&gid=0&f=true&colid0=1&filterstr0=Moroccans&sortcolid=-1&sortasc=true&rowsperpage=2 50
http://www.eupedia.com/images/content/African-admixture.gif
quote:Northwest African is still African. And that study was a Nuclear DNA study.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:what is called " Northwest African" here is distinct from other African populations.
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
[qb] @Lioness.
I know the average person in the Maghreb is not African and they have mixed origins, but their origins is primary African I believe. Since Africans were the first people in the Maghreb with proof of the Aterian culture. And note this...
BERBERS are predominately ''African'' in admixture and remain an indigenous African group.
Nuclear DNA
Note that Moroccans are the Berbers with the most ‘’Eurasian’’ admixture.
Moroccans = 62% African + 38% Eurasian (20% Asian + 18% European)
41.3% Northwest African
17.9% Mediterranean
16.2% Southwest Asian
14.6% West African
05.6% East African
03.6% Caucasus
00.4% South Asian
00.1% Far East
00.1% Siberian
00.1% Northern European
00.1% Southeast Asian
Source:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/lv?key=0ArJDEoCgzRKedGdRbkxKMDdlZkJWc21tdkpldWxwVmc&type=view&gid=0&f=true&colid0=1&filterstr0=Moroccans&sortcolid=-1&sortasc=true&rowsperpage=2 50
http://www.eupedia.com/images/content/African-admixture.gif [/b]
It is characterized by hg M81 which is believed to be 5,600 years old.
quote:How would you sum up in a couple of sentences why the study is flawed?
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
But what I really want to know in full details how the Henn study is flawed and I believe Troll Patrol showed me that.
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
How would you sum up in a couple of sentences why the study is flawed?
quote:
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
I already posted why I felt the Henn study had its flaws.
quote:
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
Can you mind telling how the study is based on lies? Just asking.
quote:
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
I believe Troll Patrol showed me that.
quote:Of course it is distinct, since it is predominantly and solely Northwest African. Just like Northeast Africa is distinct. I have posted this abundant info in previous posts. For some funny reason you act as if you haven't seen it.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:what is called " Northwest African" here is distinct from other African populations.
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
[qb] @Lioness.
I know the average person in the Maghreb is not African and they have mixed origins, but their origins is primary African I believe. Since Africans were the first people in the Maghreb with proof of the Aterian culture. And note this...
BERBERS are predominately ''African'' in admixture and remain an indigenous African group.
Nuclear DNA
Note that Moroccans are the Berbers with the most ‘’Eurasian’’ admixture.
Moroccans = 62% African + 38% Eurasian (20% Asian + 18% European)
41.3% Northwest African
17.9% Mediterranean
16.2% Southwest Asian
14.6% West African
05.6% East African
03.6% Caucasus
00.4% South Asian
00.1% Far East
00.1% Siberian
00.1% Northern European
00.1% Southeast Asian
Source:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/lv?key=0ArJDEoCgzRKedGdRbkxKMDdlZkJWc21tdkpldWxwVmc&type=view&gid=0&f=true&colid0=1&filterstr0=Moroccans&sortcolid=-1&sortasc=true&rowsperpage=2 50
http://www.eupedia.com/images/content/African-admixture.gif [/b]
It is characterized by hg M81 which is believed to be 5,600 years old.
quote:How would you sum up in a couple of sentences why the study is flawed?
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
But what I really want to know in full details how the Henn study is flawed and I believe Troll Patrol showed me that.
quote:This first link...
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:^^^ what is the source here?
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
BERBERS are predominately ''African'' in admixture and remain an indigenous African group.
Nuclear DNA
Note that Moroccans are the Berbers with the most ‘’Eurasian’’ admixture.
Moroccans = 62% African + 38% Eurasian (20% Asian + 18% European)
41.3% Northwest African
17.9% Mediterranean
16.2% Southwest Asian
14.6% West African
05.6% East African
03.6% Caucasus
00.4% South Asian
00.1% Far East
00.1% Siberian
00.1% Northern European
00.1% Southeast Asian
Source:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/lv?key=0ArJDEoCgzRKedGdRbkxKMDdlZkJWc21tdkpldWxwVmc&type=view&gid=0&f=true&colid0=1&filterstr0=Moroccans&sortcolid=-1&sortasc=true&rowsperpage=2 50
http://www.eupedia.com/images/content/African-admixture.gif
quote:read my post to xyyman.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
How would you sum up in a couple of sentences why the study is flawed?quote:
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
I already posted why I felt the Henn study had its flaws.quote:
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
Can you mind telling how the study is based on lies? Just asking.quote:
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
I believe Troll Patrol showed me that.
quote:
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
What do they mean with recent Sub Saharan ancestry? The term Sub Saharan itself is a flawed term, since Africans were traveling back and forth. They seem to be trying to separate North Africa from Africa.
quote:
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
Of course it is distinct, since it is predominantly and solely Northwest African. Just like Northeast Africa is distinct.
quote:You have an inability to state concisely what the major flaws are.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
I have shown that the "study" is flawed. It's based on assumptions and "suggestions". Hence, why you haven't shown any of the supposed fossil records and site scenes.
quote:Usually when Saharans speaks of having Arab ancestry it's Yemenis/ South Arabians.
Originally posted by xyyman:
The Henn study was dissected every which way already...8 pages. Emotions aside...the Henn study agrees more or less with the DNATribes Feb report. Yes, there is a genetic connection between South Arabians and Saharans. Notice I and she did not say extant Levantines. I have no idea what these people look like. An educated guess...the indigenous people of Arabia are black....why...latitude. Southern Arabia is an extension of Africa. South Saharans to the south and Saharans to the North. Of course there is no "barrier" in Africa and Arabia between both groups. However the south arabians do have substantial admixture with Levantines which is NOT found in Saharans.
![]()
quote:I posted about the inconsistencies and flawed ways, of her rubbish claims, telling the world how there was no connection between "sub-Saharans/ Saharans and North Africa. But you are too dumb to understand anything. Then you have the nerve to call someone else a "troll". When in fact you're the impersonation of the main troll.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
What do they mean with recent Sub Saharan ancestry? The term Sub Saharan itself is a flawed term, since Africans were traveling back and forth. They seem to be trying to separate North Africa from Africa.quote:
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
Of course it is distinct, since it is predominantly and solely Northwest African. Just like Northeast Africa is distinct.quote:You have an inability to state concisely what the major flaws are.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
I have shown that the "study" is flawed. It's based on assumptions and "suggestions". Hence, why you haven't shown any of the supposed fossil records and site scenes.
Instead you throw up a lot of copy and paste.
I don't blame Son of Ra he probably thought 'look at all this multiple post info Troll put up', he must have proven the flaws somewhere.
Yet when asked he couldn't sum up the flaws in a couple of sentences.
The is a difference between putting up data and processing the meaning of the data
I blame you Troll
quote:
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
I posted about the inconsistencies and flawed ways, of her rubbish claims,
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
Flawed??? Henn study is not flawed.
quote:wait a minute, isn't your first name Troll ?
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
Then you have the nerve to call someone else a "troll".
quote:
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
Usually when Saharans """speaks""" of having Arab ancestry it's Yemenis/ South Arabians.
quote:First off, the name is "Troll Patrol" . You say/ write it whole. Like "A Tribe Called Quest", like Michael Jackson".
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
I posted about the inconsistencies and flawed ways, of her rubbish claims,quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
Flawed??? Henn study is not flawed.quote:wait a minute, isn't your first name Troll ?
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
Then you have the nerve to call someone else a "troll".
quote:--Late Pleistocene Human Occupation of Northwest Africa: A Crosscheck of Chronology and Climate Change in Morocco
Regular Middle Paleolithic inventories as well as Middle Paleolithic inventories of Aterian type have a long chronology in Morocco going back to MIS 6 and are interstratified in some sites. Their potential for detecting chrono-cultural patterns is low. The transition from the Middle to Upper Paleolithic, here termed Early Upper Paleolithic—at between 30 to 20 ka—remains a most enigmatic era. Scarce data from this period requires careful and fundamental reconsidering of human presence. By integrating environmental data in the reconstruction of population dynamics, clear correlations become obvious. High resolution data are lacking before 20 ka, and at some sites this period is characterized by the occurrence of sterile layers between Middle Paleolithic deposits, possibly indicative of a very low presence of humans in Morocco. After Heinrich Event 1, there is an enormous increase of data due to the prominent Late Iberomaurusian deposits that contrast strongly with the foregoing accumulations in terms of sedimentological features, fauna, and artifact composition. The Younger Dryas again shows a remarkable decline of data marking the end of the Paleolithic. Environmental improvements in the Holocene are associated with an extensive Epipaleolithic occupation. Therefore, the late glacial cultural sequence of Morocco is a good test case for analyzing the interrelationship of culture and climate change.
quote:--On the industrial attributions of the Aterian and Mousterian of the Maghreb, Harold L. Dibble et al.
North Africa is quickly emerging as one of the more important regions yielding information on the origins of modern Homo sapiens. Associated with significant fossil hominin remains are two stone tool industries, the Aterian and Mousterian, which have been differentiated, respectively, primarily on the basis of the presence and absence of tanged, or stemmed, stone tools. Largely because of historical reasons, these two industries have been attributed to the western Eurasian Middle Paleolithic rather than the African Middle Stone Age. In this paper, drawing on our recent excavation of Contrebandiers Cave and other published data, we show that, aside from the presence or absence of tanged pieces, there are no other distinctions between these two industries in terms of either lithic attributes or chronology. Together, these results demonstrate that these two ‘industries’ are instead variants of the same entity. Moreover, several additional characteristics of these assemblages, such as distinctive stone implements and the manufacture and use of bone tools and possible shell ornaments, suggest a closer affinity to other Late Pleistocene African Middle Stone Age industries rather than to the Middle Paleolithic of western Eurasia.
quote:Pardon my typo. lol it was early, and I posted that in a rush.
Originally posted by xyyman:
But we agree. Saharans do not have Arab ancestry. Arabs have Saharan ancestry...or ..in reality both have East African ancestry.
quote:
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
Usually when Saharans """speaks""" of having Arab ancestry it's Yemenis/ South Arabians.
quote:your chart is not matching what you are saying.
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
I know Arabia can be noted as an extended part of Africa and that the early Arabian people most likely looked no different than their African counterparts, especially with what Keita has said...
The issue of how much Paleolithic migration from the Near East there may have been is intriguing, and the mitochondrial DNA variation may need to be reassessed as to what can be considered to be only of "Eurasian origin" because if hunters and gatherers roamed between the Saharan and supra-Saharan regions and Eurasia it might be difficult to determine exactly "where" a mutation arose.-- Keita, In Hot Pursuit of Language in Prehistory ed. John Benjamins. (2008)
But the the thing is North Africans for the most case carry little mideastern clades, especiallly Northwest Africans. Not saying they don't, but it is not as significant...
![]()
quote:the chart is again showing significant J
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
So I don't get why she says this...
"The indigenous North African ancestry may have been more common in Berber populations and appears most closely related to populations outside of Africa , but divergence between Maghrebi peoples and Near Eastern/Europeans likely precedes the Holocene (>12,000 ya)."
If anything their ancestry is more African...
![]()
^^^Though that is just their Y-DNA, but it is prodomintely African. Also as Troll Patrol stated, almost all fossil sites are of African orgins.
And again why does Henn use the term 'Sub Saharan African'? When there is no such divsion and Africans have been traveling back andf forth to 'North Africa' and "Sub Sahara African'. And another thing that is mind boggling is that she states that 'Sub Saharan' African gene flow into North Africa is recent...With the Trans-African slave trade. Isn't that what most Eurocentrics state?
Doesn't Henn know that the most ancient haplopgroup in Tunisia is the 'Sub Saharan' African mtDNA haplogroup L3? So why does she state 'Sub Saharan' African gene flow is recent? Like I said before, she seems to be trying to seperate North Africa from the rest of Africa.... [/QB]
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
Henn concluded that the small amount of Levantine autosomal SNP entered Africa recently quote "Maritime age". ieless than 1000ya.
Prior to that "if" there was any back migration it was at the time of the "initial" exit of AMH which really does not make any sense.
.....really...does it?
In addition remember she said nRDNA etc is a definite means of confirming the hypothesis of back migration. We know the result already. See illustration above.
As I said read the paper. It was discussed too many times already
quote:Son of Ra, be careful of xyyman
Originally posted by Troll P.
Pardon my typo. lol it was early, and I posted that in a rush.
But yes, before Arabs entered Africa they already had African ancestry, it even dates back to the Nubian Complex. This of course is something we don't read in Henn's "study".
What I speak of is, those who have "Arab lineage" due to the recent migration/ spread of Islam. Have this Arabic lineage from Southern Arabia, Yemeni. I am addressing instances.
quote:the largest berber group are the Kabyle.
Originally posted by xyyman:
[QB] Yes "Berber populations and appears most closely related to populations outside of Africa ". That is because as I said. Saharans...and other Africans.. migrating "into" Arabia.
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
[QUOTE]Originally posted by xyyman:
[QUOTE]Originally posted by xyyman:
[QB] Yes "Berber populations and appears most closely related to populations outside of Africa ". That is because as I said. Saharans...and other Africans.. migrating "into" Arabia.
For those who prefer images
Saharans in Arabia and Persia.
![]()
and
Zero or insignificant Levantine admixture in Berbers. But much more SSA.
![]()
quote:You dumb hog, don't speard lies about me. And stop diluting my screen name.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
Battaglia et al. (2007) estimated that E-M78 (called E1b1b1a1 in that paper) has been in Europe longer than 10,000 years.
E-M81 is the most common Y-chromosome haplogroup in the Maghreb, dominated by its subclade E-M183. It is thought to have originated in the area of North Africa 5,600 years ago. This haplogroup reaches a mean frequency of 42% in North Africa, decreasing in frequency from approximately 80% or more in some Moroccan Berber populations, including Saharawis, to approximately 10% to the east of this range in Egypt. Because of its prevalence among these groups and also others such as Mozabite, Middle Atlas, Kabyle and other Berber groups, it is sometimes referred to as a genetic "Berber marker"
Troll and xyyman ignore this haplogroup M81 and disregard it's relatively recent age of 5,600 years.
if you do this as well you will also not understand North Africa.
![]()
quote:Please, show me/ us where I've claimed that E-M81 isn't Northwest African or that I have disregarded it as African? BIG LOL
Originally posted by the lioness,:
![]()
![]()
![]()
Battaglia et al. (2007) estimated that E-M78 (called E1b1b1a1)
Troll and xyyman ignore this haplogroup M81 and disregard it's relatively recent age of 5,600 years.
if you do this as well you will also not understand North Africa.
^^^^ Do you see the various haplogroups listed?
If you want to have blinders on like Troll and xyyman just ignore most of them, pretend they're not there
quote:Back to this here:
E1b1b1b (E-M81) is the most common Y chromosome haplogroup in the Maghreb,
dominated by its sub-clade E-M183. It is thought to have originated in the area of North Africa 5,600 years ago (Cruciani et al. 2004, Arredi et al. (2004)). It is colloquially referred to as the "Berber marker" for its prevalence among Mozabite, Moyen Atlas, Kabyle and other Amazigh groups, E-M81 is also quite common among North African Arab groups.
quote:
"it seems that Y-chromosome markers have an eastern African origin with an ancient local evolution in North Africa."
quote:It's funny how you toot and quote at convenience. Out of everything I've post in the last two days, this is what you "cited" and even altered my post? lol
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
[qb] Henn concluded that the small amount of Levantine autosomal SNP entered Africa recently quote "Maritime age". ieless than 1000ya.
Prior to that "if" there was any back migration it was at the time of the "initial" exit of AMH which really does not make any sense.
.....really...does it?
In addition remember she said nRDNA etc is a definite means of confirming the hypothesis of back migration. We know the result already. See illustration above.
As I said read the paper. It was discussed too many times already![]()
quote:Son of Ra, be careful of xyyman
Originally posted by Troll P.
Pardon my typo. lol it was early, and I posted that in a rush.
But yes, before Arabs entered Africa they already had African ancestry, it even dates back to the Nubian Complex. This of course is something we don't read in Henn's "study".
What I speak of is, those who have "Arab lineage" due to the recent migration/ spread of Islam. Have this Arabic lineage from Southern Arabia, Yemeni. I am addressing instances.
he doesn't know the Levant includes part of Arabia.
Also keep in mind the vast majority of the more ancient trade and migrations between Arabia and the Maghreb is via the Sinai, relating to Northern Arabia
Southern Arabia/Yemen is more related to settlement of the horn
as we see the closest Red Sea crossing point into what is now Djibouti, right next to Ethiopia.
As I mentioned before the Arabs had their capital in Damascus Syria at the time
quote:the largest berber group are the Kabyle.
Originally posted by xyyman:
Yes "Berber populations and appears most closely related to populations outside of Africa ". That is because as I said. Saharans...and other Africans.. migrating "into" Arabia.
xyyman has no idea what they look like.
He assumes they are primarily African and there is no such thing as back migration.
That's his postion, there is no such thing as back migration. ask him
quote:--Late Pleistocene Human Occupation of Northwest Africa: A Crosscheck of Chronology and Climate Change in Morocco
Regular Middle Paleolithic inventories as well as Middle Paleolithic inventories of Aterian type have a long chronology in Morocco going back to MIS 6 and are interstratified in some sites. Their potential for detecting chrono-cultural patterns is low. The transition from the Middle to Upper Paleolithic, here termed Early Upper Paleolithic—at between 30 to 20 ka—remains a most enigmatic era. Scarce data from this period requires careful and fundamental reconsidering of human presence. By integrating environmental data in the reconstruction of population dynamics, clear correlations become obvious. High resolution data are lacking before 20 ka, and at some sites this period is characterized by the occurrence of sterile layers between Middle Paleolithic deposits, possibly indicative of a very low presence of humans in Morocco. After Heinrich Event 1, there is an enormous increase of data due to the prominent Late Iberomaurusian deposits that contrast strongly with the foregoing accumulations in terms of sedimentological features, fauna, and artifact composition. The Younger Dryas again shows a remarkable decline of data marking the end of the Paleolithic. Environmental improvements in the Holocene are associated with an extensive Epipaleolithic occupation. Therefore, the late glacial cultural sequence of Morocco is a good test case for analyzing the interrelationship of culture and climate change.
quote:--On the industrial attributions of the Aterian and Mousterian of the Maghreb, Harold L. Dibble et al.
North Africa is quickly emerging as one of the more important regions yielding information on the origins of modern Homo sapiens. Associated with significant fossil hominin remains are two stone tool industries, the Aterian and Mousterian, which have been differentiated, respectively, primarily on the basis of the presence and absence of tanged, or stemmed, stone tools. Largely because of historical reasons, these two industries have been attributed to the western Eurasian Middle Paleolithic rather than the African Middle Stone Age. In this paper, drawing on our recent excavation of Contrebandiers Cave and other published data, we show that, aside from the presence or absence of tanged pieces, there are no other distinctions between these two industries in terms of either lithic attributes or chronology. Together, these results demonstrate that these two ‘industries’ are instead variants of the same entity. Moreover, several additional characteristics of these assemblages, such as distinctive stone implements and the manufacture and use of bone tools and possible shell ornaments, suggest a closer affinity to other Late Pleistocene African Middle Stone Age industries rather than to the Middle Paleolithic of western Eurasia.
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
Per autosomal SNPs...Berbers are not admixed with Levantines.
As I said Henn chose Qatar to do her close affinity to Saharans. One of the closest groups to Africans on the Arabian peninsular.
She dare not choose Levantines.
![]()
quote:--Cerný V et al., Am J Phys Anthropol. 2009 Apr;138(4):439-47. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.20960.
Abstract
The Soqotra archipelago is one of the most isolated landmasses in the world, situated at the mouth of the Gulf of Aden between the Horn of Africa and southern Arabia. The main island of Soqotra lies not far from the proposed southern migration route of anatomically modern humans out of Africa approximately 60,000 years ago (kya), suggesting the island may harbor traces of that first dispersal. Nothing is known about the timing and origin of the first Soqotri settlers. The oldest historical visitors to the island in the 15th century reported only the presence of an ancient population. We collected samples throughout the island and analyzed mitochondrial DNA and Y-chromosomal variation. We found little African influence among the indigenous people of the island. Although the island population likely experienced founder effects, links to the Arabian Peninsula or southwestern Asia can still be found. In comparison with datasets from neighboring regions, the Soqotri population shows evidence of long-term isolation and autochthonous evolution of several mitochondrial haplogroups. Specifically, we identified two high-frequency founder lineages that have not been detected in any other populations and classified them as a new R0a1a1 subclade. Recent expansion of the novel lineages is consistent with a Holocene settlement of the island approximately 6 kya.
quote:http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2268671/bin/1471-2148-8-45-S3.xls
For the J, the West (37.5%) and Southeast (25.7%) regions have higher frequencies than the Central (17.6%) and North (16.3%) regions. Heterogeneity in the whole Peninsula is also significant .... being Saudi Arabia (21%) and Qatar (17.8%) the two countries with the highest J frequencies.
However,
This is mainly due to the comparatively high frequency of sub-Saharan lineages in Yemen (38%) compared to Oman-Qatar (16%) and to Saudi Arabia-UAE (10%). Most probably, the higher frequencies shown in southern countries reflect their greater proximity to Africa, separated only by the Bab al Mandab strait. However, when attending to the relative contribution of the different L haplogroups, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Yemen are highly similar for their L3 (34%), L2 (36%) and L0 (21%) frequencies whereas in Oman and UAE the bulk of L lineages belongs to L3 (72%).
Two potential migratory routes followed by modern humans to colonize Eurasia from Africa have been proposed. These are the two natural passageways that connect both continents: the northern route through the Sinai Peninsula and the southern route across the Bab al Mandab strait.
Recent archaeological and genetic evidence have favored a unique southern coastal route. Under this scenario, the study of the population genetic structure of the Arabian Peninsula, the first step out of Africa, to search for primary genetic links between Africa and Eurasia, is crucial.
The haploid and maternally inherited mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) molecule has been the most used genetic marker to identify and to relate lineages with clear geographic origins , as the African Ls and the Eurasian M and N that have a common root with the Africans L3.
"Particularly, Yemen has the largest contribution of L lineages (30). So, most probably, this area was the entrance gate of a portion of these lineages in prehistoric times, which participated in the building of the primitive Arabian population."
Under these suppositions, the Arabian Peninsula, as an obliged step between East Africa and South Asia, has gained crucial importance, and indeed several mtDNA studies have recently been published for this region [30-32]. However, it seems that the bulk of the Arab mtDNA lineages have northern Neolithic or more recent Asian or African origins....
quote:Even Troll P understands that there is a genetic influence from Levantines including those form the Arabian peninsula who entered Egypt/North Africa during the Islamic conquests.
Originally posted by xyyman:
[qb] I am not busy now...so. Information overload. He! He!
Notice the pattern. This shows a clear migration of African from the North and South into Arabia.
Note: The data was collected from EXTANT populations. This pattern is consistent with demic diffusion.
Notice where there is high SSA SNPs there is a corresponding increase in North Africans and East African SNPs.
Finally...the Henn study is not flawed. There is affinity between Qatari(her source population-Middle East) and North Africans.
![]()
quote:http://mbe.oxfordjournals.org/content/24/3/757/F1.expansion
Evolutionary history of mtDNA haplogroup structure in African populations inferred from mtDNA d-loop and RFLP analysis.
(A) Relationships among different mtDNA haplogroup lineages inferred from mtDNA d-loop sequences and mtDNA coding region SNPs from previous studies (Kivisild, Metspalu, et al. 2006). Dashed lines indicate previously unresolved relationships.
(B) Relative frequencies of haplogroups L0, L1, L5, L2, L3, M, and N in different regions of Africa from mtDNA d-loop and mtDNA coding region SNPs from previous studies.
(C) Relative frequencies of haplogroups L0, L1, and L5 subhaplogroups (excluding L2 and L3) in different regions of Africa from mtDNA d-loop and mtDNA coding region SNPs from previous studies. Haplogroup frequencies from previously published studies include East Africans (Ethiopia [Rosa et al. 2004], Kenya and Sudan [Watson et al. 1997; Rosa et al. 2004]), Mozambique (Pereira et al. 2001; Salas et al. 2002), Hadza (Vigilant et al. 1991), and Sukuma (Knight et al. 2003); South Africans (Botswana !Kung [Vigilant et al. 1991]); Central Africans (Mbenzele Pygmies [Destro-Bisol et al. 2004], Biaka Pygmies [Vigilant et al. 1991], and Mbuti Pygmies [Vigilant et al. 1991]); West Africans (Niger, Nigeria [Vigilant et al. 1991; Watson et al. 1997]; and Guinea [Rosa et al. 2004]). L1*, L2*, and L3* from previous studies indicate samples that were not further subdivided into subhaplogroups.
quote:^^^^ he did what I told you he was going to do. Any haplogroup in the world that is mentioned he calls African by backtracking to earlier haplogroups it branches from.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
Portugal has colonized parts of Northern Africa. So tell me, what do they mean by Portuguese?
No wonder people always have called lying ass. You are lying in full effect, it's clear cut!
quote:http://www.nature.com/ng/journal/v23/n4/abs/ng1299_437.html
Two other variants (489C and 10873C) also support a single origin of haplogroup M in Africa.
quote:--Erwan Pennarun et al.
No southwest Asian specific clades for M1 or U6 were discovered. U6 and M1 frequencies in North Africa, the Middle East and Europe do not follow similar patterns, and their sub-clade divisions do not appear to be compatible with their shared history reaching back to the Early Upper Palaeolithic."
quote:As presumed no "clear" answer is given. Nor do we "still" see any follis and side scene records. This twisted attempted has been going on for about a year or longer, now.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:^^^^ he did what I told you he was going to do. Any haplogroup in the world that is mentioned he calls African by backtracking to earlier haplogroups it branches from.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
Portugal has colonized parts of Northern Africa. So tell me, what do they mean by Portuguese?
No wonder people always have called lying ass. You are lying in full effect, it's clear cut!
There's no point in discussing any haplogroup they are all African.
They all originate in Africa.
quote:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1040618212031813
The Aterian is a frequently cited manifestation of the Middle Stone Age (MSA) of North Africa, yet its character and meaning have remained largely opaque, as attention has focused almost exclusively on the typology of ‘tanged’, or ‘pedunculated’, lithics. Observations of technological similarities between the Aterian and other regional technocomplexes suggest that the Aterian should be considered within the wider context of the North African MSA and not as an isolated phenomenon. This paper critically reviews the meaning and history of research of the Aterian. This highlights a number of serious issues with definitions and interpretations of this technocomplex, ranging from a lack of definitional consensus to problems with the common view of the Aterian as a ‘desert adaptation’. Following this review, the paper presents the results of a quantitative study of six North African MSA assemblages (Aterian, Nubian Complex and ‘MSA’). Correspondence and Principal Components Analyses are applied, which suggest that the patterns of similarity and difference demonstrated do not simplistically correlate with traditional divisions between named industries. These similarity patterns are instead structured geographically and it is suggested that they reflect a population differentiation that cannot be explained by isolation and distance alone. Particular results include the apparent uniqueness of Haua Fteah compared to all the other assemblages and the observation that the Aterian in northeast Africa is more similar to the Nubian in that region than to the Aterian in the Maghreb. The study demonstrates the existence of population structure in the North African MSA, which has important implications for the evolutionary dynamics of modern human dispersals.
quote:In full effect and turbo charged. NITRO! Nowhere did I claim "all originated in Africa". I clearly summarized those that did!
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:^^^^ he did what I told you he was going to do. Any haplogroup in the world that is mentioned he calls African by backtracking to earlier haplogroups it branches from.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
Portugal has colonized parts of Northern Africa. So tell me, what do they mean by Portuguese?
No wonder people always have called lying ass. You are lying in full effect, it's clear cut!
There's no point in discussing any haplogroup they are all African.
They all originate in Africa.
quote:
However, as the original chronology of a 20-40 ka Aterian is no longer acceptable and the age of 40 ka indicates the end, not longer the beginning, of the Aterian, this industrial complex is much earlier and cannot be compared with the Sultrean. Furthermore, the natural conditions of the Strait of Gibraltar, with strong currents, must not have encouraged Aterian desert-adapted people to embark on seafaring adventures , as Erlandson (2001) has stated.
quote:--Jean-Jacques Hublin,Shannon P. McPherron, Modern Origins: A North African Perspective. Desert adaptions of the Libyan Aterian, page 137.
"The other unanswered question is where Aterian peoples and their technology came from. Increasingly evidence indicates that East Africa is like a region to consider for the origin of the Aterian. In fact, the Aterian biracial technology shows some affinities with the Lupemban of East and Central Africa."
quote:
A complete mandible of Homo erectus was discovered at the Thomas I quarry in Casablanca by a French-Moroccan team co-led by Jean-Paul Raynal, CNRS senior researcher at the PACEA(1) aboratory (CNRS/Université Bordeaux 1/ Ministry of Culture and Communication). This mandible is the oldest human fossil uncovered from scientific excavations in Morocco. The discovery will help better define northern Africa's possible role in first populating southern Europe.
A Homo erectus half-jaw had already been found at the Thomas I quarry in 1969, but it was a chance discovery and therefore with no archeological context.
This is not the case for the fossil discovered May 15, 2008, whose characteristics are very similar to those of the half-jaw found in 1969. The morphology of these remains is different from the three mandibles found at the Tighenif site in Algeria that were used, in 1963, to define the North African variety of Homo erectus, known as Homo mauritanicus, dated to 700,000 B.C.
The mandible from the Thomas I quarry was found in a layer below one where the team has previously found four human teeth (three premolars and one incisor) from Homo erectus, one of which was dated to 500,000 B.C. The human remains were grouped with carved stone tools characteristic of the Acheulian(2) civilization and numerous animal remains (baboons, gazelles, equines, bears, rhinoceroses, and elephants), as well as large numbers of small mammals, which point to a slightly older time frame. Several dating methods are being used to refine the chronology.
The Thomas I quarry in Casablanca confirms its role as one of the most important prehistoric sites for understanding the early population of northwest Africa. The excavations that CNRS and the Institut National des Sciences de l’Archéologie et du Patrimoine du Maroc have led there since 1988 are part of a French-Moroccan collaboration. They have been jointly financed by the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs(3), the Department of Human Evolution at the Max Plank Institute in Leipzig (Germany), INSAP(4)(Morocco) and the Aquitaine region.
quote:BMC Genet. 2009 Sep 22;10:59. doi: 10.1186/1471-2156-10-59.
Originally posted by xyyman:
To those who don't get the main point. The migration is essentially in one direction ie from Africa TO Arabia and not from Arabia to Africa. That explains the affinity.
Why?
If the migration was INTO Africa from Arabia then Levantine autosomal SNPs would migrate along with the populations into Africa.
Instead we see the reverse. SSA, East African AND Saharan SNP holistically migrating into Arabia.
She(Henn) did not sample population from the Levantine(North), for the simple reason of she knew there is no affinity with modern Levantines.
As Mike would say "they think we are all stupid nig***s)."
Henn's study is not flawed..it is just stacked.
=====
back to research on Africans in Rome, ancient Greece and Arabia.
BTW: I recently found out that Ancient Sardinians, ancient Greeks, ancient North Africans were rife with porotic hyperostosis. Some may ask what is the significance of this. Well...do the research.
eg Larry Angel and "the People of Lerna"
quote:I'm not sure what to make of this, here?
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
@ xyyman
Isn't the J-clade the signature mid-eastern Y-DNA clade? Also the pictures you posted states 500 years ago and not 12,000 like Henn states. And can't the African clades in the mid-east be due to the Axumite occupation? I believe it is much more recent than 12,000, unless you can prove me wrong. Also she didnt't only state Berber populations are closely related to people in the Mid-east, but also Europe.
I don't think Henn is saying what you're saying.
quote:http://www.familytreedna.com/public/arabian_ydna_j1_project/default.aspx?section=results
The Arabian Y-DNA J1 Project - Results
YDNA J1 Haplogroup Research Summery
1-(J1) Haplogroup is believed to have been generated some 10,000 years ago south of the Levant and in the heart of the Arabian Peninsula (Source is National Geographic Genetic Project) 2-(J1) Haplogroup is very common in Arabs and Jews (about 65% of Bedouins) and (almost half of national geographic data base J1 persons are Jew) (source is Semino et al.: Origin, Diffusion, and Differentiation of Y-chromosome Haplogroups E and J: Inferences on the Neolithization of Europe and Later Migratory Events in the Mediterranean Area) and (National Geographic Genetic Project). 3-Research shows that (J1) haplogroup makes about 72% of Yemen people, 34% of UAE people, 58% of Qatari people, 50% of Iraq people, 55% of Palestinian Arabs, 48% of Oman People, 34% of Tunisian, and 35% of Algerian. Rest of these countries populations is a mixture of other Haplogroups. (Source: Y-chromosome diversity characterizes the Gulf of Oman by Cadenas et al. 2008) and (Semino et al. : Origin, Diffusion, and Differentiation of Y-Chromosome Haplogroups E and J: Inferences on the Neolithization of Europe and Later Migratory Events in the Mediterranean Area) and (The Levant Versus the Horn of Africa by J.R Luis et al 2004). 4-All persons who carry J* haplogroup (because of not belonging to J2) were considered as members of (J1) haplogroup by Cruciani et al. (2002), Nebel et al. (2001), and Bosch et al.(2001). (Source is Semino et al. : Origin, Diffusion, and Differentiation of Y-Chromosome Haplogroups E and J: Inferences on the Neolithization of Europe and Later Migratory Events in the Mediterranean Area). 5-(J1) haplogroup had expanded to the rest of the world all over history but distinctively during two main periods. It had expanded out from the Fertile Crescent about 7000-9000 years ago during the Neolithic times (last part of the stone age). The other period was during Arab migration with the expansion of Islamic empire on 6th century AC. (source Nadia Al-Zahery et al research). 6-To confirm J haplogroup type, deep SNP tests must be used. For J1, M267 SNP must be positive. 7-Main cluster of Arabic J1 holder were found to be J1e. 8-Following genetic Family Tree was generated for this project memebers who have carried 37 marker tests and are expected to have J1e haplogroup with L147 positive. Calculations carried and presented using PHILIP, Nighbor and Mcgee softwares.
quote:(aka North African ancestry)
Genomic Ancestry of North Africans Supports Back-to-Africa Migrations Brenna M. Henn
"Tunisian Berbers, who are assigned nearly 100% Maghrebi ancestry"
quote:If we want to grasp published DNA concepts we need at least a high scool level understanding of Biology. If you don’t have a life science background some of these terms may be difficult to ..understand. Fortunately some of us do.
Originally posted by xyyman:
I am busy right now. Will get back to you. Regarding Henn,her work is based upon autosomal SNP,same as DNATribes. So I am comparing apples and apples. They both agree. Will explain later. @Son of Ra
quote:This is what I told that ignorant person already. And see, how still no fossil and side scene records are being shown. Mere stupid repetitive ranting.
Originally posted by xyyman:
This is what I visualize Sarahans/Arabians to look like.
extremely dark/black - latitude
long legs and arms - heat/sub-tropic
aquiline nose - dry heat
full lips- Mainly an African feature
Straight hair - dry heat
A lighter pigmentation version should be found in Tunisia.
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quote:--See Khaled K Abu-Amero et. al., BMC Evolutionary Biology 2008, 8:45
“Particularly, Yemen has the largest contribution of L lineages. So, most probably, this area was the entrance gate of a portion of these lineages in prehistoric times, which participated in the building of the primitive Arabian population.”
quote:--Viktor Černý, Am J Phys Anthropol, 2009
The Soqotra archipelago is one of the most isolated landmasses in the world, situated at the mouth of the Gulf of Aden between the Horn of Africa and southern Arabia. The main island of Soqotra lies not far from the proposed southern migration route of anatomically modern humans out of Africa ∼60,000 years ago (kya), suggesting the island may harbor traces of that first dispersal. Nothing is known about the timing and origin of the first Soqotri settlers. The oldest historical visitors to the island in the 15th century reported only the presence of an ancient population. We collected samples throughout the island and analyzed mitochondrial DNA and Y-chromosomal variation. We found little African influence among the indigenous people of the island. Although the island population likely experienced founder effects, links to the Arabian Peninsula or southwestern Asia can still be found. In comparison with datasets from neighboring regions, the Soqotri population shows evidence of long-term isolation and autochthonous evolution of several mitochondrial haplogroups. Specifically, we identified two high-frequency founder lineages that have not been detected in any other populations and classified them as a new R0a1a1 subclade. Recent expansion of the novel lineages is consistent with a Holocene settlement of the island ∼6 kya.
quote:Piece of lying sh*t, you keep posting lies about people.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
.
Above Tunisian berbers below people of Chad.
xyyman's interpretation of the Henn article statement
" Tunisian Berbers, who are assigned nearly 100% Maghrebi ancestry"
is that berbers like the above, and there are a great many of them in Tunisia that look like this, many more so than people as dark as the Chadians below, that regardless these Tunisian berbers are mainly African.
I won't say it's impossible.
There is a point in time at which a migrant populaltion becomes regarded as "indigenous"
The American Indians for instance are regarded as indigenous and native to America, yet they are believed to have come from Asia originally over the bering strait.
But they are now called AmerIndians or native Americans.
The Tunisian berbers above are considered indigenous North Africans. Now either they were always indigenous or at some point in time, thousands of years ago some of their ancestors came from outside of Africa and mixed with people in Africa who were always indigenous to Africa and this mixture became to be known as "berber"
xyyman and Troll P say this never happened, that the average Tunisian berber, the ones regarded as 90% or more M81 Maghrebi ancestry have always been African as far back as you want to go. Nobody knows if it's true or not so I say it's possible that the above people and Tunisian berbers in general are 90% or more ancestors who never left Africa.
On the other hand it's possible that as Henn suggests what is called "Maghrebi ancestry" or "North African ancestry" might have Eurasian elements within under 20,000 years.
No one knows for sure.
Chad President, Idriss Deby
Chad people
J Hum Genet. 2010 Dec;55(12):827-33. doi: 10.1038/jhg.2010.120. Epub 2010 Sep 30.
Mixed origin of the current Tunisian population from the analysis of Alu and Alu/STR compound systems.
El Moncer W, Esteban E, Bahri R, Gayà-Vidal M, Carreras-Torres R, Athanasiadis G, Moral P, Chaabani H.
Source
Laboratory of Human Genetics and Anthropology, Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Monastir, Monastir, Tunisia.
Abstract
During successive historical periods, Tunisia has been a crossroads of multiple civilizations and their corresponding key population movements. The aim of this study was to provide genetic information relating to the mixed origin of the Tunisian population, and to analyze its genetic relationship with other North African and Mediterranean populations. A set of 16 Alu and 3 Alu/STR compound systems has been analyzed in 268 autochthonous Tunisians from the north-center and the south of the country. Our two sampled populations showed no significant differentiation from one another in any of the three Alu/STR compound systems, whereas the analysis of the 16 Alu markers revealed a significant genetic differentiation between them. A sub-Saharan component shown by the three Alu/STR combinations is more noticeable in our north-center sample than in that of the south. The presence of two Alu/STR combinations specific to North African ancestral populations also suggests that the ancient Berber component is relatively more substantial in the north and center regions than in the south. Our Tunisian samples cluster together with other Berber samples from Morocco and Algeria, underpinning the genetic similarity among North Africans regardless of their current linguistic status (Berber or Arabic).
quote:--Frigi et al.(2010)
Our results reveal that Berber speakers have a foundational biogeographic root in Africa and that deep African lineages have continued to evolve in supra-Saharan Africa.
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
![]()
contrary to popular belief so called
" European looking people"
like this Algerian berber evolved in North Africa not Europe
(some suggest)
quote:quote me where I'm telling a lie or shut the hell up
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
Piece of lying sh*t, you keep posting lies about people.
quote:I posted childeren because they are in "pure" form and don't wear head scarfs, like most elder women.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
troll, stop always posting kids and teenagers for examples of people. Kids tend to look more similar to each other across ethnic groups.
quote:quote me where I'm telling a lie or shut the hell up
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
Piece of lying sh*t, you keep posting lies about people.
thanks,
lioness
-also if you wnat to mention specific berber groups, mention their population numbers
and compare it to the overall popualtion of the country. This thread is about North Africa not about berbers specifically doodie head
Kabyles number 6 million. ilha or Chleuh ( Arabic Shalh in High and Anti-Atlas regions of Morocco, number about 8 million. Other groups include the Riffians of northern Morocco, the Chaoui people of eastern Algeria, the Chenouas in western Algeria, the Berbers of Tripolitania and the Tuaregs of the Sahara scattered through several countries. Siwa number about 25,000
The purpose of these studies is to describe the average person in the Maghreb not list every obscure ethnic group or archaic proto berber such as this:
![]()
quote:I assum you're asking this as a rhetoric. Since you're knowledgeable on this science.
Originally posted by xyyman:
do you know what this means?
Quote:
*****These models should be further tested with genomic sequence data, STRs/haplogroup!! which have better power to detect magnitude and timing of bottlenecks, and to estimate the true joint allele frequency spectrum. ****
AND
Maghrebi populations do NOT represent a large-scale demic diffusion of agropastoralists from the Near East
AND''
European populations from HapMap3 [43], western Africa [20], and 20 Qatari(AFRICAN) from the Arabian Peninsula [44] as Near Eastern representatives.
quote:I was not able to find the Qatari Arab subsets in the HapMap3..
HapMap3 samples included: West African (YRI, Yoruba in Ibadan, Nigeria), European (CEU, Utah residents with northern and western European ancestry from the CEPH collection),[...]
quote:
agropastoralists
ag·ro·pastoral: of or relating to a practice of agriculture that includes both the growing of crops and the raising of livestock
— ag·ro·pastoralism noun
quote:
More recently, the substantial, east-to-west decline of Near Eastern ancestry (Figure 1A) could represent a defined migration associated with Arab conquest 1,400 ya or merely gene flow occurring gradually among neighboring populations along a North African | Arabian Peninsula transect. Although we observe a declining amount of Maghrebi ancestry from northwest-to-northeast, it is possible that other geographically North African samples (e.g. Egyptians further south than the sampled Siwa Oasis) do not conform to this geographic cline. Finally, we also observe European ancestry that is not clearly accounted for by the inclusion of a Near Eastern sample. Additional migration coming from Europe might be plausible, though the origin and the period where it took place cannot be determined with the present data.
quote:--Henn et al.
At k = 6 through 8, all North African populations except for Tunisians have sub-Saharan ancestry, present in most individuals, though this ancestry varies between 1%–55%. Interestingly, eastern populations (i.e. Libya and Egypt) share ancestry assigned to both the Bantu-speaking Luhya and the Nilotic-speaking Maasai, whereas western populations share ancestry mainly with the Luhya.
- Of note is that the South Moroccan and western Saharan populations contain considerable variation across individuals in the amount of sub-Saharan ancestry (see also [14], [26]), consistent with recent admixture.
- PCADMIX requires predefined ancestral groups. For this purpose, we assume South Moroccans have ancestry from three primary sources: Maghrebi ancestry (e.g. Saharawi), eastern Bantu-speakers (e.g. Luhya) and European (e.g. Spanish Basque) (Figure 5A).
quote:
**There have been two main groups of badu tribes (nomadic tribes) using the Qatar peninsula:
- a group which moves in and out of the peninsula – the Bani Hajir, Al Manasir, Al Murrah, Al Awamir and Al ’Ajman, and
- one which moves within a relatively small part of the peninsula, the Al Na’im and, to a lesser extent, the Al Ka’aban.
The reason for this is historical, having to do with tribes and their inter-relationships.
quote:http://www.catnaps.org/islamic/population.html#settlement
The Bani Hajir
The Bani Hajir were the main badu group living in the eastern region of Saudi Arabia and their pattern of movement seems to have been governed both by their wide territorial interests as well as by the need to move relatively frequently.
The Al Manasir
The Al Manasir lived in the region covering the area between the south of the Qatar peninsula and the Buraimi oasis in what is now the United Arab Emirates. The Al Manasir were neighbours of both the Bani Hajir and Al Murrah and based themselves in the Liwah oasis – between the Buraimi oasis and the Qatar peninsula – in summer, and the Qatar peninsula in winter.
The Al Murrah
Further inland from the Qatar peninsula was the area used by the Al Murrah who inhabited the south part of the Al Hasa district, and who lived deeper into the Saudi peninsula than the Bani Hajir.
The Al Awamir
The Al Awamir were a tribe living in the area between the Oman and towards the Rub’a al Khali, south of the Liwa oasis.
The Al Ajman
I should also mention the Al Ajman, a tribe living in Al Hasa in the area north and west of the Bani Hajir and who were occasional visitors to the Qatar peninsula.
The Al Na’im
By the mid eighteenth century the main settlements in Qatar were those associated with two tribes, the Al Thani and the Al Khalifah. Very crudely the Al Thani, settled at Al Doha and Al Wakrah, controlled the east side of the peninsula but the Al Khalifah, settled on Al Zubarah controlled the north-west, and the Al Na’im were associated with the Al Khalifah.
quote:It's easy to say this when you have no idea of how the average Tunisian berbers looks.
Originally posted by xyyman:
1. Tunisian Berbers are 100% pure indigenous. Minor “recent” near east input in other groups.
quote:Again, they came from East Africa and about 5.6 Ky a mutation occurred. It did not appear out of thin air. An older group to them is the Tuaregs, and Bejas are a parent group to the Tuaregs.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:It's easy to say this when you have no idea of how the average Tunisian berbers looks.
Originally posted by xyyman:
1. Tunisian Berbers are 100% pure indigenous. Minor “recent” near east input in other groups.
"indigenous" is a relative term
The Americans Indians are considered inidgenous to the Americas yet there was a point at which they were Asians and had not entered the Americas. Some estimates are 15,000 years ago.
So after people migrate into an area and stay there a while they are then considered indigenous.
Now we look to the Tunisian berbers, the article says some have nealry 100% Mahgrebian ancestry.
The marker is E-M81.
The age of M81 is thought to be 5,600 years ago.
What happened 6-15000 years ago ?
quote:--Beniamino Trombetta et al. (2010)
Within E-M35, there are striking parallels between two haplogroups, E-V68 and E-V257. Both contain a lineage which has been frequently observed in Africa (E-M78 and E-M81, respectively) [6], [8], [10], [13]–[16] and a group of undifferentiated chromosomes that are mostly found in southern Europe (Table S2). An expansion of E-M35 carriers, possibly from the Middle East as proposed by other Authors [14], and split into two branches separated by the geographic barrier of the Mediterranean Sea, would explain this geographic pattern. However, the absence of E-V68* and E-V257* in the Middle East (Table S2) makes a maritime spread between northern Africa and southern Europe a more plausible hypothesis. A detailed analysis of the Y chromosomal microsatellite variation associated with E-V68 and E-V257 could help in gaining a better understanding of the likely timing and place of origin of these two haplogroups.
quote:Reread 100* , over.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
E-M78 ( E1b1b1) has been in Europe longer than 10,000 years.
So a mutation half as old as that could be at this point, to some extent European.
Capsian populations were considered of two anatomical types, Proto-Mediterranean and Mechta-Afalou
quote:Explorer covers the subject here.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
E-M78 ( E1b1b1) has been in Europe longer than 10,000 years.
So a mutation half as old as that could be at this point, to some extent European.
Capsian populations were considered of two anatomical types, Proto-Mediterranean and Mechta-Afalou
quote:Libya and the Maghreb:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
E-M78 ( E1b1b1) has been in Europe longer than 10,000 years.
So a mutation half as old as that could be at this point, to some extent European.
Capsian populations were considered of two anatomical types, Proto-Mediterranean and Mechta-Afalou
quote:WHAT BONES CAN TELL: BIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES ON THE HUNTER-GATHERERS OF THE MAGHREB:
If the archaeology of the Sahara’s southern margins remains rela- tively poorly understood, the Maghreb has long been the focus of sustained activity focused on the Pleistocene/Holocene transition (Lubell 2000, 2005). Here and at Haua Fteah in northeastern Libya, the Iberomaurusian industry introduced in Chapter 7 continued to be made into the terminal Pleistocene (McBurney 1967; Close and Wendorf 1990). Several unusual features are of interest, includ- ing evidence, rare at this time depth, for sculpture. This takes the form of anthropomorphic and zoomorphic ceramic figurines from Afalou, Algeria, baked from locally available clay to temperatures of 500◦–800◦C (Hachi 1996, Hachi et al. 2002). Dating 15–11 kya, they are complemented by an earlier fragmentary figurine from the nearby site of Tamar Hat (Saxon 1976). Distinctive, too, are the many burials known from these later Iberomaurusian contexts, including apparent cemeteries at Afalou (Hachi 1996) and Taforalt, Morocco (almost 200 individuals; Ferembach et al. 1962). Analysis of these remains (see inset) raises issues of territoriality, limited mobility, and group identity that economic data are still too few to explore further.
Knowing that people hunted Barbary sheep and other large mam- mals and that they collected molluscs, both terrestrial and marine, is very different from being able to develop this checklist of ingredients into a meaningful set of recipes or menus that could illuminate the details of Iberomaurusian subsistence-settlement strategies.
quote:--Lawrence Barham
The extremely large skeletal samples that come from sites such as Taforalt (Fig. 8.13) and Afalou constitute an invaluable resource for understanding the makers of Iberomaurusian artefacts, and their number is unparalleled elsewhere in Africa for the early Holocene. Frequently termed Mechta-Afalou or Mechtoid, these were a skeletally robust people and definitely African in origin, though attempts, such as those of Ferembach (1985), to establish similarities with much older and rarer Aterian skeletal remains are tenuous given the immense temporal separation between the two (Close and Wendorf 1990). At the opposite end of the chrono- logical spectrum, dental morphology does suggest connections with later Africans, including those responsible for the Capsian Industry (Irish 2000) and early mid-Holocene human remains from the western half of the Sahara (Dutour 1989), something that points to the Maghreb as one of the regions from which people recolonised the desert (MacDonald 1998).
Turning to what can be learned about cultural practices and disease, the individuals from Taforalt, the largest sample by far, dis- play little evidence of trauma, though they do suggest a high inci- dence of infant mortality, with evidence for dental caries, arthritis, and rheumatism among other degenerative conditions. Interest- ingly, Taforalt also provides one of the oldest known instances of the practice of trepanation, the surgical removal of a portion of the cranium; the patient evidently survived for some time, as there are signs of bone regrowth in the affected area. Another form of body modification was much more widespread and, indeed, a distinctive feature of the Iberomaurusian skeletal sample as a whole. This was the practice of removing two or more of the upper incisors, usually around puberty and from both males and females, something that probably served as both a rite of passage and an ethnic marker (Close and Wendorf 1990), just as it does in parts of sub-Saharan Africa today (e.g., van Reenen 1987). Cranial and postcranial malformations are also apparent and may indicate pronounced endogamy at a much more localised level (Hadjouis 2002), perhaps supported by the degree of variability between different site samples noted by Irish (2000).
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
E-M78 ( E1b1b1) has been in Europe longer than 10,000 years.
So a mutation half as old as that could be at this point, to some extent European.
Capsian populations were considered of two anatomical types, Proto-Mediterranean and Mechta-Afalou
quote:YOU ARE A FUCKING ASSHOLE
Originally posted by Djehuti:
I and other posters in this forum are fed up with your pig-sh|t.[/QB]
quote:when you say "South Sahara" are you referring to what other people call "Sub Saharan" ?
Originally posted by xyyman:
Her extent of prejudice and distain for South Saharans is incredulous it seems personal. How can she unashamedly “assign” these ancestral markers to Qatari and not to indigenous North Africa. This makes no geographic sense.
quote:
Originally posted by Djehuti:
I agree with you that mtDNA hg H is African in origin. The reason being is that both H and its sister V occur in Africa in significant frequencies as well as their ancestor HV and even its ancestor pre-HV (hg R0) which has both its highest frequency and diversity in Africa.
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
If I had paid for each paper I have....I will wait or call in a chip. Many are just headliners. Just attention grabbers.
Quote by Lioness: This is a recent article and you haven't even read it (short term access $10 or PM Sundiata) , only the suppliment you read
You still don't get it, do you, I don't rely on what they "say". I do an independent analysis of the data.
quote:we investigated the complete mitochondrial genomes of eleven Libyan Tuareg belonging to H1. Coalescence time estimates suggest an arrival of the European H1 mtDNAs at about 8,000–9,000 years ago,the extremely low values of the diversity indices confirm that the outstanding high frequency of H1 in this population is the result of even more recent founder events.
Originally posted by xyyman:
SHE SAID:
"This suggests that gene flow between southern Europe and North Africa is older than that in other regions in Europe, where longer (recent) segments are found. While inferredIBD sharing does not indicate directionality, the North African samples that have highest IBD sharing with Iberian populations also tend to have the lowest proportion of the European cluster in ADMIXTURE (Fig. 1), e.g. Saharawi, Tunisian Berbers and South Moroccans. This suggests that gene flow occurred from Africa to Europe rather than the other way around."
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
WTF are you talking about?!! M81? Her work is on autosomal SNPs. She worked with about 500,000 alleles. Keep in mind there may be billions in the human genome.
quote:These Tunisians are not "Pure". They are an isolated inbred group skewing the results of the entire analysis. When Calculated by hand or rerun without the Tunisian related individuals the Saharawi are usually the most "Berber" with Moderate Sub Saharan and absence of European.
Originally posted by xyyman:
![]()
quote:I should have put PROBABLY is African in origin. As the issue of geneflow or back-migration from the nearby Southwest Asia is still possible. Either way H, V, HV, and R0 are still present in Africa especially in the northeastern areas.
Originally posted by xyyman:
Am I hearing right...eh! seeing right...eh! reading right?
quote:
Originally posted by Djehuti:
I agree with you that mtDNA hg H is African in origin. The reason being is that both H and its sister V occur in Africa in significant frequencies as well as their ancestor HV and even its ancestor pre-HV (hg R0) which has both its highest frequency and diversity in Africa.
quote:Yet there is no archaeological or even skeletal proof of Iberians settling in North Africa during the Holocene. Unless you can find any. That H as well as V and HV and its ancestor R0 is found present in Africa cannot be coincidence.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
There may be one but I am not aware of no article which theorizes H is of African origin
_____________________________________________
http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0013378
Mitochondrial Haplogroup H1 in North Africa: An Early Holocene Arrival from Iberia
Claudio Ottoni equal contributor,
Giuseppina Primativo equal contributor,
Baharak Hooshiar Kashani, Alessandro Achilli,
Cristina Martínez-Labarga,
Gianfranco Biondi,
Antonio Torroni,
Olga Rickards mail
Abstract
The Tuareg of the Fezzan region (Libya) are characterized by an extremely high frequency (61%) of haplogroup H1, a mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) haplogroup that is common in all Western European populations. To define how and when H1 spread from Europe to North Africa up to the Central Sahara, in Fezzan, we investigated the complete mitochondrial genomes of eleven Libyan Tuareg belonging to H1. Coalescence time estimates suggest an arrival of the European H1 mtDNAs at about 8,000–9,000 years ago, while phylogenetic analyses reveal three novel H1 branches, termed H1v, H1w and H1x, which appear to be specific for North African populations, but whose frequencies can be extremely different even in relatively close Tuareg villages. Overall, these findings support the scenario of an arrival of haplogroup H1 in North Africa from Iberia at the beginning of the Holocene, as a consequence of the improvement in climate conditions after the Younger Dryas cold snap, followed by in situ formation of local H1 sub-haplogroups. This process of autochthonous differentiation continues in the Libyan Tuareg who, probably due to isolation and recent founder events, are characterized by village-specific maternal mtDNA lineages.
Evidence of trans-Mediterranean contacts between Northern Africa and Western Europe has been assessed at the level of different genetic markers (e.g. [21], [22], [23], [24]). With regards to the mtDNA, the high incidence of H1 and H3 in Northwest Africa, together with some other West European lineages (i.e. V and U5b), reveals a possible link with the postglacial expansion from the Iberian Peninsula, which not only directed north-eastward into the European continent [17], [18], [25], but also southward, beyond the Strait of Gibraltar, into North Africa [26], [27]. So, besides the ‘autochthonous’ South-Saharan component, the maternal pool of Northern Africa appears to be characterized by at least two other major components: (i) a Levantine contribution (i.e. haplogroups U6 and M1, [11]), associated with the return to Africa around 45 kya, and (ii) a more recent West European input associated with the postglacial expansion.
Within the West-European component in North Africa, H1 is the most represented haplogroup with frequencies ranging from 21% in some Tunisian Berber groups to 1% in Egypt [28]. Recently, an extremely high incidence of H1 (61%) has been reported in a Tuareg population from the Central Sahara, in Libya [29]. Tuareg are a semi-nomadic pastoralist people of Northwest Africa, who speak a Berber language. MtDNA analyses performed on the Libyan Tuareg have highlighted their genetic relatedness with some Berber groups and other North African populations, mainly resulting from the sharing of a common West-Eurasian component. A high degree of homogeneity in the Libyan H1 lineages was observed, suggesting that the high frequency of H1 in the Tuareg may be the result of genetic drift and recent founder events.
To better define the nature and extent of H1 variation in the Tuareg from Libya we have now determined the complete sequence of eleven of their mtDNAs belonging to H1. The comparison of these H1 sequences with those already available from Europe and North Africa provides new clues on how and when H1 spread in Northern Africa up to the Central Sahara.
This finding suggests that these H1 sub-clades most likely arose in North Africa after the arrival of the H1 European founder sequence, corresponding to the H1 node in Figure 1. The issue of the North African specificity of H1v, H1w and H1x needs to be corroborated by additional survey of H1 variation in Western Europe, especially in Iberia, but for the moment none of the European complete mtDNA sequences belonging to H1 were found to belong to these clades. This scenario is further supported by the overall age of haplogroup H1 in North Africa. Using the evolution rates recently proposed by Soares et al. [32] and Loogväli et al. [33], haplogroup H1 shows a coalescence time of approximately 8–9 ky (Table 1), in agreement with the hypothesis of an early arrival and radiation of H1 in the African continent in the first half of the Holocene, as a consequence of the postglacial expansion from the Iberian Peninsula. An arrival from Iberia explains the extent of H1 variation observed in North African populations (Table 2). Indeed, Moroccans and Tunisians, the populations geographically closest to Europe, harbor the highest diversity values for all considered indices. Thus, the coastal areas of northwestern Africa, after the arrival of the Iberian founder H1 mtDNAs, probably acted as centers for the subsequent diffusion of H1 in the internal regions of North Africa.
The rather high frequency of H1 in the Tuareg from Sahel (23.3%), in association with intermediate diversity values, is in agreement with the proposal that drift played a major role in shaping the genetic structure of inland populations after they were entrapped in the Sahel belt by the desertification of the Sahara [37]. As for the Libyan Tuareg, the extremely low values of the diversity indices confirm that the outstanding high frequency of H1 in this population is the result of even more recent founder events.
Overall, the results of this study support the hypothesis that most of the West Eurasian maternal contribution detectable in Northwest African populations is likely linked to prehistoric (i.e. the post-glacial expansion from the Iberian Peninsula) rather than more recent historic events [26], [27], [37].
________________________________________________________
The Complex and Doversified Mitochondrial gene pool of Berber populations.
http://www.egyptsearch.com/forums/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic;f=8;t=008533
^^^^ xyyman, in your opinion, would you say some of these berbers are more African than others?
quote:wiki
Originally posted by beyoku:
These Tunisians are not "Pure". They are an isolated inbred group skewing the results of the entire analysis. When Calculated by hand or rerun without the Tunisian related individuals the Saharawi are usually the most "Berber" with Moderate Sub Saharan and absence of European. [/QB]
quote:LMAO
Originally posted by the lyinass,:
The origin of E-M81 (E1b1b1b) is not certain
It is said to be 5,600 years old
Some call it the "berber marker"
quote:
Originally posted by beyoku:
quote:These Tunisians are not "Pure". They are an isolated inbred group skewing the results of the entire analysis. When Calculated by hand or rerun without the Tunisian related individuals the Saharawi are usually the most "Berber" with Moderate Sub Saharan and absence of European.
Originally posted by xyyman:
![]()
quote:
Originally posted by Djehuti:
[QB] [QUOTE]Originally posted by the lyinass,:
quote:Are the Saharawis 88.9 % Saharan African?
Originally posted by xyyman:
@ Beyoku.
Agreed the Saharawis are one of the purest.
0=European
0=Levant/West Asian.
Their geographic location tells the story. Henn is BSing. Maybe for a "ata boy" /"pat on the back" or to get more funds.
quote:Are you that dumb? I am still having a hard time figuring out why you are here.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
Are the Saharawis 88.9 % Saharan African?
This chart lists them as "Saharan-Arabian"
If they were 88.9% Saharan and some of their decendants migrated to Arabia they would still be called Saharan since they are not the ones who migrated to Arabia, they remained in the Sahara, hence they would not be be called Arabian at all those who never left the sahara.
Why is that word "Arabian" there? It's because Arabs conquered Egypt and North Africa.
People here often argue that modern Egyptians are not that similar to ancient Egytpians due these and other immigartions.
I'm not clear on how DNATribes distinguishes Saharawis from Southern Moroccans.
It is my understanding that the Saharwis are themselveds Southern Moroccans mainly
(and also overlapping Northern Mauritania)
Yet here they list Southern Moroccans as less "Saharan-Arabian" and they are shown as over twice as Sub Saharan than the Saharawi.
This category "Saharan-Arabian" is poorly conceived and confusing. The two should be separated "Saharan" and "Arabian"
There is a large interval of land between Morroco and Arabia.
In this case applying the term "pure" doesn't make sense at all. The term itself is a mixture of two places.
And of all berbers Saharwis are all they way over on the West coast. Further West than Libya, Algeria and Tunisia
Most people think the most African berbers are the Siwa and they are on the East side of NA or the Turaeg who are thought by some to have originated in Southern Libya which is also not that close to Morroco/Mauritania.
The purest what?
purest Afican?
or purest berber?
The problem is "purest berber" is a misnomer. [/QB]
quote:
We used the Saharawi as our proxy Maghrebi population, since the high relatedness in the Tunisian samples is likely to cause reduced ability to infer Maghrebi tracts in more diverse populations. Our sample of Tunisian Berbers retains the highest amount of Maghrebi ancestry, without substantial evidence of admixture with sub-Saharan, European or Near Eastern populations. However, their bimodal mean IBD distribution [Figure 4A] indicates a high proportion of 1st–2nd cousin equivalents and suggest that our sample of Tunisian Berbers comes from an isolated, endogamous population with diversity that is likely reduced relative to other Maghrebi populations. Thus, although their low degree of non-Maghrebi admixture might make them ideal as a Maghrebi source population, reduced haplotypic diversity means that we are likely to under-call true Maghrebi segments from other, more diverse populations
quote:you are a condecending asshole that doesn't contribute to be becoming informed. I hate know-it-alls
Originally posted by beyoku:
Are you that dumb? I am still having a hard time figuring out why you are here.
quote:I am not a know it all. And even if I were you could have easily known just as much by actually READING the content that you post. It doesn't take rocket surgery to know Saharawi are "Saharawi" and other non "Saharawi" Berbers are NOT Saharawi. It also does not take a genius to look at a map of Africa and note the separation of Morocco and Western Sahara. This is what happens when you approach the forum with no intent at all to learn about the things actually posted IN the Forum. Do you expect to get some type of positive recognition simply based on Post Count? You have more than 10 times as many posts as me! What have you actually learned here?
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:you are a condecending asshole that doesn't contribute to be becoming informed. I hate know-it-alls
Originally posted by beyoku:
Are you that dumb? I am still having a hard time figuring out why you are here.
quote:
Originally posted by Djehuti:
[QB] Hey Beyoku, I too am still wondering whether lyinass
quote:--Khaled K Abu-Amero et al., Mitochondrial DNA structure in the Arabian Peninsula
"Particularly, Yemen has the largest contribution of L lineages (30). So, most probably, this area was the entrance gate of a portion of these lineages in prehistoric times, which participated in the building of the primitive Arabian population."
quote:--Viktor Černý et al., Migration of Chadic speaking pastoralists within Africa based on population structure of Chad Basin and phylogeography of mitochondrial L3f haplogroup
3396-4218-15514-15944del and the control region motif 16209–16519 with a TMRCA of 57,100 ± 9,400 YBP. This haplogroup diversifies into sub-haplogroups L3f1, L3f2 and L3f3. The most geographically widespread sub-haplogroup is L3f1, which is distributed across the African continent [3] and also Arabia [32,33] and has a TMRCA of 48,600 ± 11,500 YBP.
quote:----Viktor Černý, Am J Phys Anthropol, 2009,
The main island of Soqotra lies not far from the proposed southern migration route of anatomically modern humans out of Africa ∼60,000 years ago (kya), suggesting the island may harbor traces of that first dispersal.
quote:I have seen Behar.
Originally posted by xyyman:
Did anyone take a close look at the cited figure 4,sup from Behar? The pattern is clearly migration into Southern Arabia. What is really fascinating is the Mongols at K2. I wonder what it any demographic event will explain that. DJ. That is your part of the world. I read about the Sindhi etc of Pakistan.
Will C&C soon.
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
[QB] Quote from the study:(Kivilsid(sp) et al 2012)
Although mtDNA is a single locus, some parallels concerning the African expansion of M1 and U6 can be drawn from autosomal data. In a recent study, Behar and colleaguesexplored the genome-wide diversity of the Jewish Diaspora with regard to that of their host populations, as well as the Middle East [45]. In their supplemental figure four, results of analyses undertaken with the software ADMIXTURE are shown, and specifically at K=10, an ancestry component depicted in deep purple colour appears. Interestingly, its proportion is particularly high amongst Mozabite Berbers, who have very high frequencies of M1 and U6 [12]. This deep purple colour is also present at a fairly high frequency amongst Moroccans, and to a lesser extent amongst Ethiopians, both Jewish and non-Jewish, and Egyptians. Its proportion in the Near Eastern populations is by far smaller than in the African ones.]
quote:The Complex and Diversified Mitochondrial Gene Pool
Originally posted by xyyman:
[QB] What do you think I am referencing on U6 and M1?
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
South Arabians are essentially Africans.
quote:when are you going to put up some haplogroup percentages of South Arabians?
Originally posted by xyyman:
I am saying not Arabians are "Africans". But their genetic makeup, those in the south, is consistent with migrants. The archeological record also supports that view as TP pointed out.
quote:Just in case you don't get it...AIM/SNP Combined with Haplogroups tells the story. That is why Henn added to verify her hypothesis with haplogroups/lineage
Originally posted by the lioness,:
[QUOTE]when are you going to put up some percentages of South Arabians?
where is your genetics of South Arabia refernces?
-and your RSI theory, Reverse Spread of Islam?
quote:What are you talking about. Maybe you should read on how STRUCTURE/ADMIXTURE programs work. North Africans differentiate at K=10. Sardinia is VOID of a North African component at K=10.
Originally posted by xyyman:
Notice the heavy North African components in Sardinia!! K5-K10 Damn!!! This is some fascinating shyte.
quote:So, the Y Chromosome J clades in Northern Africa that are just a couple of thousand years old, are cultural as well?
Originally posted by xyyman:
The genetic evidence is that the spread of Islam was cultural and not demographic.(RSI).
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
quote:So, the Y Chromosome J clades in Northern Africa that are just a couple of thousand years old, are cultural as well?
Originally posted by xyyman:
The genetic evidence is that the spread of Islam was cultural and not demographic.(RSI).
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
quote:So, the Y Chromosome J clades in Northern Africa that are just a couple of thousand years old, are cultural as well?
Originally posted by xyyman:
The genetic evidence is that the spread of Islam was cultural and not demographic.(RSI).
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
^Ok. Just wanted to confirm for myself, against better judgement, that you're not to be taken serious.
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
quote:So, the Y Chromosome J clades in Northern Africa that are just a couple of thousand years old, are cultural as well?
Originally posted by xyyman:
The genetic evidence is that the spread of Islam was cultural and not demographic.(RSI).
quote:You thrashing me? You have to be kidding me, son. As old as 2008:
Originally posted by xyyman:
You got a trashing before. Remember. Jari is not going to save you.
quote:--Hassan 2008
We study the major levels of Y-chromosome haplogroup variation in 15 Sudanese populations by typing major Y-haplogroups in 445 unrelated males representing the three linguistic families in Sudan. Our analysis shows Sudanese populations fall into haplogroups A, B, E, F, I, J, K, and R in frequencies of 16.9, 7.9, 34.4, 3.1, 1.3, 22.5, 0.9, and 13% respectively. Haplogroups A, B, and E occur mainly in Nilo-Saharan speaking groups including Nilotics, Fur, Borgu, and Masalit; whereas haplogroups F, I, J, K, and R are more frequent among Afro-Asiatic speaking groups including Arabs, Beja, Copts, and Hausa, and Niger-Congo speakers from the Fulani ethnic group. Mantel tests reveal a strong correlation between genetic and linguistic structures (r = 0.31, P = 0.007), and a similar correlation between genetic and geographic distances (r = 0.29, P = 0.025) that appears after removing nomadic pastoralists of no known geographic locality from the analysis. The bulk of genetic diversity appears to be a consequence of recent migrations and demographic events mainly from Asia and Europe, evident in a higher migration rate for speakers of Afro-Asiatic as compared with the Nilo-Saharan family of languages, and a generally higher effective population size for the former. The data provide insights not only into the history of the Nile Valley, but also in part to the history of Africa and the area of the Sahel.
quote:--Pagani et al 2012
The dates of admixture (assuming 30 years
per generation)42 are reported in Table 1. Notably, in most
of the Semitic, Cushitic, and Omotic populations, the
admixture of African and non-African ancestry components
dates to 2.5–3 kya, whereas in North Africa, the
admixture dates are ~2 ky more recent, clustering around
1 kya, consistent with previous reports.
quote:--Henn et al 2012
Under a pulse model of migration, a significant increase in gene flow likely occurred ~700 ya, after the Arabic expansion into North Africa 1,400 ya.
quote:After reading the passage in its full context, the aforementioned Henn et al reference appears not to refer to the Arabic expansion. What they say about Near Eastern ancestry in North African populations is:
Originally posted by Swenet:
Wow. Xyyman is questioning my intelligence. That really keeps me awake at night.![]()
To the rest of the forum:
quote:--Pagani et al 2012
The dates of admixture (assuming 30 years
per generation)42 are reported in Table 1. Notably, in most
of the Semitic, Cushitic, and Omotic populations, the
admixture of African and non-African ancestry components
dates to 2.5–3 kya, whereas in North Africa, the
admixture dates are ~2 ky more recent, clustering around
1 kya, consistent with previous reports.
While I don't believe this represents the first and only admixture date, Pagani et al nonetheless picked up on admixture in North Africa that coincides with the Islamic invasion. The results of other authors agree with the aforementioned time stamp:
quote:--Henn et al 2012
Under a pulse model of migration, a significant increase in gene flow likely occurred ~700 ya, after the Arabic expansion into North Africa 1,400 ya.
quote:--Henn et al 2012
More recently, the substantial, east-to-west decline of Near Eastern ancestry (Figure 1A) could represent a defined migration associated with Arab conquest 1,400 ya or merely gene flow occurring gradually among neighboring populations along a North African | Arabian Peninsula transect.
quote:--Henn et al 2012 [/QUOTE]
Originally posted by Swenet:
]Under a pulse model of migration, a significant increase in gene flow likely occurred ~700 ya, after the Arabic expansion into North Africa 1,400 ya.
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
xyyman if you wanted to prove that the South Arabians are essentailly African then you should have started with articles that are about Arabians in the title, where Arabians are the main theme of the article, studies that talk about the hap group percentages of Arab genetic ancestry. And find your own articles not the ones I posted, thanks
Let me ask you a question:
Are modern Egyptians primarily African?
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
[QUOTE]Originally posted by Swenet:
Wow. Xyyman is questioning my intelligence. That really keeps me awake at night.![]()
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
@ Beyoku.
Agreed the Saharawis are one of the purest.
0=European
0=Levant/West Asian.
Their geographic location tells the story. Henn is BSing. Maybe for a "ata boy" /"pat on the back" or to get more funds.
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
Maybe xyyman can explain why in the above DNATribes chart the term "Northeast African" doesn't have the word "Arabian" in it
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
BTW. It does matter what you do in your bedroom. It is the agenda that pisses me off.
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
[QUOTE]Originally posted by Swenet:
Wow. Xyyman is questioning my intelligence. That really keeps me awake at night.![]()
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
Beyoku, I will get back at you. Double checking a few things on SNPs.
To get started...how am I screwing up? You said I misunderstand the Behar chart. I am saying Sardinians carry high frequency of North Africans components(k-10 clearly shows that) as displayed by light blue. The dark blue being European.
Set me straight. Careful now.....go slowly![]()
quote:
Originally posted by beyoku:
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
Beyoku, I will get back at you. Double checking a few things on SNPs.
To get started...how am I screwing up? You said I misunderstand the Behar chart. I am saying Sardinians carry high frequency of North Africans components(k-10 clearly shows that) as displayed by light blue. The dark blue being European.
Set me straight. Careful now.....go slowly![]()
![]()
The light blue component in K=10 is NOT a North African specific component. It is a rather generic Southern European component. In the Previous K's the Light blue is a somewhat genetic Eurasian component. Peaking in Yemeni Jews and Saudis at different times and in Mozabites at K=9. Although it peaks in Mozabites at K=9, notice it is not a Maghreb specific component. It is generic: Romainians, French, Hungarians et al do not derive 1/3rd of their ancestry from the Maghreb. Going on to k=10 The magreb specific component materializes and is in Dark Purple. I have no idea how you can miss this...it comprises the majority component in Moroccans and Mozabites. This is similar to the Light blue in Henn (K=8).
In K=10 what you are seeing is a combination of Southern European (Light Blue), Northern European (Dark Blue) and what is best described as "West Asian": (Light Green). These components have been verified time and time again using structure/admixture.
Looking at K=10 the purple Maghreb component is very low outside Africa and nearly terminated in Europe...only showing a very minor presence in Spaniards. The lack of west Asian (Light Green) in Horn Africans and Maghreb but its presence in the Middle East and Egypt has always been seen as an indication that backflow bringing a South West Asian component into Africa (Light Purple/Blue) was at the time void of a more West Asian signature (Light Green) now found in the Middle Near/East.
quote:Damn right. And second guess your views regarding North African ''purity'' too, while you're at it:
Originally posted by xyyman:
Ok. I went back and double checked my statement on Behar. You had me 2nd guessing my statement
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
quote:Damn right. And second guess your views regarding North African ''purity'' too, while you're at it:
Originally posted by xyyman:
Ok. I went back and double checked my statement on Behar. You had me 2nd guessing my statement
--Henn et al 2012
Maghrebi component to Europe component........= 0.059
Maghrebi component to Qatar component..........= 0.055
Maghrebi component to Masaai component..........= 0.093
Maghrebi component to West Africa component..= 0.158
Maghrebi component to Luhya component..........= 0.133
Maghrebi component to Bulala component..........= 0.150
quote:No fraud, ''k-8'' indicates eight clusters, not a single one. That's exactly why its called ''k-8'', Osirion. It pains you to no end that the Qatari, your ''pure'' Maghrebi and European components are all equidistant to each other, sharing mutual distances in between 0.050-0.060, doesn't it?
Originally posted by xyyman:
K-8 is just one cluster..of many.
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
According to xyyman's theory that the term "Saharan-Arabian" means "pure African" one of the Bedouin groups groups of the Negev desert in Israel, in the Levant are 94% African
_________________________________________^^94%
quote:That's complex since to major branches play part.
Originally posted by Truthcentric:
OK, what exactly is xxyman arguing here? Is he claiming that modern Southern Arabians are all essentially African from a genetic standpoint?Has he even seen photos of most South Arabians on Google image search?
Also, his argument that the Islamic conquest of North Africa entailed no demographic movements, haplogroup J notwithstanding, is a talking point you usually see coming from the Eurocentric camp. It seems out of character for him.
quote:Question: what do you consider Southern Arabia?
Originally posted by beyoku:
Yall must be joking. "Southern Arabians" are NOT "Africans." There is a clear genetic divide between even Egyptians and Palestinians. There is likely a larger one between Southern Arabians and Sub Saharan East Africans.
quote:Sigh....I dont even know where to start. You are going to have to be familiar with the STRUCTURE and ADMIXTURE applications to know what is going on. You are not familiar with these applications that is why you are making mistakes interpreting the data. You are going to have to see other ADMIXTURE runs where they use some of this same data. Mozabite are somewhat inbred BUT when right along with other North African groups they are not inbred to the first cousin level to create their own artificial cluster. THe Mozabite were usually on par with Maghreb ancestry as southern Moroccans and Saharawi - This is data that has been proven PRIOR to the introduction of the Tunisian data set.
Originally posted by xyyman:
@ Beyoku – to clarify. I interchangeable use dark purple and purple. I did not include light purple in my analysis. Looking at the Pakistani group is a clear indication that light blue is North African and not Southern European. Because the SSA components proportionally shows up in these Pakistani groups. The same pattern is seen with ALL the Jewish groups globally. Including Yemeni and Indian/Pakistani. Ie African (SSA and Saharan) SNPs as a proportional “block” at all k-clusters
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
^^^ xyyman got hurt
quote:What actual researchers say:
Originally posted by xyyman:
Looking at the Pakistani group is a clear indication that light blue is North African and not Southern European.
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
But I can analyze data.
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
It pains you to no end that the Qatari, your ''pure'' Maghrebi and European components are all equidistant to each other, sharing mutual distances in between 0.050-0.060, doesn't it?
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
For the record read the supplements:
Pg 16
Supplementary Note 4:
Details of Structure-like Patterns
Old World Analysis (Entire Sample Set)
Dark Brown – San/Pigmy
Light Brown – Bantu
Dark Blue – European (north and south)
Dark Purple – Mazabite unoque.
Light Purple – Arabian/Ethiopian
Light Blue- North African
Light green – Middle Eastern
Dark Green – Middle Eastern
The author does not classify light blue as European(south) because he cannot. Why?
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
What Xxyman, the forum's eccentric weirdo no one takes serious, is dreaming up:
quote:What actual researchers say:
Originally posted by xyyman:
Looking at the Pakistani group is a clear indication that light blue is North African and not Southern European.
In a recent study, Behar and colleagues explored the genome-wide diversity of the Jewish Diaspora with regard to that of their host populations, as well as the Middle East [45]. In their supplemental figure four, results of analyses undertaken with the software ADMIXTURE are shown, and specifically at K=10, an ancestry component depicted in deep purple colour appears. Interestingly, its proportion is particularly high amongst Mozabite Berbers, who have very high frequencies of M1 and U6 .
--Pennarun et al 2012
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
But I can analyze data.
That's not something you're supposed to say about yourself old man, where are the others who can say this about you? Face it, old geezer, your reputation on the forum is not one of analysing data. Its more like vandalizing other researcher's data to come to a distorted conclusion.
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
It pains you to no end that the Qatari, your ''pure'' Maghrebi and European components are all equidistant to each other, sharing mutual distances in between 0.050-0.060, doesn't it?
quote:Don't drag me into this old man. I was just here to confirm for myself that you're not in your right mind. Besides, you've yet to cite a single source that's in agreement with the cuckoo idea that light blue is North African, but yet you somehow think its sensible to complement your unproven fairy tales with tuff talk buffoonery like ''prove me wrong'', ''prove me wrong''.
Originally posted by xyyman:
I am saying light blue is North African. Beyoku says it Southern European. You say it is,,,,what?
quote:How can purple be Mozabite, old man? The authors (Pennarun et al) correlate dark purple with U6 and M1, are you saying that M1 and U6 in North Africans other than Mozabites is due to admixture with the latter?
Originally posted by xyyman:
I case you don't get it you just agreed with me. Dark Purple is Mazab.
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
quote:Don't drag me into this old man. I was just here to confirm for myself that you're not in your right mind. Besides, you've yet to cite a single source that's in agreement with the cuckoo idea that light blue is North African, but yet you somehow think its sensible to complement your unproven fairy tales with tuff talk buffoonery like ''prove me wrong'', ''prove me wrong''.
Originally posted by xyyman:
I am saying light blue is North African. Beyoku says it Southern European. You say it is,,,,what?
quote:How can purple be Mozabite, old man? The authors (Pennarun et al) correlate dark purple with U6 and M1, are you saying that M1 and U6 in North Africans other than Mozabites is due to admixture with the latter?
Originally posted by xyyman:
I case you don't get it you just agreed with me. Dark Purple is Mazab.
quote:
Originally posted by beyoku:
quote:Sigh....I dont even know where to start. You are going to have to be familiar with the STRUCTURE and ADMIXTURE applications to know what is going on. You are not familiar with these applications that is why you are making mistakes interpreting the data. You are going to have to see other ADMIXTURE runs where they use some of this same data. Mozabite are somewhat inbred BUT when right along with other North African groups they are not inbred to the first cousin level to create their own artificial cluster. THe Mozabite were usually on par with Maghreb ancestry as southern Moroccans and Saharawi - This is data that has been proven PRIOR to the introduction of the Tunisian data set.
Originally posted by xyyman:
@ Beyoku – to clarify. I interchangeable use dark purple and purple. I did not include light purple in my analysis. Looking at the Pakistani group is a clear indication that light blue is North African and not Southern European. Because the SSA components proportionally shows up in these Pakistani groups. The same pattern is seen with ALL the Jewish groups globally. Including Yemeni and Indian/Pakistani. Ie African (SSA and Saharan) SNPs as a proportional “block” at all k-clusters
Purple does not show up at K=9. It shows up at K=10 and peaks in the Mozabite. The "Light Purple" component that materializes at K=9 is more descriptive of some kind of South WEST Asian ancestry...It peaks in Yemenis, Saudis and Ethiopians.
Getting into the details. If you want to say that the purple is NOT Maghreb and is something else.....then Mozabite and Moroccans have VERY LITTLE NORTHWEST AFRICAN ANCESTRY!
Moroccan JEWS have more North West African ancestry than Moroccans! Romainians and Hungarians have MORE North West African ancestry than the North West Africans in the study.![]()
This makes no sense.....If that light blue you see peaking at K=10 in Sardinia = Maghreb ancestry then most of the people carrying that Ancestry are more BERBER than the BERBERS in the study. Can you understand this? In this program, once a new K is materialized, everything gets shuffled around.
I am fimiliar enough with the program and its uses to have seen the Mozabite and other North Africans in these exercises probably HUNDREDS of times. I have analyzed me OWN ancestry using these programs.
@Troll Patrol - Southern Arabians are Southern Arabian. There are populations in Arabia that are African. Some recent, some ancient. From an OOA perspective the aboriginal population of Arabia which I assume would be the continuation of IJ* lineages and RO/N lineage are not "Africans". SOme of them may look like Africans but they are not Africans. The people on Socotra may look like Africans but they are not. Very little L lineages are found there....and Only 10% E - Lowest in all of Arabia.
quote:Say no more. I understand gramps, don't worry, I understand.
Originally posted by xyyman:
Ha! Ha!
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
quote:Don't drag me into this old man. I was just here to confirm for myself that you're not in your right mind. Besides, you've yet to cite a single source that's in agreement with the cuckoo idea that light blue is North African, but yet you somehow think its sensible to complement your unproven fairy tales with tuff talk buffoonery like ''prove me wrong'', ''prove me wrong''.
Originally posted by xyyman:
I am saying light blue is North African. Beyoku says it Southern European. You say it is,,,,what?
quote:How can purple be Mozabite, old man? The authors (Pennarun et al) correlate dark purple with U6 and M1, are you saying that M1 and U6 in North Africans other than Mozabites is due to admixture with the latter?
Originally posted by xyyman:
I case you don't get it you just agreed with me. Dark Purple is Mazab.
quote:Also take note on page 18:
. Moreover, when at K=10 the Moroccans acquire a substantial share of the novel dark violet component, then in the Moroccan Jewish component palette it reaches only approximately 10%. These non-Jewish populations, as well as Mozabite Berbers, possess significant levels of the predominantly European dark blue component, which is much less pronounced among the Levantine, Arabian Peninsula, and South Caucasus populations (Fig. 3). However, this component is absent in Yemenite Jews – the main characteristic that distinguishes them from all other West Eurasian and North African Jews. Jews from Iran and Iraq appear to be very similar to each other throughout the succession of K values
quote:Again going to the other supp here:
The main difference of Moroccan, Sephardi and Ashkenazi Jews from Levantine populations is a higher proportion of the component otherwise predominant in (Mediterranean) West Europe, which comprises as much as approximately 90% of the "palette” of the Sardinians, for example
quote:
If that light blue component is North West African - Why are Egyptians MORE North West African that Moroccans? Not only Egyptians but Saudies, Yemenis, Moroccan Jews, Palestinians, Druze, Jordanians, Samaritans, Turks, Armenians, Iranians, Georgians, All the Jews, French Basqus, French, Spaniards, Tuscans, Cypriots, Romanians, Hungarians, etc ARE ALL MORE NORTH AFRICAN THAN MOROCCANS AND MOZABITE BERBERS. You dont find something WRONG with that interpretation?
quote:[/QUOTE]
Originally posted by beyoku:
^ Sardinia is an Island........ How can Maghreb ancestry ......
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
![]()
quote:
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
quote:That's complex since to major branches play part.
Originally posted by Truthcentric:
OK, what exactly is xxyman arguing here? Is he claiming that modern Southern Arabians are all essentially African from a genetic standpoint?Has he even seen photos of most South Arabians on Google image search?
Also, his argument that the Islamic conquest of North Africa entailed no demographic movements, haplogroup J notwithstanding, is a talking point you usually see coming from the Eurocentric camp. It seems out of character for him.
http://www.sant.ox.ac.uk/mec/MECAphotos/Freya-Stark-SA-Negs-Large/Stark-SA-Neg-1935-020-031.jpg
http://www.sant.ox.ac.uk/mec/mecaphotos-freya-stark-south-arabia.html
quote:There are many more berbers in Morocco, Algeria and Libya.
Originally posted by xyyman:
[QB] That is why you mess with you Lioness. Maybe I missed it ...are you stating that this chrat represents only Tunisians from Djerba Island? That the researchers chose to sample ONLY the people from Djerba Island?
quote:this concept about "inbredness" thus producing an " artificial cluster" would need to be explained.
Originally posted by beyoku
ozabite are somewhat inbred BUT when right along with other North African groups they are not inbred to the first cousin level to create their own artificial cluster. THe Mozabite were usually on par with Maghreb ancestry as southern Moroccans and Saharawi - This is data that has been proven PRIOR to the introduction of the Tunisian data set.
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:There are many more berbers in Morocco, Algeria and Libya.
Originally posted by xyyman:
[QB] That is why you mess with you Lioness. Maybe I missed it ...are you stating that this chrat represents only Tunisians from Djerba Island? That the researchers chose to sample ONLY the people from Djerba Island?
In Tunisia they are mainly on Djerba island along with some Jews Arabs and Catholics., total pop 140,000.
There are also berbers in small villages in Chenini-Douret, Guellala and Tozeur. Poulation of Tunisia is 10.6 mill
The total berber population is 90-500,000
Tunisians in general have a mixture of Arab and berber ancestry.
Do you know anything about the history of Tunisia?
The Arabs were not the first foreigners
At it's height Carthage had 500,000 people.
The Phoenicians marched into Tunisia around 1100 BC, establishing their capital, Carthage (just north of today’s Tunis), as the main power in the western Mediterranean by the 6th century. The emerging Roman Empire was not happy with these events, and 128 years of Punic Wars ensued. The legendary general of Carthage, Hannibal, nearly conquered the Romans after his invasion of Italy in 216 BC, but the Romans finally won, razed Carthage, sold its population for slaves and then re-created it as a Roman city in 44 BC. Roman Tunisia boomed, creating the temple-decked city of Dougga and the extravagant El Jem colosseum.
The Roman decline and fall in the 5th century was followed by the rampaging Vandals, who saw their opportunity and captured Carthage in 439. Unhappy with the nihilistic rule of the Vandals, the local Berber population formed small kingdoms and rebelled, but both groups were conquered, and the Vandals ousted by the approaching Byzantines in 533.
In the 7th century the Arabs arrived from the east, bringing Islam with them. Despite continuous Berber belligerence, the Arabs ruled Tunisia until the 16th century, leaving behind the strongest ongoing cultural impact of all of Tunisia’s invaders. Stuck between the Spanish Reconquistas and the powerful Ottoman empire, Tunisia became an outpost of the Ottomans until France began to gain ground in the region during the 19th century. Establishing their rule in 1881, the French proceeded to spend the next 50 years attempting to transform Tunisia into a European-style nation.
__________________________________________
The amount of berber the average Tuniaian has is debatable.
This thread is about the Maghreb in general. Therfore you should find articles on Tunisian genetics that aren't specific to berbers
quote:this concept about "inbredness" thus producing an " artificial cluster" would need to be explained.
Originally posted by beyoku
ozabite are somewhat inbred BUT when right along with other North African groups they are not inbred to the first cousin level to create their own artificial cluster. THe Mozabite were usually on par with Maghreb ancestry as southern Moroccans and Saharawi - This is data that has been proven PRIOR to the introduction of the Tunisian data set.
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
This guy is labeled Wadi Hadhramaut !!!!! We know they are clssified as SSA.
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
South Arabians are essentially Africans. Now we have three independent sources basically concluding the same thing. South Arabia is an extension of Africa.
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
^This is what pseudo-science looks like.
By far the most African lineages in Arabia are recent and have Bantu and/or Nilotic signatures. The people that are listed above don't even look like these groups and they do not primary derive their dark skin from Africans. Its just as bizarre as saying light skinned Middle Easterners are Europeans or that some Africans with a few Indian lineages derive their dark skin from Indians. Stop degrading Egyptsearch with this lame ass ethno-centric pseudo-science, gramps.
quote:
Originally posted by Doctoris Scientia:
quote:Right. Even when the study itself points out the multi-origins of the "blue" colour characterized in the groupings of ancestral groups. This study, while some may deny it, is a nightmare for Eurocentrics, not only does it debunk massive admixture among most East and North African populations, it proposes significant gene-flow from Africa into "Western Eurasia".
Originally posted by zarahan:
Doctoris said:
The blue among the Mozabite, like you already mentioned, is of mixed origin, unlike the Dogon or the Beja. Meaning they possess both ancestral indigenous African Saharan and more recent non-African admixture. But than again the ancestral African admixture forms the majority of the "blue" found among the Mozabite, +/-30%, with the recent non-African blue forming the minority, +/-20%. Mozabite are therefore 40% African minus the "Saharan/Dogon" ancestry, 40% African "Saharan/Dogon", and only 20% non-African. Therefore tearing apart any theory that Berber/Arab North Africans, while receiving limited non-African admixture, for the most part are indigenous Africans, i.e. not "Caucasoid", genetically related to other Africans.
OK fair enough. It is a good approach to take- breaking down the color coding. I have seen some on the web try to twist it into some sort of vague "Eurasian" grouping.
quote:Not at all. If there is no common ancestry other than this Bantu-like ancestry Arabs have recently inherited, they cannot be ''SSA'' as you so bizarrely claimed.
Originally posted by xyyman:
By far the most African lineages in Arabia are recent and have Bantu and/or Nilotic signatures ]]]- strawman.
quote:If they didn't get their dark skin from Africans, explain how they can be ''sub-Saharan Africans''. Your spacey posts (and subsequent flip-flopping when called out) read like fantasies and plot twists out of one of J.K Rowling's books.
Originally posted by xyyman:
2. [[The people that are listed above don't even look like these groups and they do not primary derive their dark skin from Africans]]]. Strawman. I never said they got their dark skin from Africans. They occupy the same geographic latitude and condition. I always argued that. Right Lioness? That is why I believe there are black Persians also.
quote:
Originally posted by MindoverMatter718:
quote:Is this taking into account both parental markers (X and Y)?
Originally posted by Doctoris Scientia:
Any ways biologically, the Mozabite Berbers are 80% African and 20% non-African.
quote:^^^ That's you xyyman saking "Is this taking into account both parental markers (X and Y)?"
Originally posted by xyyman:
Is this you Sweetness? Some of you are realy clowns. More to come.....
ANYONE!!!!!!!
quote:
Originally posted by MindoverMatter718:
quote:Is this taking into account both parental markers (X and Y)?
Originally posted by Doctoris Scientia:
Any ways biologically, the Mozabite Berbers are 80% African and 20% non-African.
quote:All of these studies, when they talk about Tunisian berbers they are talking about small popualtions
Originally posted by xyyman:
[QB] Granted you have read more books than me on the history of the region. But can process information better than most.
But you still haven't answered my question.
Was the sample taken only from Djerba as you implied? Stop BSing. And I wouldn't get in your head.
quote:Your mtDNA has close affinities with the mtDNA that spread with the African branch of the Natufians to West Asia, or some another African migration to Eurasia around the same time:
Originally posted by Neferet:
Oh, I left out that I'm L2a1a and have matches with Siwa and Jerba, Mozabites and so on. Let me know what does this mean and how is it possible to be so spread out all over the place.
quote:Ancient DNA from Neolithic Syrian graves
Originally posted by Evergreen
All the recovered haplotypes belong to major European haplogroups except for H37 and also probably H43,
which could be assigned toWest African haplogroup L2a
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
[the L2a1k mentioned above. Note also that L2a1k was previously named L2a1a (your mtDNA). Your mtDNA may very well be L2a1k per current nomenclature.
quote:What exactly about my post is BS? I never said they're the same, gramps. Learn to read. I said that L2a1k was originally classed under L2a1a, and that her mtDNA might or might not classify as L2a1k per current phylogeny. She doesn't need to read her genome. She just needs to find out whether her L2a1 motif was tested for the L2a1k signature by contacting her company. I'm not sure to what extent her DNA company has done this. If they've accounted for L2a1k, then obviously, she isn't L2a1k.
Originally posted by xyyman:
L2a1a and L2a1k is different at one allele. Blakauyk(sp) et al. She needs to find out if her L2a1a is really L2a1k(European). She needs to read her genome. 23andMe does not report it as L2a1k.
More BS by Sweetness.
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
quote:Not at all. If there is no common ancestry other than this Bantu-like ancestry Arabs have recently inherited, they cannot be ''SSA'' as you so bizarrely claimed.
Originally posted by xyyman:
By far the most African lineages in Arabia are recent and have Bantu and/or Nilotic signatures ]]]- strawman.
quote:If they didn't get their dark skin from Africans, explain how they can be ''sub-Saharan Africans''. Your spacey posts (and subsequent flip-flopping when called out) read like fantasies and plot twists out of one of J.K Rowling's books.
Originally posted by xyyman:
2. [[The people that are listed above don't even look like these groups and they do not primary derive their dark skin from Africans]]]. Strawman. I never said they got their dark skin from Africans. They occupy the same geographic latitude and condition. I always argued that. Right Lioness? That is why I believe there are black Persians also.
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:^^^ That's you xyyman saking "Is this taking into account both parental markers (X and Y)?"
Originally posted by xyyman:
Is this you Sweetness? Some of you are realy clowns. More to come.....
ANYONE!!!!!!!
quote:
Originally posted by MindoverMatter718:
quote:Is this taking into account both parental markers (X and Y)?
Originally posted by Doctoris Scientia:
[qb] Any ways biologically, the Mozabite Berbers are 80% African and 20% non-African.
I gave you something that supports your position and now you are questiong it ? I already gave the link
http://www.egyptsearch.com/forums/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic;f=8;t=006835
^^^ read it and find out
quote:All of these studies, when they talk about Tunisian berbers they are talking about small popualtions
Originally posted by xyyman:
Granted you have read more books than me on the history of the region. But can process information better than most.
But you still haven't answered my question.
Was the sample taken only from Djerba as you implied? Stop BSing. And I wouldn't get in your head.
Djerba Island and Chenini-Douret,
You yourself are the one who had tallked about Jerba at an earlier point
You yourself marked the Behar chart "pure Tunisians"
The chart labels the sample Tunis berbers
- not "Tunisians" by itself
It's paid access so you didn't read it, I didn't read it. Only very limited excerpts and the supplement. Swenet and beyoku are at an advantage
>No I don't know for sure it was a Djerba sample
But I would bet money it is Djerba Island or Chenini-Douret village
Unlike Morocco, Algeria and Libya these are much smaller berber populations.
Maybe Swenet who i think has or had access can answer exactly who they sampled.
The difference between me and you is that I know when berbers in Tunisia are mentioned in these articles regardless of if they sampled the Jerba, the Jerba are the largest population of berber.
So it doesn't even matter which particular berbers in Tunisia are sampled because if you combine them all they represent 1-5% of the Tunisian population.
So if you want to say i was wrong for calling them Djeraba -fine until Swenet or beyoku verifies it.
-but you started it. You added in big letters on the chart "Pure Tunisians" and left out berber
On the chart they are listed as "Tunis berber"
It is misleading to leave out "berber' and that all of these berber groups in Tunisia live in outskirts villages.
Nevertheless Tunisians have some berber in them.
If you want to make a point about the makeup of contemporary Tunisians then find articles on Tunisians that aren't specifically berber studies.
The point of this thread is who are modern North African. more specifically Maghrebians.
-not who are the "purest" or who are the remnant of the oldest continuous population.
quote:I've seen you mention your mtDNA results earlier here on the forum, and so I know you took your test some time ago (unless you took another test recently). Some time in between 2008 and 2012 the phylogeny changed, and every mtDNA that was called 'L2a1a' was assigned a new name: L2a1k.
Originally posted by Neferet:
My DNA haplogroup is L2a1a and the matches are for L2a1a. Can you tell by my numbers if I give them to you? I only know my great grandfather was of English/Germanic descent, my great grandmothers country of origin, I do not know. By photos, she looks white with some mixture but I am not sure. I would assume from Africa somewhere maybe or even Arab?
quote:--Cerezo et al 2012
In
a follow-up study, the initial findings were not replicated, but
a new subclade was identified (L2a1k; initially named as L2a1a)
that could have specifically evolved within Europe ~10 kya
(Malyarchuk et al. 2008).
quote:Gramps, you weren't ''messing'' with me; you were fabricating things as usual, and now you're forced to take it all back. Just like with the whole Southern Arabia = Sub Saharan Africans fiasco.
Originally posted by Xyyman:
@Sweetness. I was messing with you about L2a1a. I just pulled the paper from my library. Author is Malyarchuk. He did extensive work on L-African in Europe. He introduced the term L2a1k. It is not recognize by ISSOG. As Lioness said start a thread and I will post info in it.
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
--Henn et al 2012
Maghrebi component to Europe component........= 0.059
Maghrebi component to Qatar component..........= 0.055
Maghrebi component to Masaai component..........= 0.093
Maghrebi component to West Africa component..= 0.158
Maghrebi component to Luhya component..........= 0.133
Maghrebi component to Bulala component..........= 0.150
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
It pains you to no end that the Qatari, your ''pure'' Maghrebi and European components are all equidistant to each other, sharing mutual distances in between 0.050-0.060, doesn't it?
quote:I was thinking the same thing
Originally posted by Swenet:
That North African specific ancestry is clustered with Arabian ancestry under the umbrella term ''Saharan Arabian'' obviously is a fatal death blow for those who argue that the North African specific ancestry is indigenously African. Especially since they vehemently deny that North African specific mtDNAs M1 and U6 arrived from the Near East. Instead of coming to grips with this inconvenient reality, gramps flips the script and says North African specific ancestry clusters with Arabian ancestry because they're both African.
quote:but the 20 regions where they separate N. African and Arabian
Originally posted by Swenet:
They're just pooling the Arabian and North African ancestries on one occasion, and on the other, they don't. Neither is right or wrong, its just indicative of the level they're zooming in at. For instance, they have a Khoisan-Pygmy pooled cluster, but that doesn't mean that Khoisan and Pygmy ancestry is identical or cannot be separated when you get more specific. If you notice, the Saharan-Arabian cluster only appears in the very general 9 continental zone analysis, not in the specific 20 region analysis.
quote:Of course not. It just means that Maghrebis are assigned their own cluster because their ancestry has been differentiating locally in relative isolation for 20-30ky. If an ancestry ''migrates'' from location A (Asia) to location B (North Africa), it doesn't magically become ancestry that belongs to location B simply because it currently resides in location B. Phylogeny determines what ancestry someone has, not geographical location.
but the 20 regions where they separate N. African and Arabian
shows 67% N. African or more for most Maghrebians.
One could say they are primarily African based on that.
quote:On the chart North Africans on the chart are in proximity to, including
Originally posted by Swenet:
quote:Of course not. It just means that Maghrebis are assigned their own cluster because their ancestry has been differentiating locally in relative isolation for 20-30ky. If an ancestry ''migrates'' from location A (Asia) to location B (North Africa), it doesn't magically become ancestry that belongs to location B simply because it currently resides in location B. Phylogeny determines what ancestry someone has, not geographical location.
but the 20 regions where they separate N. African and Arabian
shows 67% N. African or more for most Maghrebians.
One could say they are primarily African based on that.
Look at p21. What position does the North Africa specific cluster assume, phylogenetically?
http://www.dnatribes.com/dnatribes-snp-admixture-2013-05-14.pdf
quote:Huh? Who is talking about a root position? In DNA Tribes' tree North Africans slit off of the Eurasian branch right after Indians split off. This would have logically happened given the picture painted by the distributions of earlier sister clades of North African U6 and M1 (basal U and M is/used to be in India/Asia). Look at your own Nat Geo map, where does the North African branch ultimately come from?
Originally posted by the Lioness,:
But this chart does not place them in a root parental position. I don't think it indicates that one way or the other.
quote:No, but I'm pretty sure that the NG map documents a back migration from West Asia to Northern Africa. I'm also pretty sure that I've just recently told you that there is no support for U6 and M1 entering Northern Africa from the strait of Gibraltar. I don't get where you get this bizarre idea from, much less how you think that either map contradicts what I'm saying.
Originally posted by the Lioness,:
-neither show an OOA migration from North Africa to Europe by way of Gibralter.
quote:Now you're just making things up. Not even once have I used this line of reasoning.
Originally posted by the Lioness,:
And just because humans began in Africa you cannot necessarily allign modern North Africans with Africans of the OOA migrations.
quote:when was this migration and did it go through Gibralter or Sinai or Yemen?
Originally posted by xyyman:
lol! I repeat. Looking strictly at Behar's chart. Light blue is North African. He! He! No one can challenge that fact.
And per Henn..the migration was one way. From Africa TO Europe.
quote:^^What do you have on the category 'Saharan-Arabian"
Originally posted by xyyman:
lol! I repeat. Looking strictly at Behar's chart. Light blue is North African. He! He! No one can challenge that fact.
And per Henn..the migration was one way. From Africa TO Europe.
quote:You have no clue, do you gramps? There is a difference between the migration that brought the North African component from Asia into Northern Africa 30-20kya, and later migrations back and forth between Iberia and the Maghreb most likely around the onset of the holocene, which, BTW, has been long documented by haplogroup analysis, and is nothing new.
Originally posted by xyyman:
lol! I repeat. Looking strictly at Behar's chart. Light blue is North African. He! He! No one can challenge that fact.
And per Henn..the migration was one way. From Africa TO Europe.
quote:"Saharan-Arabian" is not clearly defined by DNATribes but as I showed by their charts it is any ratio of Saharan and Arabian ancestry mixed together.
Originally posted by zarahan- aka Enrique Cardova:
quote:^^What do you have on the category 'Saharan-Arabian"
Originally posted by xyyman:
lol! I repeat. Looking strictly at Behar's chart. Light blue is North African. He! He! No one can challenge that fact.
And per Henn..the migration was one way. From Africa TO Europe.
that DNA Tribes talks about? They use it as a catch-all
for Egyptian matches, DOminican Republic and several
other things. It covers a wide area including a
big slice of WEST Africa, not to mention the
Horn, and pieces of Uganda and Kenya, on into the
entire bottom half of the Arabian Peninsula. Are
you including this zone as part of a "North African"
grouping or dealing with mostly the coast up near
the Mediterranean?
![]()
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
That North African specific ancestry is clustered with Arabian ancestry under the umbrella term ''Saharan Arabian'' obviously is a fatal death blow for those who argue that the North African specific ancestry is indigenously African. Especially since they vehemently deny that North African specific mtDNAs M1 and U6 arrived from the Near East. Instead of coming to grips with this inconvenient reality, gramps flips the script and says North African specific ancestry clusters with Arabian ancestry because they're both African.
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
--Henn et al 2012
Maghrebi component to Europe component........= 0.059
Maghrebi component to Qatar component..........= 0.055
Maghrebi component to Masaai component..........= 0.093
Maghrebi component to West Africa component..= 0.158
Maghrebi component to Luhya component..........= 0.133
Maghrebi component to Bulala component..........= 0.150quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
It pains you to no end that the Qatari, your ''pure'' Maghrebi and European components are all equidistant to each other, sharing mutual distances in between 0.050-0.060, doesn't it?
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
quote:http://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007%2F978-94-007-2929-2_12.pdf
Facial morphology comprises some of the most distinctive features of early modern humans. The rich fossil record of Morocco allows assessing changes in facial morphology from the late Middle Pleistocene through the Late Pleistocene. Specimens associated with the Aterian industry in Morocco were originally thought to be relatively recent (40–20 ka), but could be much older (35–90 ka). Predating this population are the late Middle Pleistocene specimens of Irhoud. Later in the same geographical area, larger samples are represented by the Iberomaurusian series. We conducted a 3D geometric morphometric analysis of the facial shape of the Aterian specimen Dar es-Soltan II-5, with the aim of deciphering the affinities of this specimen with earlier North African and Levantine fossils, later Upper Paleolithic Eurasian specimens, as well as later North African populations. We used a large comparative sample (n = 191) comprising seven geographic populations of recent humans, Iberomaurusians from Afalou and Taforalt (n = 22), and Middle and Late Pleistocene Eurasian and African fossils. The 3D coordinates of 19 facial landmarks were collected. Specimen landmark configurations were processed with Generalized Procrustes Analysis. Principal Components, Canonical Variates, and cluster analyses were performed and Procrustes distances and Mahalanobis squared distances were calculated. Both Irhoud 1 and Dar es-Soltan II-5 are similar to the early anatomically modern humans from Qafzeh, and the Iberomaurusian sample is closely connected to the Upper Paleolithic European sample.
quote:Cut it out with the faked self-assuredness gramps, you're as sure of yourself as your systematic cowardly avoidance of me and Beyoku's arguments indicates you are.
Originally posted by xyyman:
You got it Lioness....
@Zarahan. I would include the North coast of Africa....as Africa. In fact. DNATribes has a similar map. Will post later. Remember Henn concluded the minor amount of Levant SNP present in North Africa entered during the historical times. She concluded there was NO long term or continuous migration during prehistoric times.
As I said. Light blue is African. Then all 3 data sets agree. Behar, Henn and DNATribes.
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
Jari, what needs to be understood is that the North African component labeled as ''North African'' in DNA Tribes or ''Maghrebi'' in Henn et al 2012 is North African ancestry without the Eastern African contributions (NRY E-M81, E-M78, mtDNA L3e5, L3k).
The ''Maghrebi'' or ''North Africa'' genetic component is correlated in both time, expansion and other molecular characteristics with the Ibero-Maurusian Afalou and Taforalt populations. In their full genome, most Northern Africans are a continuation of these prehistoric populations, not so much of the East African ancestry I mentioned earlier (see the percentages in DNA Tribes analysis; most of their ancestry goes into the ''North Africa'' bracket). Ancient Nile Valley populations, on the other hand, seem to not have been significantly affected by these Ibero-Maurusian populations, judging by the stark differences between the prehistoric populations in both regions (see Jebel Sahaba and Afalou):
Note, the following study included the Nile Valley Wadi Kubbaniya skull, which dates to around the same time as the Ibero-Maurusian skulls, but the latter STILL plot closer to European Upper Palaeolithic skulls. Of course, this result of Ibero-Maurusian samples clustering with Eurasians before they do so with Nile Valley Pleistocene remains has been repeated in many other studies (e.g., Brace 1993, Brace 2005, Pinhasi 2003, Richardson, devilliers 1990, Irish 2000 & 2005, Fransicus 1995 & 2003):
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
quote:http://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007%2F978-94-007-2929-2_12.pdf
Facial morphology comprises some of the most distinctive features of early modern humans. The rich fossil record of Morocco allows assessing changes in facial morphology from the late Middle Pleistocene through the Late Pleistocene. Specimens associated with the Aterian industry in Morocco were originally thought to be relatively recent (40–20 ka), but could be much older (35–90 ka). Predating this population are the late Middle Pleistocene specimens of Irhoud. Later in the same geographical area, larger samples are represented by the Iberomaurusian series. We conducted a 3D geometric morphometric analysis of the facial shape of the Aterian specimen Dar es-Soltan II-5, with the aim of deciphering the affinities of this specimen with earlier North African and Levantine fossils, later Upper Paleolithic Eurasian specimens, as well as later North African populations. We used a large comparative sample (n = 191) comprising seven geographic populations of recent humans, Iberomaurusians from Afalou and Taforalt (n = 22), and Middle and Late Pleistocene Eurasian and African fossils. The 3D coordinates of 19 facial landmarks were collected. Specimen landmark configurations were processed with Generalized Procrustes Analysis. Principal Components, Canonical Variates, and cluster analyses were performed and Procrustes distances and Mahalanobis squared distances were calculated. Both Irhoud 1 and Dar es-Soltan II-5 are similar to the early anatomically modern humans from Qafzeh, and the Iberomaurusian sample is closely connected to the Upper Paleolithic European sample.
quote:It makes sense for Northwest Africans to have a stronger Eurasian and weaker African component than the Nile Valley peoples. Unlike the Nile River which flows from south of the Sahara, The northwest African coastline really is cut off from the rest of the continent by the Atlas Mountains in addition to the Sahara.
Originally posted by Swenet:
Jari, what needs to be understood is that the North African component labeled as ''North African'' in DNA Tribes or ''Maghrebi'' in Henn et al 2012 is North African ancestry without the Eastern African contributions (NRY E-M81, E-M78, mtDNA L3e5, L3k).
The ''Maghrebi'' or ''North Africa'' genetic component is correlated in both time, expansion and other molecular characteristics with the Ibero-Maurusian Afalou and Taforalt populations. In their full genome, most Northern Africans are a continuation of these prehistoric populations, not so much of the East African ancestry I mentioned earlier (see the percentages in DNA Tribes analysis; most of their ancestry goes into the ''North Africa'' bracket). Ancient Nile Valley populations, on the other hand, seem to not have been significantly affected by these Ibero-Maurusian populations, judging by the stark differences between the prehistoric populations in both regions (see Jebel Sahaba and Afalou):
Note, the following study included the Nile Valley Wadi Kubbaniya skull, which dates to around the same time as the Ibero-Maurusian skulls, but the latter STILL plot closer to European Upper Palaeolithic skulls. Of course, this result of Ibero-Maurusian samples clustering with Eurasians before they do so with Nile Valley Pleistocene remains has been repeated in many other studies (e.g., Brace 1993, Brace 2005, Pinhasi 2003, Richardson, devilliers 1990, Irish 2000 & 2005, Fransicus 1995 & 2003):
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
quote:http://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007%2F978-94-007-2929-2_12.pdf
Facial morphology comprises some of the most distinctive features of early modern humans. The rich fossil record of Morocco allows assessing changes in facial morphology from the late Middle Pleistocene through the Late Pleistocene. Specimens associated with the Aterian industry in Morocco were originally thought to be relatively recent (40–20 ka), but could be much older (35–90 ka). Predating this population are the late Middle Pleistocene specimens of Irhoud. Later in the same geographical area, larger samples are represented by the Iberomaurusian series. We conducted a 3D geometric morphometric analysis of the facial shape of the Aterian specimen Dar es-Soltan II-5, with the aim of deciphering the affinities of this specimen with earlier North African and Levantine fossils, later Upper Paleolithic Eurasian specimens, as well as later North African populations. We used a large comparative sample (n = 191) comprising seven geographic populations of recent humans, Iberomaurusians from Afalou and Taforalt (n = 22), and Middle and Late Pleistocene Eurasian and African fossils. The 3D coordinates of 19 facial landmarks were collected. Specimen landmark configurations were processed with Generalized Procrustes Analysis. Principal Components, Canonical Variates, and cluster analyses were performed and Procrustes distances and Mahalanobis squared distances were calculated. Both Irhoud 1 and Dar es-Soltan II-5 are similar to the early anatomically modern humans from Qafzeh, and the Iberomaurusian sample is closely connected to the Upper Paleolithic European sample.
quote:EPD........= Early Predynastic
Originally posted by Swenet:
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
Ha! Ha! Ha! God Good man…stop the BS. WTF are you talking about…facial morphology and genes. Not even the most advanced research has can make that type of assertion. Stop the BS. You are ruining your reputation. Similarly you are correlating Uniparental Markers and autosomal SNPs. Henn, Tribes and Behar are all autosomal SNPs so a comparison can be made. Howver, They may even be using different SNPs on the genome. SNPs are still not standardize unlike STRs.
Come on man, that is like comparing apples and ……rocks. We haven’t reach that far as yet.
They still don’t know what really causes white skin. Give it up bro!!.
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
Jari, what needs to be understood is that the North African component labeled as ''North African'' in DNA Tribes or ''Maghrebi'' in Henn et al 2012 is North African ancestry without the Eastern African contributions (NRY E-M81, E-M78, mtDNA L3e5, L3k).
The ''Maghrebi'' or ''North Africa'' genetic component is correlated in both time, expansion and other molecular characteristics with the Ibero-Maurusian Afalou and Taforalt populations. In their full genome, most Northern Africans are a continuation of these prehistoric populations, not so much of the East African ancestry I mentioned earlier (see the percentages in DNA Tribes analysis; most of their ancestry goes into the ''North Africa'' bracket). Ancient Nile Valley populations, on the other hand, seem to not have been significantly affected by these Ibero-Maurusian populations, judging by the stark differences between the prehistoric populations in both regions (see Jebel Sahaba and Afalou):
Note, the following study included the Nile Valley Wadi Kubbaniya skull, which dates to around the same time as the Ibero-Maurusian skulls, but the latter STILL plot closer to European Upper Palaeolithic skulls. Of course, this result of Ibero-Maurusian samples clustering with Eurasians before they do so with Nile Valley Pleistocene remains has been repeated in many other studies (e.g., Brace 1993, Brace 2005, Pinhasi 2003, Richardson, devilliers 1990, Irish 2000 & 2005, Fransicus 1995 & 2003):
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
quote:http://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007%2F978-94-007-2929-2_12.pdf
Facial morphology comprises some of the most distinctive features of early modern humans. The rich fossil record of Morocco allows assessing changes in facial morphology from the late Middle Pleistocene through the Late Pleistocene. Specimens associated with the Aterian industry in Morocco were originally thought to be relatively recent (40–20 ka), but could be much older (35–90 ka). Predating this population are the late Middle Pleistocene specimens of Irhoud. Later in the same geographical area, larger samples are represented by the Iberomaurusian series. We conducted a 3D geometric morphometric analysis of the facial shape of the Aterian specimen Dar es-Soltan II-5, with the aim of deciphering the affinities of this specimen with earlier North African and Levantine fossils, later Upper Paleolithic Eurasian specimens, as well as later North African populations. We used a large comparative sample (n = 191) comprising seven geographic populations of recent humans, Iberomaurusians from Afalou and Taforalt (n = 22), and Middle and Late Pleistocene Eurasian and African fossils. The 3D coordinates of 19 facial landmarks were collected. Specimen landmark configurations were processed with Generalized Procrustes Analysis. Principal Components, Canonical Variates, and cluster analyses were performed and Procrustes distances and Mahalanobis squared distances were calculated. Both Irhoud 1 and Dar es-Soltan II-5 are similar to the early anatomically modern humans from Qafzeh, and the Iberomaurusian sample is closely connected to the Upper Paleolithic European sample.
quote:
Originally posted by -Just Call Me Jari-:
Well as far as I know the Egyptians are still predominantly Eurasian(e3b) even the Northern Arab looking ones.
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
Get out my face, gramps. Your silly objections are all disposable. Why characterize my post as ''BS'' when the last time you did it, you were forced to retract it. Why engage me when all of our last exchanges resulted in you running away, with your tail tucked between your legs? Why engage me when you horribly failed to substantiate even one of your many pseudo-scientific claims in this thread? You've got to be kidding me, gramps.
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
Ha! Ha! Ha! God Good man…stop the BS. WTF are you talking about…facial morphology and genes. Not even the most advanced research has can make that type of assertion. Stop the BS. You are ruining your reputation. Similarly you are correlating Uniparental Markers and autosomal SNPs. Henn, Tribes and Behar are all autosomal SNPs so a comparison can be made. Howver, They may even be using different SNPs on the genome. SNPs are still not standardize unlike STRs.
Come on man, that is like comparing apples and ……rocks. We haven’t reach that far as yet.
They still don’t know what really causes white skin. Give it up bro!!.
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
Jari, what needs to be understood is that the North African component labeled as ''North African'' in DNA Tribes or ''Maghrebi'' in Henn et al 2012 is North African ancestry without the Eastern African contributions (NRY E-M81, E-M78, mtDNA L3e5, L3k).
The ''Maghrebi'' or ''North Africa'' genetic component is correlated in both time, expansion and other molecular characteristics with the Ibero-Maurusian Afalou and Taforalt populations. In their full genome, most Northern Africans are a continuation of these prehistoric populations, not so much of the East African ancestry I mentioned earlier (see the percentages in DNA Tribes analysis; most of their ancestry goes into the ''North Africa'' bracket). Ancient Nile Valley populations, on the other hand, seem to not have been significantly affected by these Ibero-Maurusian populations, judging by the stark differences between the prehistoric populations in both regions (see Jebel Sahaba and Afalou):
Note, the following study included the Nile Valley Wadi Kubbaniya skull, which dates to around the same time as the Ibero-Maurusian skulls, but the latter STILL plot closer to European Upper Palaeolithic skulls. Of course, this result of Ibero-Maurusian samples clustering with Eurasians before they do so with Nile Valley Pleistocene remains has been repeated in many other studies (e.g., Brace 1993, Brace 2005, Pinhasi 2003, Richardson, devilliers 1990, Irish 2000 & 2005, Fransicus 1995 & 2003):
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
quote:http://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007%2F978-94-007-2929-2_12.pdf
Facial morphology comprises some of the most distinctive features of early modern humans. The rich fossil record of Morocco allows assessing changes in facial morphology from the late Middle Pleistocene through the Late Pleistocene. Specimens associated with the Aterian industry in Morocco were originally thought to be relatively recent (40–20 ka), but could be much older (35–90 ka). Predating this population are the late Middle Pleistocene specimens of Irhoud. Later in the same geographical area, larger samples are represented by the Iberomaurusian series. We conducted a 3D geometric morphometric analysis of the facial shape of the Aterian specimen Dar es-Soltan II-5, with the aim of deciphering the affinities of this specimen with earlier North African and Levantine fossils, later Upper Paleolithic Eurasian specimens, as well as later North African populations. We used a large comparative sample (n = 191) comprising seven geographic populations of recent humans, Iberomaurusians from Afalou and Taforalt (n = 22), and Middle and Late Pleistocene Eurasian and African fossils. The 3D coordinates of 19 facial landmarks were collected. Specimen landmark configurations were processed with Generalized Procrustes Analysis. Principal Components, Canonical Variates, and cluster analyses were performed and Procrustes distances and Mahalanobis squared distances were calculated. Both Irhoud 1 and Dar es-Soltan II-5 are similar to the early anatomically modern humans from Qafzeh, and the Iberomaurusian sample is closely connected to the Upper Paleolithic European sample.
quote:As I said South Arabia is an extension of Africa
Originally posted by the lioness,:
http://www.dnatribes.com/dnatribes-digest-2013-04-02.pdf
quote:This is a better representation. Notice Levant/West Asia is a distinctive group. Technical DNATribes is corect with the label "saharan-arabian". But as stated above. Note who are the true Arabs.
Originally posted by zarahan- aka Enrique Cardova:
[QUOTE]?
![]()
quote:That's pretty much the scenario I had in mind too. There's no record of anyone wiping out the native Egyptians, so the population change we observe must have reflected gradual assimilation rather than a violent or abrupt replacement.
Originally posted by Swenet:
The evidence points to Egypt gradually becoming more and more like modern day Egyptians. There are no abrupt changes. The pre dynastic Egyptian material clusters with Upper and Lower Nubians and then, the more time passes, the more the Egyptian samples gravitate towards the cranio-facial pattern of modern Egypt:
quote:EPD........= Early Predynastic
Originally posted by Swenet:
LPD........= Late Predynastic
Edynastic..= Early Dynastic
OK.........= Old Kingdom
MK.........= Middle Kingdom
Late.......= the Late Dynastic E-series from Gizeh.
^Note that the ''late'' sample above approximates the cranio-facial pattern of modern Northern Africans. In Keita 1988 it clustered with a very recent sample from the Maghreb. You can clearly see a trend of Egyptian samples going upward along PC 1, as time passes,
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
You may be on point Lioness:
From DNATribes.
==========
Compared to sampled East Mediterranean(LEVANT/TURKS) and European individuals, Saharan-Arabian individuals
are somewhat closer to Sub-Saharan Africans. This might reflect a greater history of contacts between Sub-Saharan Africa and both North Africa and the Arabian Peninsula. For instance, these contacts might include population movements via early trade and migration routes along the Nile River and Red Sea, as well as Trans-Saharan trade routes active since early periods.3
Within the Arabian region (green in Figure 3), some Arabians are shifted further to the right
(towards Africans) relative to other Arabians
However, another factor might be earlier migrations between West Asia and Africa
Notably, sampled populations that are most representative of the Arabian genetic
component include not only Saudi and Qatari individuals, but also Yemeni Jewish individuals.
======================
REPEAT: most representative of the Arabian genetic component, most representative of the Arabian genetic component, most representative off the Arabian genetic component!!!!!!
QATARI- 60% Sub-Saharan African, also Saharan and minor levantine
YEMENI - 70% Sub-saharan African, same
Saudi - 40% Sub-saharn, same
quote:As I said South Arabia is an extension of Africa
Originally posted by the lioness,:
http://www.dnatribes.com/dnatribes-digest-2013-04-02.pdf
quote:
Originally posted by Truthcentric:
That said, I second Jari's question about when exactly did Egyptians as opposed to Northwest Africans become predominantly Eurasian in genetic affiliation. At what point in history could we fairly generalize the people living in Egypt as non-black?
quote:
Originally posted by -Just Call Me Jari-:
Well as far as I know the Egyptians are still predominantly Eurasian(e3b) even the Northern Arab looking ones.
quote:Yes, I agree Truth. It could have something to do with that its a Siwa sample (its not Nile Valley) that contains more foreign Middle Eastern elements than is usual for the Siwa population. Either that or the fact that ancestry informative markers don't always converge on the picture they paint.
Originally posted by Truthcentric:
That's pretty much the scenario I had in mind too. There's no record of anyone wiping out the native Egyptians, so the population change we observe must have reflected gradual assimilation rather than a violent or abrupt replacement.
That being the case, I wonder why Henn et al didn't find a larger Inner African component in their Egyptian sample. Not only is the Inner African component swamped out by Eurasian elements in their graphs, but they attribute the few African elements that are present to the trans-Saharan slave trade rather than any pre-existing substratum. I would think the Inner African component would be much larger if modern Egyptians descend from the ancient inhabitants to such a significant degree. [/qb]
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
The evidence points to Egypt gradually becoming more and more like modern day Egyptians. There are no abrupt changes. The pre dynastic Egyptian material clusters with Upper and Lower Nubians and then, the more time passes, the more the Egyptian samples gravitate towards the cranio-facial pattern of modern Egypt:
quote:EPD........= Early Predynastic
Originally posted by Swenet:
LPD........= Late Predynastic
Edynastic..= Early Dynastic
OK.........= Old Kingdom
MK.........= Middle Kingdom
Late.......= the Late Dynastic E-series from Gizeh.
^Note that the ''late'' sample above approximates the cranio-facial pattern of modern Northern Africans. In Keita 1988 it clustered with a very recent sample from the Maghreb. You can clearly see a trend of Egyptian samples going upward along PC 1, as time passes,
quote:I have no problem with that per se- North Coast is still Africa
Originally posted by xyyman:
@Zarahan. I would include the North coast of Africa....as Africa. In fact. DNATribes has a similar map. Will post later. Remember Henn concluded the minor amount of Levant SNP present in North Africa entered during the historical times. She concluded there was NO long term or continuous migration during prehistoric times.
quote:I see. Yes, Henn et al do support this by limiting Sub-Saharan gene-flow to the region to medieval times:
Originally posted by -Just Call Me Jari-:
Well my position has been this for a while, that the Change was Gradual rather than abrubt. I asked because some Eurocentrics try to claim Egypt was mixed from the start. I wanted to see if Henn et al. supports this. From my brief reading it does'nt seem so but I was just wondering if I missed something.
quote:--Henn et al 2012
We propose that present-day ancestry in North Africa is the result of at least three distinct episodes: ancient “back-to-Africa” gene flow prior to the Holocene, more recent gene flow from the Near East resulting in a longitudinal gradient, and limited but very recent migrations from sub-Saharan Africa.
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
^Bro, check this out:
http://www.academia.edu/677017/Human_Skeletal_Remains_Fazzan_Libya
Wow. Just wow. Have we stumbled upon the elusive Neolithic E-M81 carrying Proto-Berber speakers?
quote:
Originally posted by Clyde Winters:
Since we know the Vandals conquered the country from the Romans, why should we not be more inclined to seek explanations for the Berbers in the direction, both linguistically and in physical appearance: blond hair, blue eyes, etc? But no! Disregarding all these facts, historians decree that there was no Vandal influence and that it would be impossible to attribute anything in Barbary to their occupation” (p.69).
The influence of European languages on the Berber languages and the grammar of the Berber languages indicate that the Berbers are probably of European, especially Vandal origin.
quote:I put the link up to redirect languge oriented replies to Clyde's language oriented thread as opposed to this one
Originally posted by Swenet:
^Who cares? Keep it moving.
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
Sweetness!!
This is the first time I have seen Garamantes, South Saharans and Roman Egyptians cluster.
What's up?!
![]()
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
^ http://www.academia.edu/677017/Human_Skeletal_Remains_Fazzan_Libya
quote:
Originally posted by zarahan- aka Enrique Cardova
Can you quote where she says that the minor amount of Levant SNP present in North Africa entered during the historical times, and concluded there was NO long term or continuous migration during
prehistoric times? [/QB]
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
Clyde! Clyde! Clyde!![]()
I credit Sweetness for digging up this one. But as usual, he has no idea of the significnce of what he is posting....
Old news...
Caucasoids! Caucasoids! Caucasoids! in Sub-Saharan Africa. Reminds me of Rameses III.
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
Sweetness!!
This is the first time I have seen Garamantes, South Saharans and Roman Egyptians cluster.
What's up?!
![]()
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
^ http://www.academia.edu/677017/Human_Skeletal_Remains_Fazzan_Libya
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
QATARI- 60% Sub-Saharan African, also Saharan and minor levantine
YEMENI - 70% Sub-saharan African, same
Saudi - 40% Sub-saharn, same
quote:As I said South Arabia is an extension of Africa
Originally posted by the lioness,:
http://www.dnatribes.com/dnatribes-digest-2013-04-02.pdf
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
Seems like you are not following. The genetic evidence is that the spread of Islam was cultural and not demographic.(RSI).
This is getting old.....
![]()
![]()
quote:Just in case you don't get it...AIM/SNP Combined with Haplogroups tells the story. That is why Henn added to verify her hypothesis with haplogroups/lineage
Originally posted by the lioness,:
[QUOTE]when are you going to put up some percentages of South Arabians?
where is your genetics of South Arabia refernces?
-and your RSI theory, Reverse Spread of Islam?
quote:I can't keep bailing you out.
Originally posted by xyyman:
Lioness...can you explain? You seem a little sharper in this area than some of the others.
quote:Swenet, how about physical remains, what does physical anthropology tell us about the populations from that time.
Originally posted by Swenet:
quote:I see. Yes, Henn et al do support this by limiting Sub-Saharan gene-flow to the region to medieval times:
Originally posted by -Just Call Me Jari-:
Well my position has been this for a while, that the Change was Gradual rather than abrubt. I asked because some Eurocentrics try to claim Egypt was mixed from the start. I wanted to see if Henn et al. supports this. From my brief reading it does'nt seem so but I was just wondering if I missed something.
quote:--Henn et al 2012
We propose that present-day ancestry in North Africa is the result of at least three distinct episodes: ancient “back-to-Africa” gene flow prior to the Holocene, more recent gene flow from the Near East resulting in a longitudinal gradient, and limited but very recent migrations from sub-Saharan Africa.
Henn et al either ignored or didn't cross-check the literature for the consensus dates of various haplogroup introductions from Sub-Saharan Africa/East Africa to Northern Africa, to get a feel for how accurate their conclusions are.
How do I know? Henn et al also failed to pick up on the Neolithic migration of Proto Chado-Berbers to the Maghreb ~7kya, which is documented with haplogroups NRY E-V257, E-M81 and mtDNA L3e1 among others in modern Maghrebi populations. Some elements of this Neolithic East African population supposedly met up and merged with Capsians from Tunisia to Central Algeria and Ibero-Maurusians further West in coastal Morocco. They conferred their thin layer of East African genes, language and Neolithic trappings on top of the overwhelming pre-existing Ibero-Maurusian ancestry and this is likely how modern Berbers as we know them came into existence.
Skeletally speaking, this migration (that Henn et al 2012 failed to pick up on) is most likely documented by recent finds of Ancient Garamantes non-metric relationships with Chadian, Niger and Mali Neolithic remains. See here if you hadn't already (scroll all the way to the bottom):
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
^Bro, check this out:
http://www.academia.edu/677017/Human_Skeletal_Remains_Fazzan_Libya
Wow. Just wow. Have we stumbled upon the elusive Neolithic E-M81 carrying Proto-Berber speakers?
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
You're such a goddamn pinhead, Xyyman. You call the bulk of their ancestry Sub-Saharan and you then post as proof data that says that almost all indigenous Arabian samples have 1.2%, 1.1% and 8.4% Sub-Saharan African ancestry. I'm really starting to think that you have mental problems.
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
You also said origin is suggested by frequency and diversity of a haplogroup, Now I notice you leave out where the hg has the greatest diversity. U6 for instance has highest diversity in Iberia.
You also disregard isolation. If you introduce something to an isolated village eventually that village has a greater proportion of it then the city you broght it from
xyyman how come U6 and H1 are highest in in berbers but after that they are most common in Europeans ???
why aren't other Africans the next highest in these hgs?
explain that, you keep avoiding this
quote:You can use that argument to dismiss any article you don't like.
Originally posted by zarahan- aka Enrique Cardova:
[QB] What they choose to call North Africa
is irrelevant to the the analysis of the
set of countries that are listed in a given analysis
If a set of counties is analyzed the
information stated remains the same whatever
you choose to call the set. That's semantics.
^^Dubious, because within a particular country,
there may be a wide range of diversity. Sampling
one small piece and using that as "representative"
of a diverse whole can produce shaky results that
are indeed UNREPRESENTATIVE. Sampling Mormon Utah
and saying that it "representative" of the United
States would present a misleading picture.
quote:You are quoted as saying frequency and diversity are the primary factors determining origin.
Originally posted by xyyman:
[qb] A number of factors determine origin. Frequency, diversity, presence upstream clades or siblings, age etc.
quote:Troll, you can fabricate pseudo-scientific data all you want to distract away from the issue at hand. Truth is:
Originally posted by xyyman:
He! He! running on half a tank...
BTW. For those who don't get it.
Here are the FACTS.
Tunisians, Mazab other Berbers are >90% Pure Africans....based upon SNP DNA materials. FOUR independent studies confirms that. 2 x Henn, Behar and DNATribes.
STR studies also confirms that. Then it follows that their MtDNA Haplogroup is also African. More specifically MtDNA H is also African along with U6.
Remember H*, HV, H3 also has a higher frequency and older coalescene age in Africa compared to Europe. H1 in Africa and Europe is about the same.
It is simply logic. Emotional outburst aside.
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
You're such a goddamn pinhead, Xyyman. You call the bulk of their ancestry Sub-Saharan and you then post as proof data that says that almost all indigenous Arabian samples have 1.2%, 1.1% and 8.4% Sub-Saharan African ancestry
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
By far the most African lineages in Arabia are recent and have Bantu and/or Nilotic signatures.
quote:--Kivisild 2004
The haplotype sharing with Mozambique
accounts for 23% of the total and 49% of haplogroup
L0–L5 lineages among Yemenis. The lack of M and N
lineages in the Mozambique sample is the only apparent
factor that separates it from Yemenis in the MDS plot.
It should be noted here that the percentage of shared
lineages between Yemeni and Mozambique mtDNAs
cannot be taken as a measure of actual admixture pro-
portion, because there is a substantial fraction of un-
informative haplotypes in both samples. These include
either matches or the lack of matches, both in north-
eastern and southeastern African populations, that prob-
ably reflect the incomplete sampling of Africa. Com-
pared with Bantu speakers from southeastern Africa, the
Ethiopian contribution to the Yemeni mtDNA pool can
be considered relatively minor, since the shared haplo-
types account for just 9% of the total variation.
quote:--Henn et al 2012
After accounting for putative recent admixture (Figure 1), the indigenous Maghrebi component (k-based) is estimated to have diverged from Near Eastern/Europeans between 18–38 Kya (Figure 3)
quote:Price et al 2009
We show that the Mozabite have inherited roughly
78% ancestry from a European-related population and
22% ancestry from a population related to sub-Saharan
Africans. Our analysis also shows that the Mozabite
admixture has occurred over a period that began at
least 100 generations ago (~2,800 years ago), and
that has continued into the present day. We are
able to infer small, ancient, ancestry segments
in the Mozabite, and we demonstrate that the
segments show considerable drift relative to
all the other HGDP populations, consistent with
the historical isolation of the Mozabite population.
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
Caucasoids are NOT indigenous to Europe..
![]()
quote:Nevermind. LOL
Originally posted by Swenet:
You're such a goddamn pinhead, Xyyman. You call the bulk of their ancestry Sub-Saharan and you then post as proof data that says that almost all indigenous Arabian samples have 1.2%, 1.1% and 8.4% Sub-Saharan African ancestry. I'm really starting to think that you have mental problems.
quote:FICTION
Originally posted by xyyman:
Here are the FACTS.
Tunisians, Mazab other Berbers are >90% Pure Africans....based upon SNP DNA materials. FOUR independent studies confirms that. 2 x Henn, Behar and DNATribes.
STR studies also confirms that. Then it follows that their MtDNA Haplogroup is also African. More specifically MtDNA H is also African along with U6.
Remember H*, HV, H3 also has a higher frequency and older coalescene age in Africa compared to Europe. H1 in Africa and Europe is about the same.
It is simply logic. Emotional outburst aside.
quote:[/QB]
Originally posted by Swenet:
. I'm really starting to think that you have mental problems.
quote:Translation: no mas. Lemme jump ship right now before more of my pseudo-scientific mumbo jumbo gets blown to smithereens.
Originally posted by xyyman:
Listen...next topic. I had enough of this until any new development.
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
quote:Troll, you can fabricate pseudo-scientific data all you want to distract away from the issue at hand. Truth is:
Originally posted by xyyman:
He! He! running on half a tank...
BTW. For those who don't get it.
Here are the FACTS.
Tunisians, Mazab other Berbers are >90% Pure Africans....based upon SNP DNA materials. FOUR independent studies confirms that. 2 x Henn, Behar and DNATribes.
STR studies also confirms that. Then it follows that their MtDNA Haplogroup is also African. More specifically MtDNA H is also African along with U6.
Remember H*, HV, H3 also has a higher frequency and older coalescene age in Africa compared to Europe. H1 in Africa and Europe is about the same.
It is simply logic. Emotional outburst aside.
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
You're such a goddamn pinhead, Xyyman. You call the bulk of their ancestry Sub-Saharan and you then post as proof data that says that almost all indigenous Arabian samples have 1.2%, 1.1% and 8.4% Sub-Saharan African ancestryquote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
By far the most African lineages in Arabia are recent and have Bantu and/or Nilotic signatures.quote:--Kivisild 2004
The haplotype sharing with Mozambique
accounts for 23% of the total and 49% of haplogroup
L0–L5 lineages among Yemenis. The lack of M and N
lineages in the Mozambique sample is the only apparent
factor that separates it from Yemenis in the MDS plot.
It should be noted here that the percentage of shared
lineages between Yemeni and Mozambique mtDNAs
cannot be taken as a measure of actual admixture pro-
portion, because there is a substantial fraction of un-
informative haplotypes in both samples. These include
either matches or the lack of matches, both in north-
eastern and southeastern African populations, that prob-
ably reflect the incomplete sampling of Africa. Com-
pared with Bantu speakers from southeastern Africa, the
Ethiopian contribution to the Yemeni mtDNA pool can
be considered relatively minor, since the shared haplo-
types account for just 9% of the total variation.
All this Bantu haplotype sharing (more than 49% of the total amount of Yemeni mtDNA L)is not exactly consistent with Yemeni having substantial Sub-Saharan affinity independant of recent African admixture. Besides, dumbass, where are the mtDNAs Yemeni Qatari and Saudi populations got from North Africans Berbers/Arabic speakers?
Face it, troll. The Saharan-Arabian cluster defined by DNA Tribes is not Sub-Saharan and its not because Arabs are admixed with North Africans, but because of the inconvenient truth that:
quote:--Henn et al 2012
After accounting for putative recent admixture (Figure 1), the indigenous Maghrebi component (k-based) is estimated to have diverged from Near Eastern/Europeans between 18–38 Kya (Figure 3)
And because of the inconvenient truth that:
quote:Price et al 2009
We show that the Mozabite have inherited roughly
78% ancestry from a European-related population and
22% ancestry from a population related to sub-Saharan
Africans. Our analysis also shows that the Mozabite
admixture has occurred over a period that began at
least 100 generations ago (~2,800 years ago), and
that has continued into the present day. We are
able to infer small, ancient, ancestry segments
in the Mozabite, and we demonstrate that the
segments show considerable drift relative to
all the other HGDP populations, consistent with
the historical isolation of the Mozabite population.
quote:What population are you referring to. Ibero-Maurusians?
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
Swenet, how about physical remains, what does physical anthropology tell us about the populations from that time.
quote:Just any Eurasian population who has migrated into Northeast and Northwest Africa in abundance during the Paleolithic, Holocene, Mesolithic or even Neolithic. "Conveniently also called the back migration hypotheses".
Originally posted by Swenet:
quote:What population are you referring to. Ibero-Maurusians?
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
Swenet, how about physical remains, what does physical anthropology tell us about the populations from that time.
quote:In what way?
Originally posted by the lioness,:
U6 for instance has highest diversity in Iberia.
quote:Who (non-Africans) supposedly are the "next highest" in these hgs (U6)?
why aren't other Africans the next highest in these hgs?
quote:Maca-Meyer N, González AM, Pestano J, Flores C, Larruga JM, Cabrera VM (October 2003). "Mitochondrial DNA transit between West Asia and North Africa inferred from U6 phylogeography
Originally posted by The Explorer:
quote:In what way?
Originally posted by the lioness,:
U6 for instance has highest diversity in Iberia.
quote:Who (non-Africans) supposedly are the "next highest" in these hgs (U6)?
why aren't other Africans the next highest in these hgs?
quote:both in relation show diversity
Originally posted by The Explorer:
So lioness, by posting the above, are you saying Fst values is the indicator of this diversity, or are you saying pi represents this, or is there yet some other indicator of this; which is it?
quote:I didn't answer it it was a question
Originally posted by The Explorer:
And what about this:
Who (non-Africans) supposedly are the "next highest" in these hgs (U6)?
I could not locate your answer to it.
quote:Alright then. How does the Fst value communicate this diversity in contrast to how pi arrives at this diversity?
Originally posted by the lioness,:
both in relation show diversity
quote:Still not seeing which non-Africans supposedly have the "next highest" frequencies of U6, as opposed to Africans.
[/QUOTE][i] The highest frequencies for haplogroup U6 as a whole are found in Northwest Africa (Table (Table2),2), with a maximum of 29% in the Algerian Berbers [The following popper user interface control may not be accessible. Tab to the next button to revert the control to an accessible version.Destroy user interface control9]. Subgroup U6a and its derivative U6a1 present the widest geographic distribution, from the Canary Islands in the West, to Syria and Ethiopia in the East, and from the Iberian Peninsula in the North, to Kenya in the South. In contrast, U6b shows a more limited and patched distribution, restricted to western populations. In the Iberian Peninsula, U6b is more frequent in the North whilst U6a is prevalent in the South. In Africa, it has been sporadically found in Morocco and Algeria in the North, and Senegal and Nigeria in the South, pointing to a wider distribution in the past, or to gene flow from a geographic focus which has still not been sampled.
__________________________________________
U6b and M1b1 appeared at the time of the Capsian culture.
---Divorcing the Late Upper Palaeolithic demographic histories of mtDNA haplogroups M1 and U6 in Africa
Erwan Pennarun et al 2012
_________________________________
Capsian
10,000 to 6,000 BCE.
quote:I am not informed enough to explain Fst and pi values. Maca-Meyer said that chart shows highest divesity of U6 in Iberians. I thought I had seen a U6 frequency chart before that showed Europe with next highest frequency but that may have been an H chart. Are you claiming that U6 is next highest in other Africans after NorthAfricans/Canaries? I couldn't find info.
Originally posted by The Explorer:
Well, you seemed to be sure about U6 having its "next highest" frequencies in some supposed non-Africans, hence your rather assumptive line of questioning directed at the other poster.
As for the Canary Island, even though the French took possession of it, geographically, and from an indigenous population standpoint, it is actually part of the African continent more than any other land mass. So, I would not treat indigenous Canary Islanders as "non-African".
I take it from your silence to the question seeking to discern how you interpreted the so-called diversity of Iberian U6 clades from what you claim were two indicators of diversity, namely Fst values and pi values respectively, that you are not informed enough to speak on it?
quote:First off, Fst actually estimates differences between two samples rather than internal diversity of samples, while the pi calculation estimates the internal nucleotide diversities of clades. Instead of just parroting what research teams said, it is generally a good idea to have a firm grounding on the science.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
I am not informed enough to explain Fst and pi values. Maca-Meyer said that chart shows highest divesity of U6 in Iberians.
quote:I don't see its distribution being higher outside of Africa than in Africa, even when not considering the Maghreb. At least, not going by the source you cited yourself, aka Maca-Meyer et al.
I thought I had seen a U6 frequency chart before that showed Europe with next highest frequency but that may have been an H chart. Are you claiming that U6 is next highest in other Africans after NorthAfricans/Canaries? I couldn't find info.
quote:What is the "earlier U", and what bearing does it have on U6's origin? U6 doesn't descend from the presently identified U clades; I'm not sure you understand that.
But I think the character of the earlier U does not suggest African origin.
quote:I've been making my viewpoint on U6 fairly known, long before you've joined ES. Any attentive poster, and longstanding enough, would know where I stand on U6 phylogeny by now. Unlike you, I don't simply post excerpts, and leave people to guess what the point was.
Give an opinion instead of trying soley to expose my limits.
quote:OK now I am about to start calling you stupid. Otzi is in fact MORE Sardinian than even Sardinians. He is "southern European" par excellence. Somewhat like Basques.
Originally posted by xyyman:
Not to start anything..nothing new. But researching Albert Zink(Son of Ra), I came across this. Reminded me of the idiotic stateme in this threadnt by Beyoku.."Sardinia is ONLY an Island". Some of us with limited intelligence do not see the importance of Sardinia in all of this.
Zink also did Otzi Alps Iceman.
quote:See also the ADMIXTURE results of his genome.
The genetic results add both information and intrigue. From his genes, we now know that the Iceman had brown hair and brown eyes and that he was probably lactose intolerant and thus could not digest milk—somewhat ironic, given theories that he was a shepherd. Not surprisingly, he is more related to people living in southern Europe today than to those in North Africa or the Middle East, with close connections to geographically isolated modern populations in Sardinia, Sicily, and the Iberian Peninsula.
quote:Not to mention that this finding also supports the historical records of continuous infiltration of Egypt from Asia from late dynastic times up until the Ottoman Empire.
Originally posted by -Just Call Me Jari-:
quote:Well my position has been this for a while, that the Change was Gradual rather than abrubt. I asked because some Eurocentrics try to claim Egypt was mixed from the start. I wanted to see if Henn et al. supports this. From my brief reading it does'nt seem so but I was just wondering if I missed something.
Originally posted by Swenet:
The evidence points to Egypt gradually becoming more and more like modern day Egyptians. There are no abrupt changes. The pre dynastic Egyptian material clusters with Upper and Lower Nubians and then, the more time passes, the more the Egyptian samples gravitate towards the cranio-facial pattern of modern Egypt:
quote:EPD........= Early Predynastic
Originally posted by Swenet:
LPD........= Late Predynastic
Edynastic..= Early Dynastic
OK.........= Old Kingdom
MK.........= Middle Kingdom
Late.......= the Late Dynastic E-series from Gizeh.
^Note that the ''late'' sample above approximates the cranio-facial pattern of modern Northern Africans. In Keita 1988 it clustered with a very recent sample from the Maghreb. You can clearly see a trend of Egyptian samples going upward along PC 1, as time passes,
quote:
Originally posted by beyoku:
quote:OK now I am about to start calling you stupid. Otzi is in fact MORE Sardinian than even Sardinians. He is "southern European" par excellence. Somewhat like Basques.
Originally posted by xyyman:
Not to start anything..nothing new. But researching Albert Zink(Son of Ra), I came across this. Reminded me of the idiotic stateme in this threadnt by Beyoku.."Sardinia is ONLY an Island". Some of us with limited intelligence do not see the importance of Sardinia in all of this.
Zink also did Otzi Alps Iceman.
Notice his Ydna NOR his MTDNA has anything to do with the Maghreb.
http://dienekes.blogspot.com/2012/02/complete-genome-of-tyrolean-iceman.html
And about his autosomal results.
quote:See also the ADMIXTURE results of his genome.
The genetic results add both information and intrigue. From his genes, we now know that the Iceman had brown hair and brown eyes and that he was probably lactose intolerant and thus could not digest milk—somewhat ironic, given theories that he was a shepherd. Not surprisingly, he is more related to people living in southern Europe today than to those in North Africa or the Middle East, with close connections to geographically isolated modern populations in Sardinia, Sicily, and the Iberian Peninsula.
http://dienekes.blogspot.com/2012/03/first-look-at-genome-of-tyrolean-iceman.html
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0ArJDEoCgzRKedHo3UWw0M0Y2dWFBeFI3bGZEdTNROEE#gid=1
Otzi:
Only 5.7% "North West African".
Only 2.4% East African.
0% West African
Who are the most "North West African":
Mozabite @ 90%, Moroccans at 41%.
Ethiopians Jews, Somalis and Egyptians are about 11-12% "North West African."
Sardiniansa are only 3.9% North West African at K=12.
You are arguing from ignorance.
You have no idea what you are talking about and making yourself a laughing stock the process.
quote:
Originally posted by The Explorer:
I've been making my viewpoint on U6 fairly known, long before you've joined ES. Any attentive poster, and longstanding enough, would know where I stand on U6 phylogeny by now. Unlike you, I don't simply post excerpts, and leave people to guess what the point was.[/QB]
quote:The populations of all those sub-Saharan countries in which possess U6 are all found inland AWAY from any coasts! The U6 in Kenya is found among the Maasai for example! LMAO
Originally posted by the lyinass,:
I haven't seen high ferquencies for U6 listed in inner Africa.
Senegal Kenya and Ethiopia are coastal that suggests maritime trade.
U has an inland spread in West Asia genrally. That may not prove origin but it suggests it.
If you've been up on U6 for so long so you have a world frequency comparision source?
quote:
Originally posted by Djehuti:
[
[QUOTE]Originally posted by the lyinass,:
quote:Over 10 years ago I used to frequent this arcade in my hometown. Lots of folks used to hang out there. There was this older burnout guy that was going to the local community college. I was with a friend and we started talking about each other all in good fun. I told that guy "Man you so dumb you dont even know 9 times 9". We laughed.
Originally posted by xyyman:
Btw. You can call me whatever you want. Does it look like I care. I only have a problem with DHoxie lumping in with.....racist.
No one has proven me wrong!!!
Oh. You do know be carries two motifs unique to Pygmy and Ethiopians. Pointing again to this ancestral homeland. Let me check your links.
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
From Henn’s Supplemental.
![]()
ANYONE!!!!!!????
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
quote:Based on what exactly?
Originally posted by xyyman:
Yeah! Yeah! Yeah! Light Blue is not Southern Europeans ……and Otzi possibly has “recent” North African ancestry.
quote:Which motifs and from what loci??
1. He has unique motifs from Ethiopia and Pygmies(African)
quote:LMAO
2. He has brown eyes(African)
quote:Can you please cite this or are you making this up?
3. He does NOT carry SLC45A2 – the white gene (most African)
quote:Didn't Beyoku just cite a source showing him to be lactose intolerant? Besides, lactose tolerance is adaptation to milk consumption and the trait varies from Europeans to East Asians having nothing to do with Africans.
4. He is lactose tolerant(50% African)
quote:Another typological feature. You realize many northwestern Europeans with no Africa ancestry at all are long-headed.
5. He is long headed(Most African)
quote:Yeah and K is found from Europe through Southwest Asia and India. Is his specific hg K even specific to Africa?
6. His MtDNA is K(albeit unique) but found on both sides the Medit Sea
quote:Actually there are higher frequencies in the Iranian plateau and Siberia though its highest frequencies are in the Caucasus. Again is his hg G specific to Africa or Europe as Beyoku's source cites?
7. His Y-DNA is G -169(?). rare. But found mostly in Ethiopia and Southern Arabia.
quote:Maybe YOU should stop analyzing DNA since you don't know what you're talking about the older dummy was a simile of YOU! LOL
What! What! What!. That story was funny though
May be you should stop analyzing DNA and do comedy. That was good
quote:Too bad for you then. However, your own cited source, Maca-Meyer et al.'s report, does not support your unsubstantiated claim about U6 frequencies outside being higher than in Africa. If anything, it does the opposite.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
I haven't seen high ferquencies for U6 listed in inner Africa.
quote:Trade with whom precisely?
Senegal Kenya and Ethiopia are coastal that suggests maritime trade.
quote:Describe this "inland spread in west Asia" for me, with specific clade information to along with it.
U has an inland spread in West Asia genrally. That may not prove origin but it suggests it.
quote:This is irrelevant. What you need to be doing, is supporting your claim instead of misguidedly trying to turn the burden. Your own cited source discredits your claim.
If you've been up on U6 for so long so you have a world frequency comparision source?
quote:I didn't say that
Originally posted by The Explorer:
Too bad for you then. However, your own cited source, Maca-Meyer et al.'s report, does not support your unsubstantiated claim about U6 frequencies outside being higher than in Africa. If anything, it does the opposite.
quote:.
Originally posted by Doctoris Scientia:
Mozabites
![]()
quote:So you didn't imply that U6 has its 'next highest" frequencies outside of Africa, with this line of questioning directed at another poster:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
I didn't say that
quote:In the above, clearly you were including U6.
why aren't other Africans the next highest in these hgs?
quote:Did you forget to read my updated remark on the previous page? >
Originally posted by The Explorer:
quote:So you didn't imply that U6 has its 'next highest" frequencies outside of Africa, with this line of questioning directed at another poster:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
I didn't say that
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
I'm not sure after N African, then Canaries who is next highest U6.
quote:I told you I don't know after North Africans/Canaries who has the highest frequencies of U6.
Originally posted by The Explorer:
why aren't other Africans the next highest in these hgs?
quote:They are not spams they are a fair sample of some of the Mozabite berbers in Algeria. Some of the pictures are from Doc Scientia some are my postings.
Originally posted by The Explorer:
I have no idea what purpose your picture spams serve. [/qb]
quote:It is not a matter of forgetting. It is a matter of holding you accountable for your original post.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
Did you forget to read my updated remark on the previous page? >
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
I'm not sure after N African, then Canaries who is next highest U6.
quote:And so, I should ignore a questionable post just because it was not specifically addressed to me?
I had made a previous remark to another poster not you.
quote:Where?
Then I updated the remark to say I didn't know who had the next highest U6 frequencies after North Africans/Canaries
quote:So now you do telepathy? LOL
Of course you know that I said that but you want to keep going back to an earlier point in the discussion and recyle arguments for the sake of arguing only, move on
quote:Why do I need another data, when your own cited source, Maca-Meyer et al., does a good enough job of debunking you?
You think it might be Africans other than NAs?
maybe.
But either you have data to support that or you don't
quote:If they are not wasteful spams, what then is their purpose?
They are not spams they are a fair sample of some of the Mozabite berbers in Algeria. Some of the pictures are from Doc Scientia some are my postings.
The Mozabites in Algeria and some people of the Canaries are believed to have the highest frequencies of U6 in the world.
quote:once again read the bold text again where I say "I'm not sure" it means I don't know.
Originally posted by The Explorer:
quote:It is not a matter of forgetting. It is a matter of holding you accountable for your original post.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
Did you forget to read my updated remark on the previous page? >
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
I'm not sure after N African, then Canaries who is next highest U6.
This post you are now presenting above, was not posted as an admission of an error, nor does it even resemble one. It was offered as a means to obscure the original claim, for which it appears you didn't/don't have a material justification.
quote:And so, I should ignore a questionable post just because it was not specifically addressed to me?
I had made a previous remark to another poster not you.
quote:Where?
Then I updated the remark to say I didn't know who had the next highest U6 frequencies after North Africans/Canaries
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
Xyyman is a certified cupcake. Anyone notice how how this turd scrambled ''near east'' off this Botique et al 2013 image and replaced it with ''North African''?
http://i41.tinypic.com/s4lvfq.jpg
Here he labels all mtDNA hgs African:
http://i41.tinypic.com/fu7vgz.jpg
Straight up buffoon.
quote:Damn boy you dumb! Look at the image you are posting.
Originally posted by xyyman:
Now we have 2 x Henn, Behar, DNATribes and now Dienkess all in agreement. Same populations have high North African components. Some as much as 40%. According to Dienkess populations from the East migrated INTO Italy and Sardinia later on admixing with the indigenous North African component.
There is NO! Levantine or Northern European component at certain K values
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
quote:Yes I agree U6 is found in highest frequencies
Originally posted by The Explorer:
That wasn't too demanding, was it now? Badly in need for U6 to be "non-African" in origin, when the material support for it is wanting, is what got you into trouble.
The only region outside of Africa with any considerable frequency of U6 is Iberia, which is right next to the Maghreb. Coincidence? Think not...just as its high distribution in the Canary Islands is not coincidental.
As Maca-Meyer's report indicates, the diversity seen in the Iberian clades, is attributable to different demographic episodes of gene flow from Africa. It is not a reflection of an autochthonous origin in an isolated group.
When samples are considered, as the Maca-Meyer report indicates, the frequencies in various African samples is comparable to those seen in individual Iberian samples.
U6's distribution is highest in Africa. Period! Still, frequency in of itself is not going to tell you much about U6's origin. Nucleotide information however, is a different story: the most basic U6 clades are found in the African continent. And here's a fun fact: U6 is not the only U clade implicated in an African origin.
quote:At the height of Islamic Spain what was the proportion of Moors to people who were not Moors?
Originally posted by xyyman:
Remember as incredulous as it may sound. I am question the expulsion of “moors’ from Iberia. At least the magnitude. Why? The data do not lie. Similarly the extent of Islamic peoples in North Africa. Why? I don’t BS. I can back up everything I say with science proof.
ANYONE!!
quote:What percentage is 80,000 of the total population at the time?
Originally posted by xyyman:
I have no idea. BUT! according to a few studies they quoted ~80,000 Moors were expelled. However there is very little genetic trace of these new returnees in their "reported/documented" location in Tunisia and Morrocco. So...are the documents accurate?
quote:I was taking Africa as a whole.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
Yes I agree U6 is found in highest frequencies
in the Maghreb, Africa.
quote:The ethnogenesis of Tamazight populations is African. All the uniparental markers that more approximate the distribution path of Tamazight-speaking populations are mainly African in origin. The language phylum which essentially makes the Imazighen what they are, is also entirely an African creation. Exchanging genes with migrants from locations nearby the continent does not change this. So, yes, I'd say modern Maghrebi populations are primarily African.
xyyman says the average Algerian, Moroccan and Tunisian today are primarily African
I assume you agree with this.
How about the average modern Egyptian? primarily African?
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness:
quote:See not only are you dumb. You are also blind.
Originally posted by xyyman:
@ Beyoku
I can see you slowly coming around. Good. You are asking the right questions.
I happy to see you retracting some of your statements eg light blue being Southern European.
Each one of your questions can be easily answered.
1. This component comprises nearly 100% of some of these Bedouins ancestry. EXAGGERATION AND FALSE. MORE LIKE 65%
2. The BEDOUIN and SAUDIS have MORE Light Blue that Moroccans and Mozabite.
FALSE AGAIN. HOWEVER, THIS IS THE ANCESTRAL COMPONENT PER HENN. Ie They HAVE THE SAME ANCESTRAL GROUP. I AM SAYING AFRICA TO ARABIA. Reflected in PN2.
quote:There's no point in twisting the truth. Current/Modern Berbers while generally predominantly African on the male side (Y-DNA) but are not predominantly African on the female side (mtDNA). The word predominately also hide the smaller but significant foreign Y-DNA among Berber people.
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
BERBERS are predominantly ''African'' in admixture and remain an indigenous African group.
quote:Too bad neither Y-DNA or mtDNA tells admixture like Nuclear DNA...But only ancestry.
Originally posted by Amun-Ra The Ultimate:
quote:There's no point in twisting the truth. Current/Modern Berbers while generally predominantly African on the male side (Y-DNA) but are not predominantly African on the female side (mtDNA). The word predominately also hide the smaller but significant foreign Y-DNA among Berber people.
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
BERBERS are predominantly ''African'' in admixture and remain an indigenous African group.
We can imagine very ancient conflict between native black Africans (original Berbers if you like) and migrants from other regions (Europe and Middle east) resulting in the reduction of Y-DNA portion from such regions while the female members were spared during such conflicts then admixed with native black North Africans (original berber). Then those people were to some level admixed further more with foreign conquerors and migrants through time. I don't have to cite all the foreign conquest of North Afica (persian, assyrian, ottoman, muslim, british, etc).
Modern Berbers seems like a nice mix of different people. People who think they are pure something must be out of their mind.
quote:I'm not sure what you're trying to say here, but *modern/current* Berbers seem like a nice mix of different people from different origin. That's for sure.
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
[QUOTE]Too bad neither Y-DNA or mtDNA tells admixture like Nuclear DNA...But only ancestry.
quote:Its we were talking about two different thing. You were talking about Haplogroups while I was posting admixture.
Originally posted by Amun-Ra The Ultimate:
quote:I'm not sure what you're trying to say here, but *modern/current* Berbers seem like a nice mix of different people from different origin. That's for sure.
Originally posted by Son of Ra:
[QUOTE]Too bad neither Y-DNA or mtDNA tells admixture like Nuclear DNA...But only ancestry.
Obviously it's hard to gauge about ancient ancestry (ancient population structure) if that's what you meant because everything could have happened to Ancient populations in the far past (migration elsewhere after dessication, widespread mortality due to disease, conflict as mentioned above, conquest and admixture as related by history, migration and admixture, etc, etc).
quote:
Originally posted by The Explorer:
quote:I was taking Africa as a whole.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
Yes I agree U6 is found in highest frequencies
in the Maghreb, Africa.
quote:The ethnogenesis of Tamazight populations is African. All the uniparental markers that more approximate the distribution path of Tamazight-speaking populations are mainly African in origin. The language phylum which essentially makes the Imazighen what they are, is also entirely an African creation. Exchanging genes with migrants from locations nearby the continent does not change this. So, yes, I'd say modern Maghrebi populations are primarily African.
xyyman says the average Algerian, Moroccan and Tunisian today are primarily African
I assume you agree with this.
How about the average modern Egyptian? primarily African?
Immigration has perhaps modified the local Egyptian populations of the north more so than the southern areas, but that is not enough to render the Egyptian populace as anything but primarily African.
Using your standards, many populations in the globe will no longer be representative of their native continents, just on the mere account of genetic exchange with migrants from elsewhere. How sensible is that?
quote:How does the Sherlock Holmes line go? You English Majors..swenet?
Originally posted by Djehuti:
1. Anybody can SEE that Berbers in generally tend to be mixed especially those in the northern areas.
2. but mitochondria tell a different story
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
[QB] @ Beyoku.
You know what Brotha this ego thing is really getting out of control. What are we playing now “who can better estimate”. First, it is mathematically impossible for “Light Blue” to be Southern European. Because that would mean Bedouins, Yemeni’s..etc are primarily European…and I hope YOU know that is NOT the case. Bedoiuns are the most ancient and African group in the region carrying y-DNA R-V88, J* (not J2) and E. So, again, rethink your statement and stop making a fool of yourself.
This is not about who has the bigger dick. I would win that one.
Lioness. Can you at least set him straight. About the percentage, This is an easy math problem
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
^^ This is getting old...we are going in circles here
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
Seems like you are not following. The genetic evidence is that the spread of Islam was cultural and not demographic.(RSI).
This is getting old.....
![]()
![]()
quote:Just in case you don't get it...AIM/SNP Combined with Haplogroups tells the story. That is why Henn added to verify her hypothesis with haplogroups/lineage
Originally posted by the lioness,:
[QUOTE]when are you going to put up some percentages of South Arabians?
where is your genetics of South Arabia refernces?
-and your RSI theory, Reverse Spread of Islam?
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
Ha! Sensible man. It is definitely not European. Explain that to the GENETIC ANALYST who helped discover Rameses e1b1a.
Nice semantic game- Arabian..and not African.
QUOTE:
I'm not getting into what blue means.
If I were to guess I would say it's Arabian as distinguished from North African as shown:
quote:WTF?
Originally posted by xyyman:
Typical statement come from a Hindu. Are you Hindu? Have YOU been to North Africa? Have YOU seen these people first hand?
quote:Of course I expect such an ignorant conclusion mad by an ignoramus. Apparently you haven't heard of bottle-neck events and founder effect which also explains why the predominant paternal lineage among Berbers is E-M35 as opposed to various lineages. Did the E-M35 carriers leave their women behind in search of white pussy?? As far as the maternal lineages correlating with white women (since again the lineages vary), apparently you haven't heard of the Islamic/Moorish slave trade of European women. But as I said, not surprisingly such lineages are found in the coastal areas. Interestingly though not surprising these recent European mt lineages also tend to be found in patrilineal Berber groups while the majority of African and other non-recent Eurasian mt lineages tend to be found in matrilineal groups.
What is the story..white women migrating to Africa leaving their men behind in search of black dick.
quote:Is Swenet really an English major or are you making that up? What did YOU major in? Apparently not in science judging by your gross misinterpretation of data and silly claims based on such.
How does the Sherlock Holmes line go? You English Majors..swenet?
quote:Or in your case no matter how ignorant.
No matter how improbable..
quote:Which SNP autosomes are you referring to? Yes the Y-DNA is predominantly (though not solely African), but the mtDNA is more varied. I would say the mtDNA is also predominantly African if one speaks of L2, L3, and other L clades, and perhaps U6 and M1 as well, but to say no Eurasian lineages is absurd.
Jackasses, bottom line is if the autosome SNP is African, the y-DNA is African then the mtDNA is also African. Especially since the coalescene age is about the same and upstreams clades are found in Africa.
quote:The ancestor of hg R is M207 P-M45. This haplotype is found in Africa. As a result it is shared by all R haplogroups.
Originally posted by xyyman:
Typical statement come from a Hindu. Are you Hindu? Have YOU been to North Africa? Have YOU seen these people first hand?
What is the story..white women migrating to Africa leaving their men behind in serach of black dick.
quote:How does the Sherlock Holmes line go? You English Majors..swenet?
Originally posted by Djehuti:
1. Anybody can SEE that Berbers in generally tend to be mixed especially those in the northern areas.
2. but mitochondria tell a different story
No matter how improbable..
Jackasses, bottom line is if the autosome SNP is African, the y-DNA is African then the mtDNA is also African. Especially since the coalescene age is about the same and upstreams clades are found in Africa.
quote:M originated in Africa. The Dravidian took this haplogroup to India.
Originally posted by xyyman:
Typical statement come from a Hindu. Are you Hindu? Have YOU been to North Africa? Have YOU seen these people first hand?
What is the story..white women migrating to Africa leaving their men behind in serach of black dick.
quote:How does the Sherlock Holmes line go? You English Majors..swenet?
Originally posted by Djehuti:
1. Anybody can SEE that Berbers in generally tend to be mixed especially those in the northern areas.
2. but mitochondria tell a different story
No matter how improbable..
Jackasses, bottom line is if the autosome SNP is African, the y-DNA is African then the mtDNA is also African. Especially since the coalescene age is about the same and upstreams clades are found in Africa.
quote:Complete and utter garbage. I am trying to figure out if you are an old senile man, a 13 year old kid, or perhaps not well versed in the English language.
Originally posted by xyyman:
@ Beyoku.
You know what Brotha this ego thing is really getting out of control. What are we playing now “who can better estimate”. First, it is mathematically impossible for “Light Blue” to be Southern European. Because that would mean Bedouins, Yemeni’s..etc are primarily European…and I hope YOU know that is NOT the case. Bedoiuns are the most ancient and African group in the region carrying y-DNA R-V88, J* (not J2) and E. So, again, rethink your statement and stop making a fool of yourself.
This is not about who has the bigger dick. I would win that one.
Lioness. Can you at least set him straight. About the percentage, This is an easy math problem
Been awhile since I did serious calculus. But on the 1st order the percentage would be approximately as seen.
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
Great post Dr. Winters. Nice leads to followup on.
@Beyoku.. Give it up man. Take your lumps and call it a day.
quote:Do you NOT have eyes to see that the Bolded portion of my statement is factually correct at K=5-8?
You are ignoring nearly 40-50% of the Bedouin sample by drawing that line. The individual Bedouin men OVER that line EXCEED the % of Blue component found in North Africans. that is Strike one.
quote:
Originally posted by beyoku:
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
Great post Dr. Winters. Nice leads to followup on.
@Beyoku.. Give it up man. Take your lumps and call it a day.quote:Do you NOT have eyes to see that the Bolded portion of my statement is factually correct at K=5-8?
You are ignoring nearly 40-50% of the Bedouin sample by drawing that line. The individual Bedouin men OVER that line EXCEED the % of Blue component found in North Africans. that is Strike one.![]()
quote:Again you display MORE Stupidity. I actually LINKED the Y-dna of the Bedouin in question. The SAME EXACT Bedouin whose Autosomal results we are looking at. I also stated all Bedouin are not the same. What do you go and do?...............you go and link the Y-dna results of a totally different Group, in JORDAN, who are in fact NOT EVEN BEDOUIN!
Originally posted by xyyman:
You haven't read enough and displayed the type of intelectual prowess for me spending so much time. You have a knack for stating the obvious and ...missing the obvious. Of course each group represent a collection of individuals within the said population. The line represent an average/mode/median of the group ie some values are above some below for each K. Here is R-V88 in the Levant.
And find another hobby. This is not working for you. More on ESR
quote:
Originally posted by beyoku:
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
Great post Dr. Winters. Nice leads to followup on.
@Beyoku.. Give it up man. Take your lumps and call it a day.quote:Do you NOT have eyes to see that the Bolded portion of my statement is factually correct at K=5-8?
You are ignoring nearly 40-50% of the Bedouin sample by drawing that line. The individual Bedouin men OVER that line EXCEED the % of Blue component found in North Africans. that is Strike one.![]()
quote:
As Bedouin tribes had an important role in the colonization of southeast Jordan, it could be that the haplogroup composition of the Dead Sea reflected genetic affinities to them, but that is not the case. The most striking characteristic of the Dead Sea sample is the high prevalence of R1*-M173 lineages (40%), contrasting with the lack of them and of its derivates R1b3-M269 in Bedouin from Nebel et al. (2001) and its low frequencies in Amman.
quote:Notice the differentiation of Dead Sea Jordanians and "Bedouin". Nowhere in that article are Dead Sea Jordanians called "Bedouin". One good thing about this study is that you can see the Autosomal results AND The Y-dna/mtdna results of the individual samples. Not sure why you ignored this and link data on Jordanians....stupidity perhaps?
Another singularity of the Dead Sea is its high frequency (31%) of E3b3a-M34, a derivate clade of E3b3-M123 that is only found in 7% in Bedouins (Cruciani et al. 2004). Until now, the highest frequencies for this marker (23.5%) had been found in Ethiopians from Amhara (Cruciani et al. 2004). On the contrary, most Bedouin chromosomes (63%) belong to haplogroup J1-M267 (Semino et al. 2004) compared with 9% in the Dead Sea
quote:Well duh, dont try and act like you knew that the entire time. You dont even know what a "K" is. Looking at the study there are 45 Bedouin and 27 Mozibite. (Page 34 of the supplemental you failed to click.) The Mozabite carry that blue component at 60-70% give or take. Half of the Bediouin match that at 60-70% as well. BUT There about about 20 or so Bedouin that exceed that 60-70%....and instead they carry the Blue Cluster at 80-90%. Since NONE of the Mozibite carry the Blue component at 80-90% - this component cannot be characteristic of the Mozibite at the specific K=5,6,7,and 8. Got it dummy?
The line represent an average/mode/median of the group ie some values are above some below for each K.
quote:woman, get it right
Originally posted by xyyman:
You de man!!...
quote:To add to what you're saying here, the Mozabites have little to no light blue in Behar. It just classifies as light blue for the lack of a better category until a proper category is 'found' for the Mozabite and Morrocan ancestry at K=10. It's no different from what happens in Henn et al 2012, where the generalised purple Eurasian ancestry doesn't turn into Maghrebi proper until K=4. In Henn et al 2012, Qatar isn't assigned its own ancestry until K=6. The predominant purple assignment of these two populations in Henn et al 2012's K=2 doesn't mean that Qatari and Maghrebi populations, or any other population for that matter, actually have purple to the extent that Xyyman's amateurish interpretations of the lower Ks suggests.
Originally posted by beyoku:
Well duh, dont try and act like you knew that the entire time. You dont even know what a "K" is. Looking at the study there are 45 Bedouin and 27 Mozibite. (Page 34 of the supplemental you failed to click.) The Mozabite carry that blue component at 60-70% give or take. Half of the Bediouin match that at 60-70% as well. BUT There about about 20 or so Bedouin that exceed that 60-70%....and instead they carry the Blue Cluster at 80-90%. Since NONE of the Mozibite carry the Blue component at 80-90% - this component cannot be characteristic of the Mozibite at the specific K=5,6,7,and 8. Got it dummy?
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
the reason certain geographic maps of North Africa don't correspond to human biological maps of North Africa is because of population densities and the desert barrier between modern population centers
Africa Population Density
![]()
The smaller the area the more precise and less diluted by averages of a wider diversity
What they choose to call North Africa is irrelevant to the the analysis of the set of countries that are listed in a given analysis
If a set of counties is analyzed the information stated remains the same whatever you choose to call the set. That's semantics.
as we see populations of the Sahel are contiguous with Sub Saharan Africa, they flow into each other.
And since the dry period of several thousand years they do not flow into North Africa, They are separated by desert.
What one chooses to call North Africa is a separate political issue.
One could argue calling the Sahel North Africa separates it from West and Central Africa yet there are more population overlaps and corresponding higher frequencies of L then to align the Sahel with North Africa.
These researchers could prevent a lot of confusion if they would switch to the term Maghreb instead of "North Africa" which has at least 4 significantly different definitions, different combinations of countries possible and you cant's say one is better than the other.
quote:Again this is why you are stupid. What you quote about the Mandinka just means that he Bedouin have some African Admixture....Nothing more. I then link AGAIN the supplemental...and even note the SPECIFIC PAGE that details the Bedouin. What do you do? Make some madness about 3 different groups and ask me which Bedouin I am talking about. Why do you ask me which bedouin if I note those on page 34!
Originally posted by xyyman:
As I said. The Bedouins are one of the most African groups in the Levant. Listen man you have a habit of either citing things you did not read or you do not understand(DJ has the same annoying habit). Last time you did this was with Dienkess. Evidently you are wasting my time. If you continue doing this, I can not be of any help to you and you are on your own.
But you know what, I am glad I went back to check. One thing I discovered. The results from Bedouins in “this” study really came from three studies and 3 DIFFERENT groups of “Bedouins”. Now which Bediouns are you referring to?
quote:
In many populations, ancestry is derived predominantly from one of the inferred components, whereas in others, especially those in the Middle East and South/Central Asia, there are multiple sources of ancestry. For example, Palestinians, Druze, and Bedouins have contributions from the Middle East, Europe, and South/Central Asia.
quote:This is like beating a dead horse.....
Originally posted by xyyman:
[QB] As I said. The Bedouins are one of the most African groups in the Levant. Listen man you have a habit of either citing things you did not read or you do not understand(DJ has the same annoying habit). Last time you did this was with Dienkess. Evidently you are wasting my time. If you continue doing this, I can not be of any help to you and you are on your own.
Quote: from what you cited.
[[[[Supplementary Note 2:
Details of Old-World PCA
We investigated the lower-ranked PC3 and PC4 for meaningful variation
Thus, PC3 describes genotype variation within Africa and projection of Middle Eastern populations along this PC suggests that alleles in Yoruba-Mandenka-Bantu group are also present among a SUBSET of Bedouin]]] of the Levant
[[[[The third cluster comprised solely of Yemenite Jews is also evident in the Old Worldbased PC plot and is clearly separated from Yemenites but overlaps with Bedouins and Saudis.]]]]
But you know what, I am glad I went back to check. One thing I discovered. The results from Bedouins in “this” study really came from three studies and 3 DIFFERENT groups of “Bedouins”. Now which Bediouns are you referring to?
quote:I know.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
xyyman you seem to be completely ignorant on what the Bedouin haplogroups are.
quote:Idiocy. You are calling Brown North African meanwhile the image shows half the Bedouin 100% Brown............and all the North Africans 65% Brown.
Originally posted by xyyman:
Irregardless in this dataset. Brown seems to be North African. Green is European. Pink being SSA. Again this supports what I am saying!!! Ha! Ha! Bedouins seem to be predominantly African. You lose again man!!!
quote:The number of European slaves was a few million. And I find it amusing when people act as if it didn't change the demographic gene pool in the region.lol
Originally posted by the lioness,:
^^^ this seems to be an argument that there is significant genetic contributions to North Africa form Europe due to Barbary pirtates kidnapping and enslavement of Europeans.
I'm not sure about how much it represents.
I have heard of berbers having European slaves but that was probably rare. It was primarily Ottomans sultans and Arab cohorts.
A much greater proportion of these slaves were men. However most of them eventually returned to Europe and it's unlikely that many were mixing and producing children with Ottomans, Arabs or berbers.
The smaller number of European women in the Ottoman pasha's harem on the other hand were probably some offspring probably with Ottomans mainly and perhaps also Arabs and the occasional berber who could afford one.
The larger number of kidnapped Europeans were kidnapped for ransom or labor.
Berbers however had retreated to the mountains to avoid the Ottomans and Arabs and it seems unlikely that they would have much admixture with these kidnapped Eurpeans.
Some of the Barbary corsairs, the pirates doing the capturing of Europeans were outcast European coverte to islam themselves. The most famous for instance Hayreddin Barbarossa ("Red Beard"), an Ottoman admiral was born on the Greek island of Lesbos. They had a variety of various North Africans in their crews. They are said to be the original O.G.s
In earlier periods prior to Islam there were also Pheonicians cities
Carthage being the largest and later take over by Romans and then Germanic Vandals
quote:--Mercedes García-Arenal
The memory of the loss of Granada was also still alive, and it had driven a large number of exiles, known as andalusiyyun or ' Andalusians' (those who came from al-Andalus), to Morocco.
quote:http://ballandalus.wordpress.com/2012/08/17/the-muslim-expulsion-from-spain-an-early-example-of-religious-and-ethnic-cleansing-by-roger-boase/
There is much disagreement about the size of the Morisco population. Henri Lapeyre estimates from his study of census reports and embarkation lists that approximately 275,000 Spanish Moriscos emigrated in the years 1609-14, out of a total of 300,000. [15] This conservative estimate is not consistent with many of the contemporary accounts that give a figure of 600,000. [16] Bearing in mind that the total population of Spain at that time was only about seven and a half million, this must have constituted a serious deficit in terms of productive manpower and tax revenue. In the Kingdom of Valencia, which lost a third of its population, nearly half the villages were deserted in 1638.
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
As I said. The Bedouins are one of the most African groups in the Levant. Listen man you have a habit of either citing things you did not read or you do not understand(DJ has the same annoying habit)...
quote:I am only now starting to see the magnitude and importance of the para-group F* and her descendant clades, which are found in Africa. It's of major importance. I've never focused on it before.
Originally posted by Djehuti:
^ Indeed, and that underived F* is found in Sudan in appreciable frequencies yet not in Arabia is also telling.
quote:Population of Jordon 6.2 mill
Originally posted by xyyman:
quote:I know.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
xyyman you seem to be completely ignorant on what the Bedouin haplogroups are.
![]()
quote:
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/3619651/The-depraved-sultan-and-his-forgotten-white-slaves.html#
"an estimated one million Europeans and Americans captured "
quote:White Gold: The Extraordinary Story of Thomas Pellow and Islam's One Million White Slaves
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/3619651/The-depraved-sultan-and-his-forgotten-white-slaves.html#
the strongest men to breeding farms to mate with black Senegalese slaves, Ismail believing that mulattos made the most trustworthy workers. One Frenchman was locked up, naked, for six days with a bottle of brandy and four women, a eunuch keeping watch; whenever sexual activity flagged, he ordered a drum serenade.
quote:http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/3619651/The-depraved-sultan-and-his-forgotten-white-slaves.html#
Attractive European women were sent to the sultan's harem, and the strongest men to breeding farms to mate with black Senegalese slaves, Ismail believing that mulattos made the most trustworthy workers.
quote:--Jamil M. Abun-Nasr, Cambridge University Press, (1987 - page 5.)
"it is important to bear in mind that over the centuries the Maghreb has been a melting-pot of many other ethnic groups and cultures"
quote:--(Fadhlaoui-Zid et al. 2004)."
"During historic times, Berbers experienced a long and complicated history with many invasions, conquests, and migrations by Phoenicians, Romans, Vandals, Byzantines, Arabs, Bedouins, Spanish, Turks, Andalusians, sub-Saharans (communities settled in Jerba and Gabes in the 16th–19th centuries), and French (Brett and Fentress 1996).
During these invasions, Berbers were forced back to the mountains and to certain villages in southern Tunisia
quote:--(Coudray et al. 2009; Fadhlaoui-Zid et al. 2004; Khodjet-el-Khil et al. 2008).
It is interesting that these “non-African”mtDNA lineages are usually predominant while being diverse
quote:--Jacques Chiaroni et al.
Previous studies of J1-M2672, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 have found it to occur at high frequencies among the Arabic-speaking populations of the Middle East, conventionally interpreted as reflecting the spread of Islam in the first millennium CE.
[...]
Although most post-Last Glacial Maximum recolonization events have a typically northward signature,30, 31 our J1e results provide an example of a southward spread during the early Holocene. Although J1e is one of the most frequent haplogroups in the region, haplogroup E-M123 also shows its highest frequency and haplotype diversity in regions of the Fertile Crescent, decreasing toward the Arabian Peninsula.
quote:what are you talking about my last post on
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
[QB] lol at the disgruntled mindset. You truly have a unhealthy brain. Twisting... tweaking... lying throughout live.
quote:Stop lying, you twisted my post into something else. You can sit here acting as if you don't know. But it's for all to see. All you are good for is lying and altering people's posts. It hasn't been the first time you did this.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:what are you talking about my last post on
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
[QB] lol at the disgruntled mindset. You truly have a unhealthy brain. Twisting... tweaking... lying throughout live.
Moulay Ismail supported what you said
-but you are too denfensive to realize that.
Whatever I say you say the opposite.
So if you say apples are red and then I also say apples are red you get confused. Then you start doubting if apples are red, it's funny.
You suggest that there is no evidence of a Vandal occupation of Tunisia.
You say the Barbary captives and Iberian Moriscos had a significant genetic contribution to North Africa.
Then what haplogroup frequencies in North Africa reflect this?
quote:see what?
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
[QB]quote:Stop lying, you twisted my post into something else. You can sit here acting as if you don't know. But it's for all to see.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
[qb]quote:what are you talking about my last post on
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
[QB] lol at the disgruntled mindset. You truly have a unhealthy brain. Twisting... tweaking... lying throughout live.
Moulay Ismail supported what you said
-but you are too denfensive to realize that.
Whatever I say you say the opposite.
So if you say apples are red and then I also say apples are red you get confused. Then you start doubting if apples are red, it's funny.
You suggest that there is no evidence of a Vandal occupation of Tunisia.
quote:be honest you made several posts replying to be in which you said there as no evidence of Vandals in North Africa in 429 AD.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
And I was probably the first if not the first to tell that Vandals still have offspring in the Maghreb,
quote:I didn't overlook anything. You didn't even know that that didn't all go to North Africa.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
I have posted sources on Moriscos history one page back, you lunatic. There are still descendants of them in the Maghreb. You ironically so called "overlooked" that one, I don't think so. lol
quote:It's your claim that the expulsion of Moriscos had significant genetic impact on North Africa. Therefore it is on you to state which haplogroup frequencies that represents.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
See, if you want to know how many descendants of them probably are still in the Maghreb. All you need to do is look at the Hg sequences and frequencies of those Hg within the Maghreb. I mean, you are the "specialist" after all. LOL
quote:There were European slaves in North Africa.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
LOL at the above, the lies keep stacking by this moron.
Here is a Dutch TV documentary on slavery, it also covers Dutch slaves and elaborates on more. Info is given by Ph.'s in History.
Roue verveer slavernij deel 2
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bJf7XiDxTjE
quote:where's the stack ?
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
LOL at the above, the lies keep stacking by this moron.
quote:You are still lying again.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:There were European slaves in North Africa.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
LOL at the above, the lies keep stacking by this moron.
Here is a Dutch TV documentary on slavery, it also covers Dutch slaves and elaborates on more. Info is given by Ph.'s in History.
Roue verveer slavernij deel 2
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bJf7XiDxTjE
If you want t claim a person is lying about something then you need to quote that person and point out what statement they made you think is a lie.
Otherwise you are bullshitting
quote:http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/3619651/The-depraved-sultan-and-his-forgotten-white-slaves.html#
Attractive European women were sent to the sultan's harem, and the strongest men to breeding farms to mate with black Senegalese slaves, Ismail believing that mulattos made the most trustworthy workers.
quote:Simply because it destroys your Eurocentric argument. Simply because you're a racist wearing a mask. Simply because you can't be objective. You are pathetic. You are a liar!
Attractive European women were sent to the sultan's harem,
quote:--Jamil M. Abun-Nasr, Cambridge University Press, (1987 - page 5.)
"it is important to bear in mind that over the centuries the Maghreb has been a melting-pot of many other ethnic groups and cultures"
quote:--(Fadhlaoui-Zid et al. 2004)."
"During historic times, Berbers experienced a long and complicated history with many invasions, conquests, and migrations by Phoenicians, Romans, Vandals, Byzantines, Arabs, Bedouins, Spanish, Turks, Andalusians, sub-Saharans (communities settled in Jerba and Gabes in the 16th–19th centuries), and French (Brett and Fentress 1996).
During these invasions, Berbers were forced back to the mountains and to certain villages in southern Tunisia
quote:--(Coudray et al. 2009; Fadhlaoui-Zid et al. 2004; Khodjet-el-Khil et al. 2008).
It is interesting that these “non-African”mtDNA lineages are usually predominant while being diverse
quote:--Mercedes García-Arenal
The memory of the loss of Granada was also still alive, and it had driven a large number of exiles, known as andalusiyyun or ' Andalusians' (those who came from al-Andalus), to Morocco.
quote:http://ballandalus.wordpress.com/2012/08/17/the-muslim-expulsion-from-spain-an-early-example-of-religious-and-ethnic-cleansing-by-roger-boase/
There is much disagreement about the size of the Morisco population. Henri Lapeyre estimates from his study of census reports and embarkation lists that approximately 275,000 Spanish Moriscos emigrated in the years 1609-14, out of a total of 300,000. [15] This conservative estimate is not consistent with many of the contemporary accounts that give a figure of 600,000. [16] Bearing in mind that the total population of Spain at that time was only about seven and a half million, this must have constituted a serious deficit in terms of productive manpower and tax revenue. In the Kingdom of Valencia, which lost a third of its population, nearly half the villages were deserted in 1638.
quote:I left that part out because everybody knows Ottman Sultans in North Africa had harems of European women slaves. Many threads have been made mentioning that including one of my own here:
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
[QB] Your lying tweaking ass posted:
Making it appear as if Senegalese women were taken as slaves and copulated with European male slaves.
http://www.egyptsearch.com/forums/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic;f=8;t=008327;p=16#000797
When infact this is the entire sentence, you lying beast!
quote:that's exactly what it says you have reading comprehension issues.
Attractive European women were sent to the sultan's harem, and the strongest men to breeding farms to mate with black Senegalese slaves, Ismail believing that mulattos made the most trustworthy workers.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/3619651/The-depraved-sultan-and-his-forgotten-white-slaves.html#
It says Senegalese women were taken as slaves and copulated with European male slaves and they produced mulattoes on breeding farms.
quote:Simply because it destroys your Eurocentric argument. Simply because you're a racist wearing a mask. Simply because you can't be objective. You are pathetic. You are a liar!
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
For some funny reason you snatched away this part:
[QUOTE]Attractive European women were sent to the sultan's harem,
quote:^^^ notice how he leaves out information about where all the places these Morscos went because this one article doesn't cover that.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
quote:http://ballandalus.wordpress.com/2012/08/17/the-muslim-expulsion-from-spain-an-early-example-of-religious-and-ethnic-cleansing-by-roger-boase/
There is much disagreement about the size of the Morisco population. Henri Lapeyre estimates from his study of census reports and embarkation lists that approximately 275,000 Spanish Moriscos emigrated in the years 1609-14, out of a total of 300,000. [15] This conservative estimate is not consistent with many of the contemporary accounts that give a figure of 600,000. [16] Bearing in mind that the total population of Spain at that time was only about seven and a half million, this must have constituted a serious deficit in terms of productive manpower and tax revenue. In the Kingdom of Valencia, which lost a third of its population, nearly half the villages were deserted in 1638.
quote:Good grief, you're now indirectly admitting your low scumbag behavior. lol
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:I left that part out because everybody knows Ottman Sultans in North Africa had harems of European women slaves. Many threads have been made mentioning that.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
[QB] Your lying tweaking ass posted:
Making it appear as if Senegalese women were taken as slaves and copulated with European male slaves.
http://www.egyptsearch.com/forums/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic;f=8;t=008327;p=16#000797
When infact this is the entire sentence, you lying beast!
quote:that's exactly what it says you have reading comprehension issues.
Attractive European women were sent to the sultan's harem, and the strongest men to breeding farms to mate with black Senegalese slaves, Ismail believing that mulattos made the most trustworthy workers.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/3619651/The-depraved-sultan-and-his-forgotten-white-slaves.html#
It says Senegalese women were taken as slaves and copulated with European male slaves and they produced mulattoes on breeding farms.
quote:Simply because it destroys your Eurocentric argument. Simply because you're a racist wearing a mask. Simply because you can't be objective. You are pathetic. You are a liar!
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
For some funny reason you snatched away this part:
[QUOTE]Attractive European women were sent to the sultan's harem,
But European male slaves breeding with Senegalese female slaves, that is new to me and I never saw it posted before. Probably few people have ever heard of that.
Now tell me where the lie is.
I'm sorry I left the part out where the Turks, I mean Black men got to rape the white chicks.
Forgive me next time I will only quote complete sentences.
However the statement " Attractive European women were sent to the sultan's harem," is already recorded in the thared and I never denied that.
You have yet to indicate what haplogoup contribution in North africa this represents
quote:http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/392401/Morisco
deportation on Sept. 22, 1609; their expulsion was completed some five years later. An estimated 300,000 Moriscos relocated mainly in Algeria, Tunisia, and Morocco, where again they found themselves an alien element. They were assimilated after several generations, but something of their Spanish heritage has survived into modern times.
quote:LOL hilarious dumb is what you are, you ran out of arguments so all that is left is act like a moron. Although you really are one. See, it's your own sarcasm which exposes you constantly.lol
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:^^^ notice how he leaves out information about where all the places these Morscos went because this one article doesn't cover that.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
quote:http://ballandalus.wordpress.com/2012/08/17/the-muslim-expulsion-from-spain-an-early-example-of-religious-and-ethnic-cleansing-by-roger-boase/
There is much disagreement about the size of the Morisco population. Henri Lapeyre estimates from his study of census reports and embarkation lists that approximately 275,000 Spanish Moriscos emigrated in the years 1609-14, out of a total of 300,000. [15] This conservative estimate is not consistent with many of the contemporary accounts that give a figure of 600,000. [16] Bearing in mind that the total population of Spain at that time was only about seven and a half million, this must have constituted a serious deficit in terms of productive manpower and tax revenue. In the Kingdom of Valencia, which lost a third of its population, nearly half the villages were deserted in 1638.
Then he accuses me of leaving out information out of history.
Yet I have whole threads on European slave harem girls that he lusts after
quote:This is interesting. Ottomans sultans in North Africa had European white women slaves in their harems. We knew that I have whole threads on that topic. (Morocc however never came under Ottoman dominance, was not one of the Barbary States but they did have slaves)
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
The depraved sultan and his forgotten white slaves
Nicholas Shakespeare reviews White Gold: the Extraordinary Story of Thomas Pellow by Giles Milton
One October evening in 1738, the population of Penryn abandoned their village to welcome home a man with a great long beard and sun-blackened face. Not even his parents recognised Thomas Pellow, who had been seized by Barbary corsairs when he was 11 and taken to Morocco, where he spent 23 years as a slave of Mulay Ismail, a sultan of story-book depravity.
Attractive European women were sent to the sultan's harem, and the strongest men to breeding farms to mate with black Senegalese slaves, Ismail believing that mulattos made the most trustworthy workers.
quote:What is interesting is that Moriscos moved into the Maghreb, and have remained there!
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:This is interesting. Ottomans sultans in North Africa had European white women slaves in their harems. We knew that I have whole threads on that topic.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
The depraved sultan and his forgotten white slaves
Nicholas Shakespeare reviews White Gold: the Extraordinary Story of Thomas Pellow by Giles Milton
One October evening in 1738, the population of Penryn abandoned their village to welcome home a man with a great long beard and sun-blackened face. Not even his parents recognised Thomas Pellow, who had been seized by Barbary corsairs when he was 11 and taken to Morocco, where he spent 23 years as a slave of Mulay Ismail, a sultan of story-book depravity.
Attractive European women were sent to the sultan's harem, and the strongest men to breeding farms to mate with black Senegalese slaves, Ismail believing that mulattos made the most trustworthy workers.
But there were many times more male captives then women.
But the part about white European slave men sent to breeding farms with Senegalese women and produce mulattoes.
That's a new one on me. The offspring would probably have been more sub saharan than most North Africans
I don't know how they would be identified at this point living in North Africa. Maybe they got called berbers ?
wiki:
Over 150,000 men from sub-Saharan Africa served in his elite Black Guard. By the time of Ismail's death, the guard had grown tenfold, the largest in Moroccan history.
perhaps this might account for some of the L linegages in modern Morrocans.
quote:-- Deborah Anne Kapchan
"Not all of the black African population are gnawa"
quote:--Frigi et al.
Our objective is to highlight the age of sub-Saharan gene flows in North Africa and particularly in Tunisia. Therefore we analyzed in a broad phylogeographic context sub-Saharan mtDNA haplogroups of Tunisian Berber populations considered representative of ancient settlement. More than 2,000 sequences were collected from the literature, and networks were constructed. The results show that the most ancient haplogroup is L3*, which would have been introduced to North Africa from eastern sub-Saharan populations around 20,000 years ago.
Our results also point to a less ancient western sub-Saharan gene flow to Tunisia, including haplogroups L2a and L3b. This conclusion points to an ancient African gene flow to Tunisia before 20,000 years BP. These findings parallel the more recent findings of both archaeology and linguistics on the prehistory of Africa.
The present work suggests that sub-Saharan contributions to North Africa have experienced several complex population processes after the occupation of the region by anatomically modern humans.
Our results reveal that Berber speakers have a foundational biogeographic root in Africa and that deep African lineages have continued to evolve in supra-Saharan Africa.
quote:You quote numbers and say your point was " to explain that there were Moriscos who moved into the Maghreb."
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
quote:LOL hilarious dumb is what you are, you ran out of arguments so all that is left is act like a moron. Although you really are one. See, it's your own sarcasm which exposes you constantly.lol
Originally posted by the lioness,:
[qb]quote:^^^ notice how he leaves out information about where all the places these Morscos went because this one article doesn't cover that.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
quote:http://ballandalus.wordpress.com/2012/08/17/the-muslim-expulsion-from-spain-an-early-example-of-religious-and-ethnic-cleansing-by-roger-boase/
There is much disagreement about the size of the Morisco population. Henri Lapeyre estimates from his study of census reports and embarkation lists that approximately 275,000 Spanish Moriscos emigrated in the years 1609-14, out of a total of 300,000. [15] This conservative estimate is not consistent with many of the contemporary accounts that give a figure of 600,000. [16] Bearing in mind that the total population of Spain at that time was only about seven and a half million, this must have constituted a serious deficit in terms of productive manpower and tax revenue. In the Kingdom of Valencia, which lost a third of its population, nearly half the villages were deserted in 1638.
Then he accuses me of leaving out information out of history.
Yet I have whole threads on European slave harem girls that he lusts after
I did not leave out any info. I cited the enter sentence and paragraph. The point of this column is to explain that there were Moriscos who moved into the Maghreb. You can't deal with these facts, so you are now looking for excuses. Because your Eurocentric ass has been kind hard. lol
quote:If you are to afraid to estimate what the markers are there is no point in talking about this you arer too mouse like
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
However you play it, the markers are there.
quote:when you say dullards to you include Brenna Henn or do you agree with her analysis?
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
And it's not from some hypothetical Epipaleolithic clownish nonsense. This is why you or any of you dullards can't represent fossil remains of you wandering cacasoids. Simply because they don't exist!
quote:No I didn't I just left out the part about European females and was pointing out the part about European males because I had made whole threads about European slave harem girls but this thing about Euroepan slave men and Senegalese women producing mulattoes was new.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
Now, you took a sentence altered it in such way and presented it as something else. This means you lied. Do this in the courthouse and see how the jury will respond.
quote:without mentioning what those matches might be you have no case
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
What is also interesting is that the Ottoman took females from particular places, which matches with mt-DNA found in modern Maghreb populations. Such irony. It makes you wonder...
quote:I gave you images, so your dullard brain can grasp it better. But even then.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
^^^^ you are such a coward any other poster if making such a claim they would provide their explanation as to which haplogroup is accossiated with what what origin. Must I do the work for you?
Your chart indicates R1b3* has the predominant Iberian hap. It represents only a small percenatge in NA as shown in red.
Look in Tunisia it's more than Morocco. Is that explained primarily by the expulsion of Moriscos? I'm not sure about that
Why do you fight me? I'm reasonable, open to suggestions (but you need to show and prove)
The largest contribution shown for Saharawi, Morroco, Algeria, Tunisa is E3b2 aka E-M81 a young haplgroup dated to 5,600 years ago (light bluish green)
Tunisia is about 1/4 hap J,
(dark green) - Arabian origin
Notice how E3b2 aka E-M81 is present in some parts of Iberia perhaps having arrived there from the Isamic invasion.
light bluish green in Andulusia , Portugal, etc the Western half Spain.
I would like to see that compared to E3b2 in the Sahel
quote:what about here where it said that? >
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
And nowhere in that article was stated the European men "produced" offspring. It's something you made up, lied about.
quote:you are lying. You are saying nowhere in that article was stated the European men "produced" offspring.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
infact this is the entire sentence, you lying beast!
quote:
Attractive European women were sent to the sultan's harem, and the strongest men to breeding farms to mate with black Senegalese slaves, Ismail believing that mulattos made the most trustworthy workers.
quote:you copy a lot of stuff yet you have trouble interpreting the data to make a specific point that the data alone does not make.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
And I don't have to notice anything, I already posted this.
SPAIN
Y-DNA HAPLOGROUP PERCENTAGES
http://www.iberianroots.com/Statistics/spain.html
PORTUGAL
Y-DNA HAPLOGROUP PERCENTAGES
http://www.iberianroots.com/Statistics/portugal.html [/QB]
quote:This is the sentence:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:what about here where it said that? >
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
And nowhere in that article was stated the European men "produced" offspring. It's something you made up, lied about.
Or perhaps you don't know hat a sentence is. This could indicate the problem.
quote:you are lying. You are saying nowhere in that article was stated the European men "produced" offspring.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
infact this is the entire sentence, you lying beast!
quote:
Attractive European women were sent to the sultan's harem, and the strongest men to breeding farms to mate with black Senegalese slaves, Ismail believing that mulattos made the most trustworthy workers.
yet the article says white European slave men were sent to breed with Senegalese slave women to produce mulattoes.
If you don't like the word " produce" how about "breed" and" mate" with, resulting in mulattoes.
I have to hand it to you . You uncovered something interetsing here. The problem now is that you are now lying about it, trying to cover it up. Your emotions have taken hold.
The problem is when you throw a boomerang at the lioness and I duck my head if your not quick enough to catch it it winds up hitting you in the back of the head.
maybe your little friend will arrive and try to help you
quote:http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/3619651/The-depraved-sultan-and-his-forgotten-white-slaves.html#
Attractive European women were sent to the sultan's harem, and the strongest men to breeding farms to mate with black Senegalese slaves, Ismail believing that mulattos made the most trustworthy workers.
quote:http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/3619651/The-depraved-sultan-and-his-forgotten-white-slaves.html#
Attractive European women were sent to the sultan's harem, and the strongest men to breeding farms to mate with black Senegalese slaves, Ismail believing that mulattos made the most trustworthy workers.
quote:http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/3619651/The-depraved-sultan-and-his-forgotten-white-slaves.html#
Attractive European women were sent to the sultan's harem, and the strongest men to breeding farms to mate with black Senegalese slaves, Ismail believing that mulattos made the most trustworthy workers.
quote:http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/3619651/The-depraved-sultan-and-his-forgotten-white-slaves.html#
Attractive European women were sent to the sultan's harem, and the strongest men to breeding farms to mate with black Senegalese slaves, Ismail believing that mulattos made the most trustworthy workers.
quote:http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/3619651/The-depraved-sultan-and-his-forgotten-white-slaves.html#
Attractive European women were sent to the sultan's harem, and the strongest men to breeding farms to mate with black Senegalese slaves, Ismail believing that mulattos made the most trustworthy workers.
quote:If this needs explaining, well then you have a real low I.Q.. SMH it's all mapped out for you.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:you copy a lot of stuff yet you have trouble interpreting the data to make a specific point that the data alone does not make.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
And I don't have to notice anything, I already posted this.
SPAIN
Y-DNA HAPLOGROUP PERCENTAGES
http://www.iberianroots.com/Statistics/spain.html
PORTUGAL
Y-DNA HAPLOGROUP PERCENTAGES
http://www.iberianroots.com/Statistics/portugal.html
try harder [/QB]
quote:I think you have the low I.Q. since you say to me ask me to explain it.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
If this needs explaining, well then you have a real low I.Q.. SMH it's all mapped out for you.
http://www.iberianroots.com/Statistics/diversityandage.html
See, I post facts, whereas you love to hypotheses about unmeaningful and wishful things, which you haven't proven until now. Your whole wandering caucausian history is based on eugenic fantasies. And the constant picture spamming is hilarious too, always showing folks with foreign ancestry, trying to make them pass off as the original indigenous population.[/QB]
quote:I did post data. lol
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:I think you have the low I.Q. since you say to me ask me to explain it.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
If this needs explaining, well then you have a real low I.Q.. SMH it's all mapped out for you.
http://www.iberianroots.com/Statistics/diversityandage.html
See, I post facts, whereas you love to hypotheses about unmeaningful and wishful things, which you haven't proven until now. Your whole wandering caucausian history is based on eugenic fantasies. And the constant picture spamming is hilarious too, always showing folks with foreign ancestry, trying to make them pass off as the original indigenous population.![]()
You can't even articulate a question.
If you ever entered a debate and charts and tables weren't allowed you would lose quickly
data is not an argument ot theory
you have to use the data to make an argument or theorize. [/QB]
quote:And this is another sentence:
Attractive European women were sent to the sultan's harem, and the strongest men to breeding farms to mate with black Senegalese slaves, Ismail believing that mulattos made the most trustworthy workers.
quote:These are two diffenent sentences you dullard!
One Frenchman was locked up, naked, for six days with a bottle of brandy and four women, a eunuch keeping watch; whenever sexual activity flagged, he ordered a drum serenade.
quote:The reason why you posted that nonsense above is because you've got your head stuck in your rectum. I have posted on linguistics, genetics and physical anthropology. I even did some picture spamming along to show what I mean, hair texture and facial traits etc... The Tamazight are indigenous, but have been effected by foreign people throughout recent time. As history testifies. This effect differs from place to place. Is this clear enough?
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:I think you have the low I.Q. since you say to me ask me to explain it.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
If this needs explaining, well then you have a real low I.Q.. SMH it's all mapped out for you.
http://www.iberianroots.com/Statistics/diversityandage.html
See, I post facts, whereas you love to hypotheses about unmeaningful and wishful things, which you haven't proven until now. Your whole wandering caucausian history is based on eugenic fantasies. And the constant picture spamming is hilarious too, always showing folks with foreign ancestry, trying to make them pass off as the original indigenous population.![]()
You can't even articulate a question.
If you ever entered a debate and charts and tables weren't allowed you would lose quickly
data is not an argument ot theory
you have to use the data to make an argument or theorize or ask a specific question of somebody.
"Explain this" is not enough. You have to state why some data is a problem.
It's not even clear if you agree with the afrocentic position of Cheikh Anta Diop and Dr, Winters that
the Berbers are probably of European, especially Vandal origin. [/QB]
quote:http://www.themuslimtimes.org/2013/06/europe/know-your-history-spains-forgotten-muslims-the-expulsion-of-the-moriscos
Despite the best efforts of the Moriscos to conceal their practice of Islam, the Christian kings suspected them of continued adherence to Islam. In 1609, over 100 years after the Muslims went into hiding, King Phillip of Spain signed an edict expelling all Moriscos from Spain. They were given only 3 days to completely pack up and board ships destined for North Africa or the Ottoman Empire.
[...]
By 1614 every last Morisco was gone, and Islam disappeared from the Iberian Peninsula. Going from over 500,000 people to zero in 100 years can only be described as a genocide. Indeed, the Portuguese Dominican monk, Damian Fonseca, referred to the expulsion as an “agreeable Holocaust”. The effects on Spain were grave. Its economy suffered greatly, as a large part of the labor force was gone, and tax revenues dropped. In North Africa, Muslim rulers attempted to provide for the hundreds of thousands of refugees, but in many cases, were unable to do much to help them. The Moriscos of North Africa spent centuries trying to assimilate into society, but still kept their unique Andalusian identity.
To this day, neighborhoods in major North African cities boast of their Morisco identities and keep alive the memory of Muslim Spain’s glorious past. They remind us of the illustrious history of the Iberian Peninsula, as well the tragic story of their expulsion from their homes in the one of the greatest genocides Europe has ever seen.
quote:
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
Attractive European women were sent to the sultan's harem, and the strongest men to breeding farms to mate with black Senegalese slaves, Ismail believing that mulattos made the most trustworthy workers. One Frenchman was locked up, naked, for six days with a bottle of brandy and four women, a eunuch keeping watch; whenever sexual activity flagged, he ordered a drum serenade.
quote:So what ? It's two sentences so what?
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
This is one sentence:
quote:And this is another sentence:
Attractive European women were sent to the sultan's harem, and the strongest men to breeding farms to mate with black Senegalese slaves, Ismail believing that mulattos made the most trustworthy workers.
quote:These are two diffenent sentences you dullard!
One Frenchman was locked up, naked, for six days with a bottle of brandy and four women, a eunuch keeping watch; whenever sexual activity flagged, he ordered a drum serenade.
quote:that's 1 million within a couple of centuries. Not the 1000 years of Islamic history.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
Attractive European women were sent to the sultan's harem, and the strongest men to breeding farms to mate with black Senegalese slaves, Ismail believing that mulattos made the most trustworthy workers. One Frenchman was locked up, naked, for six days with a bottle of brandy and four women, a eunuch keeping watch; whenever sexual activity flagged, he ordered a drum serenade.quote:So what ? It's two sentences so what?
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
This is one sentence:
quote:And this is another sentence:
Attractive European women were sent to the sultan's harem, and the strongest men to breeding farms to mate with black Senegalese slaves, Ismail believing that mulattos made the most trustworthy workers.
quote:These are two diffenent sentences you dullard!
One Frenchman was locked up, naked, for six days with a bottle of brandy and four women, a eunuch keeping watch; whenever sexual activity flagged, he ordered a drum serenade.
Thosands of Moriscos were expelled to North Africa but you are very dishonest in purposly leaving out the fact that many other thouands who were expelled form Spain did not.
You do this to try to inflate the numbers how went into North Africa by implictation and leaving out facts.
You did a simaliar scam with the white slaves. Your source said it was 1 million which is a rough estimate considered high by some scholars.
But then you later said a few millon.
Lies
quote:I really miss being entertained by jokers on this site like LYIN-SS so I'm just checking in.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
LOL at the above, the lies keep stacking by this moron.
It's only one page ago, where the facts are summed up. Moriscos exiled and moved to North Africa, the Maghreb. A sum of estimated 600.000. lol
The descendants are called Andelusians.
And if you like to know how many of them are still in the Maghreb you can look up the genetic sequence and frequencies in the Maghreb.
Here is a Dutch TV documentary on slavery, it also covers Dutch slaves and elaborates on more. Info is given by Ph.'s in History.
Roue verveer slavernij deel 2
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bJf7XiDxTjE
It's actually you who can't be taken seriously, since you are clowning all the time.
quote:Seems like your getting testy in your old age LYIN _NUT. Or is somebody else using your profile.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:I think you have the low I.Q. since you say to me ask me to explain it.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
If this needs explaining, well then you have a real low I.Q.. SMH it's all mapped out for you.
http://www.iberianroots.com/Statistics/diversityandage.html
See, I post facts, whereas you love to hypotheses about unmeaningful and wishful things, which you haven't proven until now. Your whole wandering caucausian history is based on eugenic fantasies. And the constant picture spamming is hilarious too, always showing folks with foreign ancestry, trying to make them pass off as the original indigenous population.![]()
You can't even articulate a question.
If you ever entered a debate and charts and tables weren't allowed you would lose quickly
data is not an argument ot theory
you have to use the data to make an argument or theorize or ask a specific question of somebody.
"Explain this" is not enough. You have to state why some data is a problem.
It's not even clear if you agree with the afrocentic position of Cheikh Anta Diop and Dr, Winters that
the Berbers are probably of European, especially Vandal origin. [/QB]
quote:HE /SHE is definitely a racist. Like most of them she can't stand the fact that the original predominate Moors were "black-skinned" people of Masmuda Zanata stock that frightened away horses of Syrians with their color, and had a lot of white slaves.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
The post above is evident that you are dumb! And I do have a case, it's just that you don't know what this is about.
And yes, you did leave out the part about European females, then tweaked it in such way, to present it different, you liar. You are trying to save face! But you are known for lying. And so, you did it too this time.
And nowhere in that article was stated the European men "produced" offspring. It's something you made up, lied about. And at the same time, you've claimed by the frame of words that Senegalese (black men) "raped" white women. So, there is more prove that you are a euronut, who can't handle historical accuracies.
Your defends is flaunt you are a racist flip flopper.
![]()
quote:Racist nuts also can't stand the fact that Haratin have always lived in Morocco and North Africa and the Mulay Ismail was the son of a Negro woman and "near black" in color.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:This is interesting. Ottomans sultans in North Africa had European white women slaves in their harems. We knew that I have whole threads on that topic. (Morocc however never came under Ottoman dominance, was not one of the Barbary States but they did have slaves)
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
The depraved sultan and his forgotten white slaves
Nicholas Shakespeare reviews White Gold: the Extraordinary Story of Thomas Pellow by Giles Milton
One October evening in 1738, the population of Penryn abandoned their village to welcome home a man with a great long beard and sun-blackened face. Not even his parents recognised Thomas Pellow, who had been seized by Barbary corsairs when he was 11 and taken to Morocco, where he spent 23 years as a slave of Mulay Ismail, a sultan of story-book depravity.
Attractive European women were sent to the sultan's harem, and the strongest men to breeding farms to mate with black Senegalese slaves, Ismail believing that mulattos made the most trustworthy workers.
But there were many times more male captives then women.
But the part about white European slave men sent to breeding farms with Senegalese women and produce mulattoes.
That's a new one on me. The offspring would probably have been more sub saharan than most North Africans. How common this was I have no idea
I don't know how they would be identified at this point living in North Africa. Maybe they got called berbers ?
wiki:
Over 150,000 men from sub-Saharan Africa served in his elite Black Guard. By the time of Ismail's death, the guard had grown tenfold, the largest in Moroccan history.
perhaps this might account for some of the L linegages in modern Morrocans.
quote:And your problem is that you are trying to change the subject of the fact that the original Moors in Spain i.e. black people known as Masmuda and who were "the Berbers" of that era and who were the largest number of the Moors in early Spain for several centuries brought in slaves from all over Eurasia.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:what about here where it said that? >
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
And nowhere in that article was stated the European men "produced" offspring. It's something you made up, lied about.
quote:you are lying. You are saying nowhere in that article was stated the European men "produced" offspring.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
infact this is the entire sentence, you lying beast!
quote:
Attractive European women were sent to the sultan's harem, and the strongest men to breeding farms to mate with black Senegalese slaves, Ismail believing that mulattos made the most trustworthy workers.
yet the article says white European slave men were sent to breed with Senegalese slave women to produce mulattoes.
If you don't like the word " produce" how about "breed" and" mate" with, resulting in mulattoes.
I have to hand it to you . You uncovered something interetsing here. The problem now is that you are now lying about it, trying to cover it up. Your emotions have taken hold.
The problem is when you throw a boomerang at the lioness and I duck my head if your not quick enough to catch it it winds up hitting you in the back of the head.
maybe your little friend will arrive and try to help you
quote:[/QB][/QUOTE]
Originally posted by the lioness,:
You go into these various areas in the Mid east or North Africa circle some hgs in small popualtions and declare the whole region African.
At least start with a whole country before you make these sweeping emotion based statements [.
![]()
quote:Yes, if you sum them all up, you get the genetic frequency of mtDNA and low imput of Y-DNA.
Originally posted by dana marniche:
quote:that's 1 million within a couple of centuries. Not the 1000 years of Islamic history.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
Attractive European women were sent to the sultan's harem, and the strongest men to breeding farms to mate with black Senegalese slaves, Ismail believing that mulattos made the most trustworthy workers. One Frenchman was locked up, naked, for six days with a bottle of brandy and four women, a eunuch keeping watch; whenever sexual activity flagged, he ordered a drum serenade.quote:So what ? It's two sentences so what?
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
This is one sentence:
quote:And this is another sentence:
Attractive European women were sent to the sultan's harem, and the strongest men to breeding farms to mate with black Senegalese slaves, Ismail believing that mulattos made the most trustworthy workers.
quote:These are two diffenent sentences you dullard!
One Frenchman was locked up, naked, for six days with a bottle of brandy and four women, a eunuch keeping watch; whenever sexual activity flagged, he ordered a drum serenade.
Thosands of Moriscos were expelled to North Africa but you are very dishonest in purposly leaving out the fact that many other thouands who were expelled form Spain did not.
You do this to try to inflate the numbers how went into North Africa by implictation and leaving out facts.
You did a simaliar scam with the white slaves. Your source said it was 1 million which is a rough estimate considered high by some scholars.
But then you later said a few millon.
Lies
What scholar says it is too high LYING_ SS.
quote:Yes, I've heard that argument before. But we have physical anthropology on fossils which disputes them and backs up what you state.
Originally posted by dana marniche:
quote:Racist nuts also can't stand the fact that Haratin have always lived in Morocco and North Africa and the Mulay Ismail was the son of a Negro woman and "near black" in color.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:This is interesting. Ottomans sultans in North Africa had European white women slaves in their harems. We knew that I have whole threads on that topic. (Morocc however never came under Ottoman dominance, was not one of the Barbary States but they did have slaves)
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
The depraved sultan and his forgotten white slaves
Nicholas Shakespeare reviews White Gold: the Extraordinary Story of Thomas Pellow by Giles Milton
One October evening in 1738, the population of Penryn abandoned their village to welcome home a man with a great long beard and sun-blackened face. Not even his parents recognised Thomas Pellow, who had been seized by Barbary corsairs when he was 11 and taken to Morocco, where he spent 23 years as a slave of Mulay Ismail, a sultan of story-book depravity.
Attractive European women were sent to the sultan's harem, and the strongest men to breeding farms to mate with black Senegalese slaves, Ismail believing that mulattos made the most trustworthy workers.
But there were many times more male captives then women.
But the part about white European slave men sent to breeding farms with Senegalese women and produce mulattoes.
That's a new one on me. The offspring would probably have been more sub saharan than most North Africans. How common this was I have no idea
I don't know how they would be identified at this point living in North Africa. Maybe they got called berbers ?
wiki:
Over 150,000 men from sub-Saharan Africa served in his elite Black Guard. By the time of Ismail's death, the guard had grown tenfold, the largest in Moroccan history.
perhaps this might account for some of the L linegages in modern Morrocans.
Dominic Busnot sent by Louis the IVth on a mission to free the French SLAVES there, saw the mother of the ruler Mulay Ismail whom he describes as a "pure black" slave (Meakin, 1899, Empire of Morocco, p. 147)
quote:That's true, but another fact is that Moriscos covertos moved to the Maghreb after the expulsion and still have descendants at the Maghreb. Lyin'ass is ignoring this fact! So the asshole will ask stupid questions like how many and prove by genetics how many. The genetic sequences of Spain found in the Maghreb speak their own story....there really is no further explanation needed.
Originally posted by dana marniche:
quote:HE /SHE is definitely a racist. Like most of them she can't stand the fact that the original predominate Moors were "black-skinned" people of Masmuda Zanata stock that frightened away horses of Syrians with their color, and had a lot of white slaves.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
The post above is evident that you are dumb! And I do have a case, it's just that you don't know what this is about.
And yes, you did leave out the part about European females, then tweaked it in such way, to present it different, you liar. You are trying to save face! But you are known for lying. And so, you did it too this time.
And nowhere in that article was stated the European men "produced" offspring. It's something you made up, lied about. And at the same time, you've claimed by the frame of words that Senegalese (black men) "raped" white women. So, there is more prove that you are a euronut, who can't handle historical accuracies.
Your defends is flaunt you are a racist flip flopper.
![]()
![]()
quote:Cultural Memories of the Expulsion of the Moriscos José M.
There is an immense bibliography on the Moriscos, so I can only speak here about two authors. First, Gregorio Maran ̃o ́n, whose Expulsion and Diaspora of the Spanish Moriscos was discovered and published only two decades after his death. Maran ̃o ́n analyses the economic, political, religious, social and cultural causes that contributed to the expulsion of 300,000 people, many of them women, children, and old people; in some parts of the country this amounted to the loss of one third of the population.
[...]
The vast majority of expelled Spaniards had to settle for a new life in the Muslim territories of North Africa. Others managed to negotiate with the Ottoman authorities of eastern Europe, in order to migrate to the Balkans. A decade later an agent of the English government in Morocco reported that he found Moriscos there who ‘complain bitterly of their cruel exile, and desire deeply to return under Christian rule’. The e ́migre ́s from Hornachos settled in what had been the desert town of Rabat in Morocco, and gave it a new life; others settled in Sale ́, just across the river from Rabat.
[...]
The same thing happened in the other cities of Morocco and Tunisia to which the Moriscos emigrated, and where they tried to conserve their religious customs, the style of their houses, their cultural traditions and their music, with the Andalus ́ıes guitar and Andalusian traditional songs still surviving.
quote:--Jacques Chiaroni et al.
Previous studies of J1-M2672, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 have found it to occur at high frequencies among the Arabic-speaking populations of the Middle East, conventionally interpreted as reflecting the spread of Islam in the first millennium CE.
[...]
Although most post-Last Glacial Maximum recolonization events have a typically northward signature,30, 31 our J1e results provide an example of a southward spread during the early Holocene. Although J1e is one of the most frequent haplogroups in the region, haplogroup E-M123 also shows its highest frequency and haplotype diversity in regions of the Fertile Crescent, decreasing toward the Arabian Peninsula.
quote:
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
I read somewhere in a source once, that Vikings took slaves to Northwest Africa as well. Guess who those were? Saami. Yes, Saami. [/QB]
quote:--(Coudray et al. 2009; Fadhlaoui-Zid et al. 2004; Khodjet-el-Khil et al. 2008).
It is interesting that these “non-African”mtDNA lineages are usually predominant while being diverse
quote:--(Fadhlaoui-Zid et al. 2004)."
" During historic times, Berbers experienced a long and complicated history with many invasions, conquests, and migrations by Phoenicians, Romans, Vandals, Byzantines, Arabs, Bedouins, Spanish, Turks, Andalusians, sub-Saharans (communities settled in Jerba and Gabes in the 16th–19th centuries), and French (Brett and Fentress 1996).
During these invasions, Berbers were forced back to the mountains and to certain villages in southern Tunisia
quote:----Toomas Kivisild (2012)
U6 and M1 frequencies in North Africa, the Middle East and Europe do not follow similar patterns, and their sub-clade divisions do not appear to be compatible with their shared history reaching back to the Early Upper Palaeolithic.
[...]
For example, U6a1 and M1b, with their coalescent ages of ~20,000–22,000 years ago and earliest inferred expansion in northwest Africa, could coincide with the flourishing of the Iberomaurusian industry, whilst U6b and M1b1 appeared at the time of the Capsian culture.
quote:--Holliday TW, Hilton CE.
In fact, in terms of body shape, the European and the Inuit samples tend to be cold-adapted and tend to be separated in multivariate space from the more tropically adapted Africans, especially those groups from south of the Sahara.
quote:--Holliday TW.
Body proportions covary with climate, apparently as the result of climatic selection. Ontogenic research and migrant studies have demonstrated that body proportions are largely genetically controlled and are under low selective rates; thus studies of body form can provide evidence for evolutionarily short-term dispersals and/or gene flow. Following these observations, competing models of modern human origins yield different predictions concerning body proportion shifts in Late Pleistocene Europe. Replacement predicts that the earliest modern Europeans will possess "tropical" body proportions (assuming Africa is the center of origin), while Regional Continuity permits only minor shifts in body shape, due to climatic change and/or improved cultural buffering. This study tests these predictions via analyses of osteometric data reflective of trunk height and breadth, limb proportions and relative body mass for samples of Early Upper Paleolithic (EUP), Late Upper Paleolithic (LUP) and Mesolithic (MES) humans and 13 recent African and European populations. Results reveal a clear tendency for the EUP sample to cluster with recent Africans, while LUP and MES samples cluster with recent Europeans. These results refute the hypothesis of local continuity in Europe, and are consistent with an interpretation of elevated gene flow (and population dispersal?) from Africa, followed by subsequent climatic adaptation to colder conditions. These data do not, however, preclude the possibility of some (albeit small) contribution of genes from Neandertals to succeeding populations, as is postulated in Bräuer's "Afro-European Sapiens" model.
quote:---Trenton Holliday (2000) Evolution at the
What we can say, however, is that in the Holocene, humans from southwest Asia do not exhibit tropically adapted body shape (Crognier 1981; Eveleth and Tanner 1976; Schreider 1975).... "
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
dana contradicted Troll patrol a number of times but neither of them is smart enough to realize it
quote:--Pagani et al 2012
The dates of admixture (assuming 30 years
per generation)42 are reported in Table 1. Notably, in most
of the Semitic, Cushitic, and Omotic populations, the
admixture of African and non-African ancestry components
dates to 2.5–3 kya, whereas in North Africa, the
admixture dates are ~2 ky more recent, clustering around
1 kya, consistent with previous reports.
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman:
On what the indigenous people look like, I rely on very old photos and books describing what these people look like. Back then Europeans had no interest in claiming North Africa...the land.
TP is a good source for such information on authentic photos.
quote:--J.-J. Hublin, Dental Evidence from the Aterian Human Populations of Morocco
The makers of these assemblages can therefore be seen as (1) a
group of Homo sapiens predating and/or contemporary to
the out-of-Africa exodus of the species, and (2) geographically one of the (if not the) closest from the main gate to Eurasia at the northeastern corner of the African continent.
Although Moroccan specimens have been discovered far
away from this area, they may provide us with [b[one of the
best proxies of the African groups that expanded into Eurasia[...][/b]
quote:--Cremaschi, Mauro, et al. "Some Insights on the Aterian in the Libyan Sahara: Chronology,
The area differs from other sties areas such as the Nile Valley or the Near East because the Middle/Late Paleolithic transition in the Sahara is not marked by changes in core technology. The overall dates for the Libya sites containing the Aterian tool technique range from 47,000- 24,500 BP. Some of the dating techniques were Thermoluminescence (TL) which proved successful in dating several types of sediments including "desert loss" sand dunes.
quote:--Eleanor M.L. Scerri , The Aterian and its place in the North African Middle Stone Age
This paper critically reviews the meaning and history of research of the Aterian. This highlights a number of serious issues with definitions and interpretations of this technocomplex, ranging from a lack of definitional consensus to problems with the common view of the Aterian as a ‘desert adaptation’. Following this review, the paper presents the results of a quantitative study of six North African MSA assemblages (Aterian, Nubian Complex and ‘MSA’).
quote:--Late Pleistocene Human Occupation of Northwest Africa: A Crosscheck of Chronology and Climate Change in Morocco
Regular Middle Paleolithic inventories as well as Middle Paleolithic inventories of Aterian type have a long chronology in Morocco going back to MIS 6 and are interstratified in some sites. Their potential for detecting chrono-cultural patterns is low. The transition from the Middle to Upper Paleolithic, here termed Early Upper Paleolithic—at between 30 to 20 ka—remains a most enigmatic era. Scarce data from this period requires careful and fundamental reconsidering of human presence. By integrating environmental data in the reconstruction of population dynamics, clear correlations become obvious. High resolution data are lacking before 20 ka, and at some sites this period is characterized by the occurrence of sterile layers between Middle Paleolithic deposits, possibly indicative of a very low presence of humans in Morocco. After Heinrich Event 1, there is an enormous increase of data due to the prominent Late Iberomaurusian deposits that contrast strongly with the foregoing accumulations in terms of sedimentological features, fauna, and artifact composition. The Younger Dryas again shows a remarkable decline of data marking the end of the Paleolithic. Environmental improvements in the Holocene are associated with an extensive Epipaleolithic occupation. Therefore, the late glacial cultural sequence of Morocco is a good test case for analyzing the interrelationship of culture and climate change.
quote:That would mean that U5 in some berber populations came from Saami slaves who the Vikings brought to North Africa.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol
I read somewhere in a source once, that Vikings took slaves to Northwest Africa as well. Guess who those were? Saami. Yes, Saami
quote:The Sahara was not always as dry as it is today. There was a green period with plenty of vegetation and was much more habitable for humans.
Originally posted by xyyman:
Nice find TP. I always contend that the tropical belt of Africa was NOT the orginal source. It was either Sahara or Further south in Southern Africa. Not the Ethiopian region per Leakey.
Tishkoff suggested origin in Southern Africa. Norton suggest origin in more Northern Africa.
I beleive it was more Northern Africa.
quote:You are retarded, you yourself posted a paper "which shows similarities in genes". I mean, how dumb can you be?
Originally posted by the lioness,:
[QB] The following is Troll Patrols explanation for possible U5 in in North Africa:
quote:Show the fossil records of cold adapted Eurasians, in the "Now Sahara" or just shut the F-ck up, with your hypothetical B.S.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:The Sahara was not always as dry as it is today. There was a green period with plenty of vegetation and was much more habitable for humans.
Originally posted by xyyman:
Nice find TP. I always contend that the tropical belt of Africa was NOT the orginal source. It was either Sahara or Further south in Southern Africa. Not the Ethiopian region per Leakey.
Tishkoff suggested origin in Southern Africa. Norton suggest origin in more Northern Africa.
I beleive it was more Northern Africa.
One of the populations living at that time were the Capsians in the Tunisan region 10,000 to 6,000 BCE.
After that the Sahara was getting drier and drier.
After the drying of the Sahara there is no evidence of human settlemjent in the Maghreb until around 800 BC until Phoenician and Greek settlements.
So there is little evidence that the current population is derived from those earlier populations.
There is gap there of nothing happeng for a few thousand years
quote:
The extremely large skeletal samples that come from sites such as Taforalt (Fig. 8.13) and Afalou constitute an invaluable resource for understanding the makers of Iberomaurusian artifacts, and their number is unparalleled elsewhere in Africa for the early Holocene. Frequently termed Mechta-Afalou or Mechtoid, these were a skeletally robust people and definitely African in origin, though attempts, such as those of Ferembach (1985), to establish similarities with much older and rarer Aterian skeletal remains are tenuous given the immense temporal separation between the two (Close and Wendorf 1990). At the opposite end of the chronological spectrum, dental morphology does suggest connections with later Africans, including those responsible for the Capsian Industry (Irish 2000) and early mid-Holocene human remains from the western half of the Sahara (Dutour 1989), something that points to the Maghreb as one of the regions from which people recolonised the desert (MacDonald 1998).
Turning to what can be learned about cultural practices and disease, the individuals from Taforalt, the largest sample by far, display little evidence of trauma, though they do suggest a high incidence of infant mortality, with evidence for dental caries, arthritis, and rheumatism among other degenerative conditions. Interestingly, Taforalt also provides one of the oldest known instances of the practice of trepanation, the surgical removal of a portion of the cranium; the patient evidently survived for some time, as there are signs of bone regrowth in the affected area. Another form of body modification was much more widespread and, indeed, a distinctive feature of the Iberomaurusian skeletal sample as a whole. This was the practice of removing two or more of the upper incisors, usually around puberty and from both males and females, something that probably served as both a rite of passage and an ethnic marker (Close and Wendorf 1990), just as it does in parts of sub-Saharan Africa today (e.g., van Reenen 1987). Cranial and postcranial malformations are also apparent and may indicate pronounced endogamy at a much more localised level (Hadjouis 2002), perhaps supported by the degree of variability between different site samples noted by Irish (2000).
quote:Craniometric data from seven human groups (Tables 3, 4) were subjected to principal components analysis, which allies the early Holocene population at Gobero (Gob-e) with mid-Holocene “Mechtoids” from Mali and Mauritania [18], [26], [27] and with Late Pleistocene Iberomaurusians and early Holocene Capsians from across the Maghreb
Craniometric data from seven human groups (Tables 3, 4) were subjected to principal components analysis, which allies the early Holocene population at Gobero (Gob-e) with mid-Holocene “Mechtoids” from Mali and Mauritania [18], [26], [27] and with Late Pleistocene Iberomaurusians and early Holocene Capsians from across the Maghreb (see cluster in Figure 6). The striking similarity between these seven human populations confirms previous suggestions regarding their affinity [18] and is particularly significant given their temporal range (Late Pleistocene to mid-Holocene) and trans-Saharan geographic distribution (across the Maghreb to the southern Sahara).
[...]
Trans-Saharan craniometry. Principal components analysis of craniometric variables closely allies the early Holocene occupants at Gobero, who were buried with Kiffian material culture, with Late Pleistocene to mid-Holocene humans from the Maghreb and southern Sahara referred to as Iberomaurusians, Capsians and “Mechtoids.” Outliers to this cluster of populations include an older Aterian sample and the mid-Holocene occupants at Gobero associated with Tenerean material culture.
quote:Really, so where is "your evidence" for this? LOL
Originally posted by the lioness,:
Henn:
In summary, although paleoanthropological evidence has established the ancient presence of anatomically modern humans in northern Africa prior to 60,000 ya [35], the simplest interpretation of our results is that the majority of ancestry in modern North Africans derives from populations outside of Africa, through at least two episodes of increased gene flow during the past 40,000 years....
We identify a gradient of likely autochthonous Maghrebi ancestry that increases from east to west across northern Africa; this ancestry is likely derived from “back-to-Africa” gene flow more than 12,000 years ago [ya], prior to the Holocene
quote:--J.-J. Hublin, Dental Evidence from the Aterian Human Populations of Morocco
The makers of these assemblages can therefore be seen as (1) a
group of Homo sapiens predating and/or contemporary to
the out-of-Africa exodus of the species, and (2) geographically one of the (if not the) closest from the main gate to Eurasia at the northeastern corner of the African continent.
Although Moroccan specimens have been discovered far
away from this area, they may provide us with one of the
best proxies of the African groups that expanded into Eurasia[...]
quote:--Cremaschi, Mauro, et al. "Some Insights on the Aterian in the Libyan Sahara: Chronology,
The area differs from other sties areas such as the Nile Valley or the Near East because the Middle/Late Paleolithic transition in the Sahara is not marked by changes in core technology. The overall dates for the Libya sites containing the Aterian tool technique range from 47,000- 24,500 BP. Some of the dating techniques were Thermoluminescence (TL) which proved successful in dating several types of sediments including "desert loss" sand dunes.
quote:--Eleanor M.L. Scerri , The Aterian and its place in the North African Middle Stone Age
This paper critically reviews the meaning and history of research of the Aterian. This highlights a number of serious issues with definitions and interpretations of this technocomplex, ranging from a lack of definitional consensus to problems with the common view of the Aterian as a ‘desert adaptation’. Following this review, the paper presents the results of a quantitative study of six North African MSA assemblages (Aterian, Nubian Complex and ‘MSA’).
quote:--Late Pleistocene Human Occupation of Northwest Africa: A Crosscheck of Chronology and Climate Change in Morocco
Regular Middle Paleolithic inventories as well as Middle Paleolithic inventories of Aterian type have a long chronology in Morocco going back to MIS 6 and are interstratified in some sites. Their potential for detecting chrono-cultural patterns is low. The transition from the Middle to Upper Paleolithic, here termed Early Upper Paleolithic—at between 30 to 20 ka—remains a most enigmatic era. Scarce data from this period requires careful and fundamental reconsidering of human presence. By integrating environmental data in the reconstruction of population dynamics, clear correlations become obvious. High resolution data are lacking before 20 ka, and at some sites this period is characterized by the occurrence of sterile layers between Middle Paleolithic deposits, possibly indicative of a very low presence of humans in Morocco. After Heinrich Event 1, there is an enormous increase of data due to the prominent Late Iberomaurusian deposits that contrast strongly with the foregoing accumulations in terms of sedimentological features, fauna, and artifact composition. The Younger Dryas again shows a remarkable decline of data marking the end of the Paleolithic. Environmental improvements in the Holocene are associated with an extensive Epipaleolithic occupation. Therefore, the late glacial cultural sequence of Morocco is a good test case for analyzing the interrelationship of culture and climate change.
quote:Ironically all this recent intrusions follows the same gene flow and genetic pooling as what you've summed up! Irony is too that all those populations are cold adapted. When remains in Africa have been found Tropical Adapted. Shall we review them one at a time?
Originally posted by the lioness,:
The following is Troll Patrols explanation for possible U5 in in North Africa:
quote:Benna Henn et al are wrong.
Originally posted by Troll Patrol
I read somewhere in a source once, that Vikings took slaves to Northwest Africa as well. Guess who those were? Saami. Yes, Saami
There was no gene flow from outside of Africa into North Africa prior to the Holocene.
Outside of Africa gene flow into North Africa is due to more recent events including Phoenician settlement, Romans,Vandals Arabs, Expulsion of Moriscos, Ottoamns and European slaves of the Barbary.
nothing prior to the holocene
If that is true then some hpalogroups found in North Africas were not present in Africa prior to the holocene.
Some of the haplogoups in North Africa both indigenous and not indigenous are:
HV0
HV
R0
J
T
U5
U6
K
N1
N2
X
M
M1
L0
L1
L2
L3
L4
L5
^^^^ xyyman I know you believe there has never been much gene flow from outside Africa into the Maghreb but not all of these haplogoups can be of African origin. Are there any here you think are not African?
Did a back migration prior to the holocene occur? I'm not sure about it. I would say it's possible
quote:http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1469-1809.2008.00493.x/full
Nevertheless, it was only during the Neolithic transition (around 6000 years ago in the Saharan areas and 5000 years ago in the Maghreb) that North Africa was incontestably marked by various cultural events.
Then, Berbers experienced a long and complicated history with many invasions, conquests and migrations by Phoenicians, Romans, Vandals and Byzantines (Brett & Fentress 1996).
The most significant event was the Arab conquest, begun during the 7th century, when North Africans were converted to Islam, and Arabic became the official unique language employed. In spite of strong resistance, Berbers acquiesced to Arab authority.
Refractory groups were driven out and constrained to more isolated areas.
This troubled past directly influenced the geographical distribution of Berber communities which are nowadays scattered in a vast region extending from Mauritania to Egypt (Siwa oasis) and from the Sahara desert to the Moroccan Atlas mountainous areas.
Over the course of time, the various populations that migrated to North Africa have probably left a footprint in the gene pool of modern Berbers.
quote:In the same way I'm going to dare you to explain why the male-inherited gene pool of the coastal Magrheb populations is overwhelmingly African?
Originally posted by Swenet:
How dare you to even ask Lioness.
quote:You can roll your eyes until they touch the back of your head. And yes, these would be the same "north Africans" who are supposedly more genetically close to Europeans than other Africans.
North Africans are genetically primarily African. In fact, they're so African that they cluster with Arabs (which, of course, has absolutely NOTHING to do with the notion that U6 and M1 originate in the Near East)!
quote:This is subjective for a number of reasons:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
As xyyman has pointed out they have Ottoman Turkish elements.
And they have more Arabian and Euroepan ancestry than other Africans.
So much so that even though primarily African
biologically they are more similar to Eurasians than other Africans.
quote:Tamazight ought to be synonymous with Maghrebi groups, as it is the autochthonous language of the area. Arabic came later.
While Maghrebians who speak Arabic have more berber ancestry than the language they speak I don't think it is proper to use the term Tamazight as being synonymous with Maghrebians.
quote:Looking at this chart one could say North Africans largely overlap Arabians (yellow and light green dots)
Originally posted by The Explorer:
Not to leave out...my guess is that what constitutes "north Africa" here does not resemble anything as either a comprehensive region-wide sample, or geographical assignment that is not afflicted by politically-charged motives....
[/QB]
quote:Which chart are you referencing?
Originally posted by the lioness,:
Looking at this chart one could say North Africans largely overlap Arabians although at the top of the chart they are unto themsleves not overlapping or particulary close to anybody.
quote:Remember this:
Regardless North Africans are clustering here closer to West Eurasians than they are to other Africans.
quote:you caught an error ther I just changed it. The upper part of the oval is light green Arabian not North African.
Originally posted by The Explorer:
[QB]quote:Which chart are you referencing?
Originally posted by the lioness,:
Looking at this chart one could say North Africans largely overlap Arabians although at the top of the chart they are unto themsleves not overlapping or particulary close to anybody.
quote:You said this already, and what did I say about it?
Originally posted by the lioness,:
In the chart they cluster closer to West Eurasians than they do other Africans.
quote:I did not specifically say that, but yes, it is a possibility.
You say maybe some of these haplogroups are not West Eurasian maybe they are African.
quote:You simply passing unsubstantiated guesswork for an objective assessment.
Here I agree with the traditional afrocentric position.
1) many Maghrebians look look mulatto.
2) There is a history of foreign occupation (and white slavery)
3) There is a 2-4000 year gap of no evidence of human settlement after earlier green period hunter forager populaltions and agrarian popualtions that extend to the present
Put these three things together and it weighs toward Eurasian clustering being likely
quote:As I mentioned these 3 points are not even applying the back-migration theory and speak to who the Maghrebians are today, I suggest more similar to Eurasians ( incl Arabs and Europeans) than they are to other Africans - on average.
Originally posted by The Explorer:
Paucity of evidence is not an airtight proof of lack of occupation; it could be the result of geological formations over the ages, or it could simply speak to the movement of groups to other locales until such time when an environment was ideal again for occupation. It does not serve as proof of "back migration". [/QB]
quote:please identify these areas in the Maghreb and cultural names
Originally posted by The Explorer:
And the claim about "2-4000" year gap of "no evidence of human settlement" is not entirely accurate. There are areas of the north which feature relative continuous occupation.
quote:How are you connecting "Maghrebi" of today with something that happened in the Upper Paleolithic, when they would not have arrived until well after mid-early Holocene?
Originally posted by the lioness,:
As I mentioned these 3 points are not even applying the back-migration theory and speak to who the Maghrebians are today, I suggest more similar to Eurasians ( incl Arabs and Europeans) than they are to other Africans - on average.
quote:"North Africa" was the context used in your post, and an example of this, would be in the Libyan region, where the so-called "Ibero-Maurusian" and "Caspian" traditions appear to have extended.
quote:please identify these areas in the Maghreb and cultural names
Originally posted by The Explorer:
And the claim about "2-4000" year gap of "no evidence of human settlement" is not entirely accurate. There are areas of the north which feature relative continuous occupation.
quote:I just said the 3 points are inependant of the back migrtaion theory.
Originally posted by The Explorer:
quote:How are you connecting "Maghrebi" of today with something that happened in the Upper Paleolithic, when they would not have arrived until well after mid-early Holocene?
Originally posted by the lioness,:
As I mentioned these 3 points are not even applying the back-migration theory and speak to who the Maghrebians are today, I suggest more similar to Eurasians ( incl Arabs and Europeans) than they are to other Africans - on average.
quote:It's strong circumstancial evidence, historical anthropological information which is mentioned in genetics articles, spread of islam, colonization etc.
Originally posted by The Explorer:Again your comparisons are subjective, as you are ignoring data that seemingly conflicts with your opinion.
quote:please identify these areas in the Maghreb and cultural names [/QUOTE]"
Originally posted by The Explorer:
And the claim about "2-4000" year gap of "no evidence of human settlement" is not entirely accurate. There are areas of the north which feature relative continuous occupation.
quote:give and example of a human settlement or remains in Libya after the Capsian but before the Phoenicians a gap period of 2-4000 years
Originally posted by The Explorer:
North Africa" was the context used in your post, and an example of this, would be in the Libyan region, where the so-called "Ibero-Maurusian" and "Caspian" traditions appear to have extended. [/qb]
quote:I guess I wasn't entirely clear on where you were going with your "3 points".
Originally posted by the lioness,:
I just said the 3 points are inependant of the back migrtaion theory.
quote:I am not arguing against gene flow from the outside. I am only arguing against the treatment of coastal north Africans as transplants of "west Eurasians" on the African continent.
It's strong circumstancial evidence, historical anthropological information which is mentioned in genetics articles, spread of islam, colonization etc.
origins of haplogroups has a subjective element as well.
quote:Ancestors of modern Tamazight-speakers would have followed not long after the so-called Capsian complexes waned. The only "gap" that comes to mind, is one between the EpiPaleolithic Maghrebi and their Aterian predecessors in the upper Paleolithic.
give and example of a human settlement or remains in Libya after the Capsian but before the Phoenicians a gap period of 2-4000 years
quote:I could easily apply the following to what you said above:
Originally posted by The Explorer:
quote:Ancestors of modern Tamazight-speakers would have followed not long after the so-called Capsian complexes waned. The only "gap" that comes to mind, is one between the EpiPaleolithic Maghrebi and their Aterian predecessors in the upper Paleolithic.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
[QUOTE]give and example of a human settlement or remains in Libya after the Capsian but before the Phoenicians a gap period of 2-4000 years
quote:"would have" is not evidence.
Originally posted by The Explorer:
Originally posted by The Explorer:Again your comparisons are subjective, as you are ignoring data that seemingly conflicts with your opinion.
quote:Yes, so that's why I posted this earlier on:
Originally posted by The Explorer:
quote:You said this already, and what did I say about it?
Originally posted by the lioness,:
In the chart they cluster closer to West Eurasians than they do other Africans.
quote:I did not specifically say that, but yes, it is a possibility.
You say maybe some of these haplogroups are not West Eurasian maybe they are African.
Hg R chromosomes are shared between certain "Eurasians" and some "Africans", but not with others. This doesn't necessarily mean that said ancestry cannot be African in origin.
quote:You simply passing unsubstantiated guesswork for an objective assessment.
Here I agree with the traditional afrocentric position.
1) many Maghrebians look look mulatto.
2) There is a history of foreign occupation (and white slavery)
3) There is a 2-4000 year gap of no evidence of human settlement after earlier green period hunter forager populaltions and agrarian popualtions that extend to the present
Put these three things together and it weighs toward Eurasian clustering being likely
And the claim about "2-4000" year gap of "no evidence of human settlement" is not entirely accurate. There are areas of the north which feature relative continuous occupation.
Paucity of evidence is not an airtight proof of lack of occupation; it could be the result of geological formations over the ages, or it could simply speak to the movement of groups to other locales until such time when an environment was ideal again for occupation. It does not serve as proof of "back migration".
quote:And since you have not such "evidence" it makes your hyped up theory bogus!
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:I could easily apply the following to what you said above:
Originally posted by The Explorer:
quote:Ancestors of modern Tamazight-speakers would have followed not long after the so-called Capsian complexes waned. The only "gap" that comes to mind, is one between the EpiPaleolithic Maghrebi and their Aterian predecessors in the upper Paleolithic.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
[QUOTE]give and example of a human settlement or remains in Libya after the Capsian but before the Phoenicians a gap period of 2-4000 years
quote:"would have" is not evidence.
Originally posted by The Explorer:
Originally posted by The Explorer:Again your comparisons are subjective, as you are ignoring data that seemingly conflicts with your opinion.
Evidence is things like bone fragments, arrowheads, pottery beads. They found some of these items for Capisans ins several sites.
After that as the region is drying where is evedence of human beings living in the Maghreb but befoer the Phoneicans/Sea people? The Libyan Desert is one of the most harsh and arid environments in the world. Over 90% of the population lives by the coast.Most of Libya is desert or semi-desert, with arable land accounting for only about 1 percent of the country's land surface.
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:I could easily apply the following to what you said above:
Originally posted by The Explorer:
quote:Ancestors of modern Tamazight-speakers would have followed not long after the so-called Capsian complexes waned. The only "gap" that comes to mind, is one between the EpiPaleolithic Maghrebi and their Aterian predecessors in the upper Paleolithic.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
[QUOTE]give and example of a human settlement or remains in Libya after the Capsian but before the Phoenicians a gap period of 2-4000 years
quote:"would have" is not evidence.
Originally posted by The Explorer:
Originally posted by The Explorer:Again your comparisons are subjective, as you are ignoring data that seemingly conflicts with your opinion.
Evidence is things like bone fragments, arrowheads, pottery beads. They found some of these items for Capisans ins several sites.
After that as the region is drying where is evedence of human beings living in the Maghreb but befoer the Phoneicans/Sea people? The Libyan Desert is one of the most harsh and arid environments in the world. Over 90% of the population lives by the coast.Most of Libya is desert or semi-desert, with arable land accounting for only about 1 percent of the country's land surface.
quote:Interesting argument, however:
Over 90% of the population lives by the coast
quote:Am J Phys Anthropol. 2012 Feb;147(2):280-92. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.21645. Epub 2011 Dec 20.
The Garamantian civilization flourished in modern Fezzan, Libya, between 900 BC and 500 AD, during which the aridification of the Sahara was well established. Study of the archaeological remains suggests a population successful at coping with a harsh environment of high and fluctuating temperatures and reduced water and food resources. This study explores the activity patterns of the Garamantes by means of cross-sectional geometric properties. Long bone diaphyseal shape and rigidity are compared between the Garamantes and populations from Egypt and Sudan, namely from the sites of Kerma, el-Badari, and Jebel Moya, to determine whether the Garamantian daily activities were more strenuous than those of other North African populations. Moreover, sexual dimorphism and bilateral asymmetry are assessed at an intra- and inter-population level. The inter-population comparisons showed the Garamantes not to be more robust than the comparative populations, suggesting that the daily Garamantian activities necessary for survival in the Sahara Desert did not generally impose greater loads than those of other North African populations. Sexual dimorphism and bilateral asymmetry in almost all geometric properties of the long limbs were comparatively low among the Garamantes. Only the lower limbs were significantly stronger among males than females, possibly due to higher levels of mobility associated with herding. The lack of systematic bilateral asymmetry in cross-sectional geometric properties may relate to the involvement of the population in bilaterally intensive activities or the lack of regular repetition of unilateral activities.
quote:Considering your history you are likely going to claim the Garamantes as foreign too.
The Garamantes flourished in southwestern Libya, in the core of the Sahara Desert ~3,000 years ago and largely controlled trans-Saharan trade. Their biological affinities to other North African populations, including the Egyptian, Algerian, Tunisian and Sudanese, roughly contemporary to them, are examined by means of cranial nonmetric traits using the Mean Measure of Divergence and Mahalanobis D(2) distance. The aim is to shed light on the extent to which the Sahara Desert inhibited extensive population movements and gene flow. Our results show that the Garamantes possess distant affinities to their neighbors. This relationship may be due to the Central Sahara forming a barrier among groups, despite the archaeological evidence for extended networks of contact. The role of the Sahara as a barrier is further corroborated by the significant correlation between the Mahalanobis D(2) distance and geographic distance between the Garamantes and the other populations under study. In contrast, no clear pattern was observed when all North African populations were examined, indicating that there was no uniform gene flow in the region.
quote:Of which "Maghrebians" do you speak, lioness?
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:As I mentioned these 3 points are not even applying the back-migration theory and speak to who the Maghrebians are today, I suggest more similar to Eurasians ( incl Arabs and Europeans) than they are to other Africans - on average.
Originally posted by The Explorer:
Paucity of evidence is not an airtight proof of lack of occupation; it could be the result of geological formations over the ages, or it could simply speak to the movement of groups to other locales until such time when an environment was ideal again for occupation. It does not serve as proof of "back migration".
quote:please identify these areas in the Maghreb and cultural names
Originally posted by The Explorer:
And the claim about "2-4000" year gap of "no evidence of human settlement" is not entirely accurate. There are areas of the north which feature relative continuous occupation.
quote:What could you apply to what I said "above"? Subjective? If so, spell out how that can be applied to the above.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:I could easily apply the following to what you said above
Ancestors of modern Tamazight-speakers would have followed not long after the so-called Capsian complexes waned. The only "gap" that comes to mind, is one between the EpiPaleolithic Maghrebi and their Aterian predecessors in the upper Paleolithic.
quote:It's merely scientific jargon for the most likely scenario given the weight of evidence. Scientific norms are apparently new to you.
"would have" is not evidence.
quote:Are you familiar with Neolithic remains found in western Africa, to as far as Mali?
Evidence is things like bone fragments, arrowheads, pottery beads. They found some of these items for Capisans ins several sites.
After that as the region is drying where is evedence of human beings living in the Maghreb but befoer the Phoneicans/Sea people?
quote:And?
The Libyan Desert is one of the most harsh and arid environments in the world. Over 90% of the population lives by the coast.Most of Libya is desert or semi-desert, with arable land accounting for only about 1 percent of the country's land surface.
quote:Its overwhelmingly African because it's the result of drift, just like the equally absurd R-V88 frequencies markers in certain Chadic speakers are the result of drift. No? Then demonstrate that the paternal East African component brought there by Neolithic proto-Berber speakers (e.g., manifested as E-M81 in Y Chromosomal analysis) re-emerges as East African affiliated ancestry when other ancestry informative markers are consulted, that are actually multi-variate (e.g., genome-wide analysis), instead of uni-variate, and therefore, drift sensitive, haplogroup analysis. While you're at it, if drift isn't at work here, explain the discrepancy between the extreme rarity of ancestral clades in between E-M81 and E-M35, even though the former only emerged ~5.6kya from the said predecessors.
Originally posted by The Explorer:
In the same way I'm going to dare you to explain why the male-inherited gene pool of the coastal Magrheb populations is overwhelmingly African?
quote:Your question is rhetoric, but first: you need to explain how they navigated back, and please show the fossil records you theorize about all the time...
Originally posted by the lioness,:
I speak of all Maghrebians
where is the human fossil evidence or artifcacts, arrowheads etc, for people living in the Mahgreb between 2,500 BC and 1000 BC ?
quote:I assume you're just kidding.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
I speak of all Maghrebians
quote:As forecasted, your answer was bound to be pretty indicative of how stupid you are.
Originally posted by Swenet:
Its overwhelmingly African because it's the result of drift
quote:African R-V88 chromosomes do not appear to be a subset of R1b chromosomes found anywhere. It's telling that you feel compelled to refer to it to bolster your fragile theories about the Maghreb.
just like the equally absurd R-V88 frequencies markers in certain Chadic speakers are the result of drift.
quote:This chump thinks uniparental markers are "univariate" vs. the "multivariate" supposed "genomewide" analysis. LOL
No? Then demonstrate that the paternal East African component brought there by Neolithic proto-Berber speakers (e.g., manifested as E-M81 in Y Chromosomal analysis) re-emerges as East African affiliated ancestry when other ancestry informative markers are consulted, that are actually multi-variate (e.g., genome-wide analysis), instead of uni-variate, and therefore, drift sensitive, haplogroup analysis.
quote:That's purely your claim! But according to Keita there is a possibility to it.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
in other words a guy like this might be primarily East African
quote:http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/afalou%20man
: one of an Upper Paleolithic people of northern Africa closely related to Cro-Magnon man but having a broader nose, a sloping forehead, and heavy brow ridges
quote:
Craniometric data from seven human groups (Tables 3, 4) were subjected to principal components analysis, which allies the early Holocene population at Gobero (Gob-e) with mid-Holocene “Mechtoids” from Mali and Mauritania [18],[26],[27] and with Late Pleistocene Iberomaurusians and early Holocene Capsians from across the Maghreb:
quote:--Lawrence Barham
*Frequently termed Mechta-Afalou or Mechtoid, these were a skeletally robust people and definitely African in origin, though attempts, such as those of Ferembach (1985), to establish similarities with much older and rarer Aterian skeletal remains are tenuous given the immense temporal separation between the two (Close and Wendorf 1990). At the opposite end of the chronological spectrum, dental morphology does suggest connections with later Africans, including those responsible for the Capsian Industry (Irish 2000) and early mid-Holocene human remains from the western half of the Sahara (Dutour 1989), something that points to the Maghreb as one of the regions from which people recolonised the desert (MacDonald 1998).
quote:^You've already had the sh!t slapped out of you when it came to your fabricated concept of (proto)Afro-Asiatic mtDNA, and that North African M1 and U6 was spread by them around the Pleistocene/Holocene border. Since you committed earlier to this fabricated idea, it's going to be particularly entertaining to see you perform your usual acrobatics to compensate for the fact that your aforementioned claim precludes you from (re)implicating these two mtDNAs in mid to late holocene events to make a case for large effective population size for the original pastoral Berber speakers. Just the idea of large population sizes for these Neolithic era pastoral populations sounds pathetically silly, but yeah, let's see which mtDNA L lineages you'll desperately scramble together for this pre-defeated purpose.
Originally posted by The Explorer:
For genetic drift to work in this situation, the effective population size of the ancestral Tamazight population(s) would have been quite small. This is inconsistent with what the maternal gene pool in the Maghreb signals.
quote:Even assuming this is true, which I'm not sure of given your reputation of a liar, you don't even know what drift is or what argues against it, otherwise you would not have made this bizarre statement involving some far left Y chromosome carried by a minimal amount of Berber speakers.
Originally posted by The Explorer:
The Maghreb is one of the areas implicated in the most diversified distribution for E-M78...inconsistent with your "genetic drift" theory.
quote:You don't even know what uni/multi-variate analysis is, just like you don't know what PCA or body linearity is. Prove me wrong that you know what uni/multi-variate analysis is, and that it contradicts with what I said! I bet you your dumbass will either ignore this request (like you ignored the gist of my post) or simply repeat your irrelevant opinion that you think it's false.
Originally posted by The Explorer:
This chump thinks uniparental markers are "univariate" vs. the "multivariate" supposed "genomewide" analysis.
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
While you're at it, if drift isn't at work here, explain the discrepancy between the extreme rarity of ancestral clades in between E-M81 and E-M35, even though the former only emerged ~5.6kya from the said predecessors.
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
Then demonstrate that the paternal East African component brought there by Neolithic proto-Berber speakers (e.g., manifested as E-M81 in Y Chromosomal analysis) re-emerges as East African affiliated ancestry when other ancestry informative markers are consulted
quote:There is no such thing as "proto-Afro-Asiatic mtDNA". The irony of your whino post about fabrication, is that you are too stupid to even realize that you're crying about something you fabricated.
Originally posted by Swenet:
^You've already had the sh!t slapped out of you when it came to your fabricated concept of (proto)Afro-Asiatic mtDNA
quote:Irrelevant. U6 an M1 are not the exclusive features of Maghrebi maternal gene pool!
and that North African M1 and U6 was spread by them around the Pleistocene/Holocene border.
quote:You're conjuring up distractions and you're not addressing what I'm telling you. The reason is obvious; you can't. I correctly anticipated that you'd use M1 and/or U6 as evidence of large effective population sizes for proto-Berber speakers and I stopped you dead in your tracks by making you face your earlier ridiculous commitment to the idea that M1 and U6 were spread by proto-Afrasan speakers around the same time as the Natufians. You presented U6 and M1 as clades that were spread by proto-Afrasan speakers, totally ignoring the fact that your silly theory is at odds with the evidence, from the glaring lack of ''Ogolian'' Maghrebi archaeological sites interpretable as associated with proto-Afrasan peoples, to the inconvenient fact that the molecular characteristics of these clades point to events that happened way before this, to the inconvenient fact that certain old Maghrebi-specific M1 and U6 subclades (M1b and U6a1) in other branches of Afasan cannot be attributed to common inheritance from proto-Afrasans, but represent admixture.
Originally posted by The Explorer:
There is no such thing as "proto-Afro-Asiatic mtDNA".
quote:I already did, and not only did you not address my explanation, being the coward that you are, you also refrained from defending your objections (i.e., the patently stupid assertion that alleged M78 diversity rules out drift or that there were large effective population sizes), after I obliterated them. Repeat:
Originally posted by The Explorer:
What you need to be focusing on at the moment, is why you haven't accounted for the Maghrebi paternal gene pool that is lopsidedly "African"
quote:Lol, this loon thinks that the loci that are involved with haplogroup assignment are the same thing as variables. They're not dumbass, as they're not used as standalone variables that, together, measure more than one thing. In other words, they don't lead to more than one factual haplogroup assignment. The most important reason why there is more than one locus is to account for homoplasy. As I suspected, you're hopelessly deprived of any sense that could clue you in on the fact that you have no idea, whatsoever, what you talking about. Evidence for this is your horribly misplaced suggestion that the term 'multi-variate' has no applicability outside the field of morphometrics.
Originally posted by The Explorer:
To the chump above (swenet), uniparental markers are not univariate entities. They span multiple loci, some more variable than others, as any other segment of the human genome. This is not cranio-morphometric analysis where individual features are examined for their variability.
quote:What the hell does this have to do with whether their M81 levels are truly representative for how much East African ancestry Maghrebi populations have in their overall genome, that can be attributed to pastoral proto-Berber speakers? Answer: nothing, but you just thought you'd randomly insert that trivial observation, because you're random like that.
Originally posted by The Explorer:
and their language that is entirely unique to Africa,
quote:Explorer above are some Algerian Mozabite berbers. They have the highest frequencies of U6 in the world.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
The Algerian Mozabites have the highest frequencies of U6 in the world
(except for a small sub-population in the Canary Islands}
ALGERIAN MOZABITES
quote:.
Originally posted by Doctoris Scientia:
Mozabites
![]()
Portrait of a Mozabite man
Stock Photo ID:42-24150866
Date Photographed:1949 Corbis Images
(detail) Mozibite family of women, in Africa, in the 1920s
Stock Photo ID:IH155539
Date Photographed:ca. 1920s
Corbis Images
[/QB]
quote:Mozabites should be at least 70% African if their haplogroup percentages are taken literally and one counts mtDNA M1 and U6 as African. As a reference, Oprah is 89% African in her ancestry. It goes without saying that 30% Eurasian ancestry in Mozabites cannot make them as pale as the majority evidently is. It's preposterous, really.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
doens' this suggest that maybe they are not primarily of East African descent?
quote:--Price et al 2009
We show that the Mozabite have inherited roughly
78% ancestry from a European-related population and
22% ancestry from a population related to sub-Saharan
Africans. Our analysis also shows that the Mozabite
admixture has occurred over a period that began at
least 100 generations ago (~2,800 years ago), and
that has continued into the present day. We are
able to infer small, ancient, ancestry segments
in the Mozabite, and we demonstrate that the
segments show considerable drift relative to
all the other HGDP populations, consistent with
the historical isolation of the Mozabite population.
quote:
Originally posted by The Explorer:
So, yes, I'd say modern Maghrebi populations are primarily African.
quote:Man are you thick!!! Skin pigmentation and lineage are....NOT related. Dumb Phucgk!!
Originally posted by Swenet:
quote:Mozabites should be at least 70% African if their haplogroup percentages are taken literally and one counts mtDNA M1 and U6 as African. As a reference, Oprah is 89% African in her ancestry. It goes without saying that 30% Eurasian ancestry in Mozabites cannot make them as pale as the majority evidently is.
quote:
:
[/b]
quote:Mitochondrial lineages are only passed by WOMEN not men, dummy! LOL
Originally posted by the lyinass,:
This is interesting. Ottomans sultans in North Africa had European white women slaves in their harems. We knew that I have whole threads on that topic. (Morocc however never came under Ottoman dominance, was not one of the Barbary States but they did have slaves)
But there were many times more male captives then women.
But the part about white European slave men sent to breeding farms with Senegalese women and produce mulattoes.
That's a new one on me. The offspring would probably have been more sub saharan than most North Africans. How common this was I have no idea
I don't know how they would be identified at this point living in North Africa. Maybe they got called berbers ?
wiki:
Over 150,000 men from sub-Saharan Africa served in his elite Black Guard. By the time of Ismail's death, the guard had grown tenfold, the largest in Moroccan history.
perhaps this might account for some of the L linegages in modern Morrocans.
quote:
Originally posted by Djehuti:
now lyinass'
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
Keep my name out your mouth, gramps. You get no attention.
quote:So you seem to be saying that the Mozabites' light complexion comes from their U6 bearing ancestors. But what is the actual proof for this?? Do you have any evidence on how their U6 forebears looked like at all let alone skin color? Apparently you're unaware that there are other Maghrebi and other African populations who carry U6 but are quite darker.
Originally posted by the lyinass,:
If Mozabites have the highest frequencies of U6 and I think many people would agree with me that the average Mozabite looks mulatto, many with lighter yellowish brown skin, and looking different the East Africans such as the man below
-and given that they have very high frequencies of M81
doens' this suggest that maybe they are not primarily of East African descent?
quote:Troll Patrol, thanks for posting the pic above. I myself first posted the picture months ago, actually last year in one of the countless threads on North Africans and Berbers but unfortunately I couldn't find it. It probably got deleted.
quote:And exactly what good will this do. How a people look now may not reflect what their original ancestors looked like. For example, many southern Europeans carry E lineages from black African ancestors yet don't look black at all.
Lyinass continues:
I think there is a place for taking a look around at what people look like on average in a region (not simply the individuals that we like the looks of) and considering that along with genetics and not soley relying on genetics to replace anthropology.
quote:
Originally posted by Djehuti:
Originally posted by the lyinass,:
quote:
Originally posted by Djehuti:
Lyinass continues:
quote:BTW - I don't take anything out on someone for someone else. ANYONE can and will feel it if they fukgkup. Of course there are those who get a small...pass.
Originally posted by Djehuti:
^ LOL Just because I agree .. make me their "lackey". You're just mad that Beyoku debunked ...short-comings out on me:)
[
quote:
Originally posted by Djehuti:
our friend lyinass is.
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:Explorer above are some Algerian Mozabite berbers. They have the highest frequencies of U6 in the world.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
The Algerian Mozabites have the highest frequencies of U6 in the world
(except for a small sub-population in the Canary Islands}
ALGERIAN MOZABITES
quote:.
Originally posted by Doctoris Scientia:
Mozabites
![]()
Portrait of a Mozabite man
Stock Photo ID:42-24150866
Date Photographed:1949 Corbis Images
(detail) Mozibite family of women, in Africa, in the 1920s
Stock Photo ID:IH155539
Date Photographed:ca. 1920s
Corbis Images
![]()
If you don't like my selections for average Mozabites then it's still reasonable to get a sense of what an average Mozabite looks like. Anthropology takes note of these things and is not purely genetics.
If Mozabites have the highest frequencies of U6 and I think many people would agree with me that the average Mozabite looks mulatto, many with lighter yellowish brown skin, and looking different the East Africans such as the man below
-and given that they have very high frequencies of M81
doens' this suggest that maybe they are not primarily of East African descent?
I think there is a place for ttaking a look around at what people look like on average in a region (not simply the individuals that we like the looks of) and considering that along with genetics and not soley relying on genetics to replace anthropology. [/QB]
quote:Cosigned strongly!
Originally posted by Djehuti:
^ LOL Just because I agree with someone else does not make me their "lackey". You're just mad that Beyoku debunked your dumbass and now vent your intellectual short-comings out on me.![]()
quote:So you seem to be saying that the Mozabites' light complexion comes from their U6 bearing ancestors. But what is the actual proof for this?? Do you have any evidence on how their U6 forebears looked like at all let alone skin color? Apparently you're unaware that there are other Maghrebi and other African populations who carry U6 but are quite darker.
Originally posted by the lyinass,:
If Mozabites have the highest frequencies of U6 and I think many people would agree with me that the average Mozabite looks mulatto, many with lighter yellowish brown skin, and looking different the East Africans such as the man below
-and given that they have very high frequencies of M81
doens' this suggest that maybe they are not primarily of East African descent?
Also the young man in the photo below is NOT 'East African' but a North African Berber from Fezzan Libya or Algeria. I forgot which area.
quote:Troll Patrol, thanks for posting the pic above. I myself first posted the picture months ago, actually last year in one of the countless threads on North Africans and Berbers but unfortunately I couldn't find it. It probably got deleted.
The reason why I posted it in the first place was to show that he had the same profile as King Jubba.
quote:And exactly what good will this do. How a people look now may not reflect what their original ancestors looked like. For example, many southern Europeans carry E lineages from black African ancestors yet don't look black at all.
Lyinass continues:
I think there is a place for taking a look around at what people look like on average in a region (not simply the individuals that we like the looks of) and considering that along with genetics and not soley relying on genetics to replace anthropology.
quote:Yawn. YOu have a short attention span and you do not pay attention to details.
Originally posted by xyyman:
Beyoku...? You don't even understand what Beyoku did. he is quoting shyte he doesn't understand. Quoting Dienkess, eg who basically said the same thing as I. Being slick, leaving off data(K2-8) ...thinking it would NOT be noticed.
.
quote:Hmm, "Two subgroups of Bedouins"......I wounder what is the difference between these two groups..........Lets continue.
Individuals from different populations can often be distinguished, including highly
similar ones such as Han Chinese recruited in northern China versus those recruited in the US
(who are mostly southern and central Chinese), Bantus in Kenya versus those in South Africa,
two subgroups of Bedouins, as well as Pathan versus Sindhi, and Brahui versus Makrani.
quote:
Frappe analysis reveals that, at K = 7 and with a 2% threshold, 21 of the 51 populations derived ancestry from at least two ancestral components. In Figure 1A, the Mozabite from the northern Sahara bear contributions from sub-Saharan Africa, the Middle East, and Europe; this group in fact originates from the Middle East. In Europe, only the Adygei, who live to the north of the Caucuses, have a significant South/Central Asian component, whereas the Russian individuals have minor contributions from South/Central Asia, East Asia, and America. In the Middle East, a small subset of the Bedouins appears to have substantially higher Middle Eastern ancestry than the Palestinians, Druze and the ***other Bedouins.***
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman: There are possibly admixed peoples in the North African coastal cities but we forget this.... J2-Turks
quote:Now let's compare these bedouins from Israel to Mozabites
Originally posted by xyyman:
.So there are different groups of Bediouns. Some with huge African genetic influence others with less.
well here's a couple of different Bedouins from from the Negev desert in Israel:
^^^ hey look Bedouin group 2 has 86.9 % Arabian affinity and xyyman has taught us that is simply J2,,, er I mean code word for African.
O.K. fine. and they have 8.2 % North African affinity
Well, add the two figures and we get 95 % African !!!
" Some with huge African genetic influence " -xyy
quote:What do you mean with ''5.6kya''? Where do you get this TMRCA(?) figure from?
Originally posted by the lioness,:
North African 75.2 % (5.6 kya, but Ok)
quote:reference to M81 tongue in cheek
Originally posted by Swenet:
quote:What do you mean with ''5.6kya''? Where do you get this TMRCA(?) figure from?
Originally posted by the lioness,:
North African 75.2 % (5.6 kya, but Ok)
quote:note horn percentages:
Originally posted by Swenet:
[QB] Okay, but M81 manifests itself in full genome analysis as what DNA Tribes describe as 'Horn', since M81 is closely related to M78 and other E-M35 subclades that Horners carry.
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
quote:Mozabites should be at least 70% African if their haplogroup percentages are taken literally and one counts mtDNA M1 and U6 as African. As a reference, Oprah is 89% African in her ancestry. It goes without saying that 30% Eurasian ancestry in Mozabites cannot make them as pale as the majority evidently is. It's preposterous, really.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
doens' this suggest that maybe they are not primarily of East African descent?
What genomewide analysis shows:
quote:--Price et al 2009
We show that the Mozabite have inherited roughly
78% ancestry from a European-related population and
22% ancestry from a population related to sub-Saharan
Africans. Our analysis also shows that the Mozabite
admixture has occurred over a period that began at
least 100 generations ago (~2,800 years ago), and
that has continued into the present day. We are
able to infer small, ancient, ancestry segments
in the Mozabite, and we demonstrate that the
segments show considerable drift relative to
all the other HGDP populations, consistent with
the historical isolation of the Mozabite population.
quote:So sad you dont even know you're wrong and why your wrong.
Originally posted by xyyman:
The more you post the more you expose how intellectually stunted you are...I would stop post if I were you. That way you can still come off like you know something about genetics. Or at least don't "debate" ME.
You misunderstood Dienkess, then Behar, Henn etc..now this..Li.
In fact I am not sure what your point is with the Bedoiuns...So there are different groups of Bediouns. Some with huge African genetic influence others with less.
That still doesn't negate the fact that light blue is North African and not Southern European as you falsely believed. And as you falsely quoted Dienkess.
All you have done so far is proved that there are several types/groups of Bedoiuns.
Look at Li et al. Let us see how smart you are.
What is odd cf to Behar, Henn, DNAtribes, etc.
Hint. Middle East and North African SNPs...
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
But if the paternal DNA is largely M81 are they ignoring that and only making these statements about European-related populations based on mtDNA ?
quote:Like I said in the cited piece, it is based on genome-wide SNPs (many many ancestry informative markers), while haplogroups consist of just one ancestry informative marker (e.g., SNPs like M2, M60, M35 or what ever the defining SNP is of that haplogroup). When you take someone's haplogroup, you can only infer one of the potentially many ancestries in their genome. If I have Chinese ancestry (which I have), it may not register in haplogroup analysis because I also have African ancestry, and haplogroups can only depict one. Haplogroup analysis is like peeking into someone's wallet to get an idea of how much money they have, without having access to their safe or bank account where most of their money is (you liked that money metaphor didn't you?). Therefore, haplogroup analysis is inferior to genome-wide analysis when it comes to assigning ancestry. However, because haplogroups are so specific, they're superior to genomewide analysis when it comes to finding individuals who have the same maternal or paternal ancestor you have. In this instance (i.e., when we're trying to find out how much non-African ancestry Bebers have), we're interested in the former, not the latter.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
So how could DNATribes gte this much higher "North African" affinity. I was guessing becuase they are considering not only the mtDNA but the Y and the Y is where that North African M81 would come in.
quote:Price et al said ''European related'' because a European sample was their reference sample. Also, there is no difference between 'European related' and 'Near Eastern'.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
Also notice that last quote mentioned European but not Near Eastern you had mentioned in your pervious comment.
quote:After the expulsion of the Moriscos convertos, along with them went Jews who resided at the Moorish empire. These Jews mixed in with the local popualtion of Northern Africa. The most likely scenario is that these Jews originally came from Isreal. Moved to Spain. And from Spain to the Maghreb.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:
Originally posted by xyyman: There are possibly admixed peoples in the North African coastal cities but we forget this.... J2-Turksquote:Now let's compare these bedouins from Israel to Mozabites
Originally posted by xyyman:
.So there are different groups of Bediouns. Some with huge African genetic influence others with less.
well here's a couple of different Bedouins from from the Negev desert in Israel:
^^^ hey look Bedouin group 2 has 86.9 % Arabian affinity and xyyman has taught us that is simply J2,,, er I mean code word for African.
O.K. fine. and they have 8.2 % North African affinity
Well, add the two figures and we get 95 % African !!!
" Some with huge African genetic influence " -xyy
Mozabites
Arabian 3.8
^^^ o.k. that's really African, moving on,
North African 75.2 % (5.6 kya, but Ok)
Horn 3 %
Nilotic 1.4 %
West African 6 %
Khosian 0.2%
-add it all up.
89.6 % African
____________________________
In other words according to xyyman teaching, Arabian = African,
the Mozabites, Tunisians and Libyans are less African than the previously mentioned bedouin group
quote:why should H have to do with PN2?
Originally posted by xyyman:
If PN2 is African then mtDNA H is also African
quote:Of the oustide of Africa element what percent is due to events before 1000 Bc and what percent after 1000 BC ?
Originally posted by Swenet:
DNA Tribes concludes based on genome-wide analysis that the North African component is = 40-90% in Berber speakers and that this ancestry has affinities with populations outside of Africa
Henn et al 2012 concludes based on genome-wide analysis that the North African component is = 40-90% in Berber speakers and that this ancestry has affinities with populations outside of Africa
Behar et al 2010 concludes based on genome-wide analysis that the North African component is = 40-90% in Berber speakers and that this ancestry has affinities with populations outside of Africa
Price et al 2009 concludes based on genome-wide analysis that the North African component is = 40-90% in Berber speakers and that this ancestry has affinities with populations outside of Africa
etc etc
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:why should H have to do with PN2?
Originally posted by xyyman:
If PN2 is African then mtDNA H is also African
Haplogroup H is common in berbers and is the most common mtDNA haplogroup in Europe. Should Europans be renamed as Extended Africans?
[
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:why should H have to do with PN2?
Originally posted by xyyman:
If PN2 is African then mtDNA H is also African
Haplogroup H is common in berbers and is the most common mtDNA haplogroup in Europe. Should Europans be renamed as Extended Africans?
![]()
quote:Can someone tell gramps that this does NOT depict biological distance, and that he doesn't know what on earth he's talking about. Tell him to take his dementia pills.
Originally posted by Xyyman:
blablabla
quote:I don't know. Of the outside of Africa genetic component, only the 'North African' component has been dated satisfactorily. See the paper you posted in the OP. Yes, haplogroups have been dated but its not clear, for instance, which Near Eastern haplogroup is associated with what segment of genome-wide near eastern ancestry. What I mean is in Henn et al the Near Eastern ancestry is green, but because the same Near Eastern haplogroups were introduced in recent and ancient times, you don't know how much of this green component can be correlated with recent or ancient Near Eastern haplogroups like NRY J1 and G.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:Of the oustide of Africa element what percent is due to events before 1000 Bc and what percent after 1000 BC ?
Originally posted by Swenet:
DNA Tribes concludes based on genome-wide analysis that the North African component is = 40-90% in Berber speakers and that this ancestry has affinities with populations outside of Africa
Henn et al 2012 concludes based on genome-wide analysis that the North African component is = 40-90% in Berber speakers and that this ancestry has affinities with populations outside of Africa
Behar et al 2010 concludes based on genome-wide analysis that the North African component is = 40-90% in Berber speakers and that this ancestry has affinities with populations outside of Africa
Price et al 2009 concludes based on genome-wide analysis that the North African component is = 40-90% in Berber speakers and that this ancestry has affinities with populations outside of Africa
etc etc
quote:Then in that case, you have been refuted. Case closed.
Originally posted by Swenet:
I already did
quote:Dumbass chump, the loci are THE variables of chromosomes. If not the loci, what then is variable on a designated chromosome?
Lol, this loon thinks that the loci that are involved with haplogroup assignment are the same thing as variables.
quote:Nobody but another complete idiot will understand what you are even saying here.
They're not dumbass, as they're not used as standalone variables that, together, measure more than one thing. In other words, they don't lead to more than one factual haplogroup assignment.
quote:You must have stopped taking your meds in the nut house, as you are still making up your own "realities". Our tax dollars wasted!
Evidence for this is your horribly misplaced suggestion that the term 'multi-variate' has no applicability outside the field of morphometrics.
quote:Your transparently obvious non-reply now takes the form of a self-inflicted confusion expressed in gobbledygook speak. You are indeed stumped to find even a half-way logical explanation for why some supposed European "transplants" would speak not only a language phylum that is obviously entirely unique to Africa, but also entirely unique to Tamazight speakers.
quote:What the hell does this have to do with whether their M81 levels are truly representative for how much East African ancestry Maghrebi populations have in their overall genome, that can be attributed to pastoral proto-Berber speakers? Answer: nothing
Originally posted by The Explorer:
and their language that is entirely unique to Africa,
quote:Let me guess? Because you say so? That's not how
Originally posted by The Explorer:
Then in that case, you have been refuted.
Case closed.
quote:Stop snorting, son. You were told that
Originally posted by The Explorer:
the loci are THE variables of chromosomes. If not
the loci, what then is variable on a designated
chromosome?
quote:No, YOU don't understand what I'm saying, because
Originally posted by The Explorer:
Nobody but another complete idiot will
understand what you are even saying
here.
quote:Wait, wait. Let me guess... because YOU say so?
Originally posted by The Explorer:
You must have stopped taking your meds in the nut
house, as you are still making up your own
"realities".
quote:You stupid bum. Despite your fanatic make
Originally posted by The Explorer:
You are indeed stumped to find even a half-way
logical explanation for why some supposed
European "transplants" would speak not only a
language phylum that is obviously entirely
unique to Africa, but also entirely unique to
Tamazight speakers.
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
While you're at it, if drift isn't at work here,
explain the discrepancy between the extreme
rarity of ancestral clades in between E-M81 and
E-M35, even though the former only emerged
~5.6kya from the said predecessors.
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
Then demonstrate that the paternal East African
component brought there by Neolithic proto-Berber
speakers (e.g., manifested as E-M81 in Y
Chromosomal analysis) re-emerges as East African
affiliated ancestry when other ancestry
informative markers are consulted
quote:If you had a brain you would not have to guess how you were refuted, chump.
Originally posted by Swenet:
Let me guess? Because you say so? That's not how
it works snot nosed brat.
quote:fuckhead, diversity of E-M78 chromosomes, along with E-M81, does not preclude genetic drift, but it does weaken your theory that Maghrebi populations' paternal gene pool is lopsidedly "African", because of genetic drift.
Cite the evidence,
right here, right now along with your sources.
Where is the evidence that:
1) diversity in E-M78 in modern Berbers precludes
genetic drift
2) that Berber mtDNA lineages evince large
effective population sizes
quote:Stop rambling through your ass. Stuff coming out of that shithole makes even less sense than the black smelly waste that comes outta there; henceforth, I couldn't give a hoot about what you "tell" me.
Stop snorting, son. You were told that
haplogroups themselves are variables,
when they are the focal point of a study.
quote:The only thing the hogwash above communicates about your thick fuckhead, is that you don't know the difference between a "marker" and "variability".
You
were told that this is what makes haplogroup
assigment an uni-variate exercise, unlike genome
-wide analysis, which is multi-variate per
definition. The only counterargument your
mentally challenged ass could muster up was the
irrelevant no-brainer and straw man that Y
chromosome and mtDNA have polymorphic sites. The
peanut you call your brain simply cannot compute
the basic fact that the variability of these
polymorphic sites in the human genome doesn't
have anything to do with multi-variate and
uni-variate analysis.
quote:You have it twisted. I'd be certifiably stupid only if I actually understood your stupid talk.
You're simply too stupid to
understand that the impossibility of yielding
more than one uniparental haplogroup from one
mtDNA sequence or Y Chromosome precludes
haplogroup analysis from being multi-variate
analysis.
quote:Let me save you the trouble of "guessing" numbnut: The notion about univariate vs. multivariate applying to just cranial study was concocted only in your thinking-retardant skull. It has absolutely nothing to do with what was said in the real world.
Wait, wait. Let me guess...
quote:Still unable to forge a reason to wish away the Tamazight language phylum. You are too dirt stupid to even come up with a dumb reason to explain it away. LOL
You stupid bum. Despite your fanatic make
believe efforts, neither their language nor their
levels of E-M81 is going to make them more
biologically allied with other E-M35 carrying
Afrasan speakers than the ~10% their genome says
they factually are.
quote:You failed epically.
Originally posted by Swenet:
Cite the evidence, right here, right now along
with your sources. Where is the evidence that:
1) diversity in E-M78 in modern Berbers precludes
genetic drift
quote:You failed here too.
Originally posted by Swenet:
Cite the evidence, right here, right now along
with your sources. Where is the evidence that:
2) that Berber mtDNA lineages evince large
effective population sizes
quote:Here, you failed more than three times in a row.
Originally posted by Swenet:
While you're at it, if drift isn't at work here,
explain the discrepancy between the extreme
rarity of ancestral clades in between E-M81 and
E-M35, even though the former only emerged
~5.6kya from the said predecessors.
quote:Same here: you failed more than 3 times in a row.
Originally posted by Swenet:
Then demonstrate that the paternal East African
component brought there by Neolithic proto-Berber
speakers (e.g., manifested as E-M81 in Y
Chromosomal analysis) re-emerges as East African
affiliated ancestry when other ancestry
informative markers are consulted
quote:That's what it sounds like to you, no doubt; the
Originally posted by The Explorer:
Stop rambling through your ass
quote:Variability wasn't even a contention here. You
Originally posted by The Explorer:
you don't know the difference between a "marker"
and "variability".
quote:Now you're resuming your tenacious habit of lying
Originally posted by The Explorer:
Still unable to forge a reason to wish away the
Tamazight language phylum.
quote:Now people can really see that you're
Originally posted by The Explorer:
E-M81 for example, a dominant marker in most
Tamazight populations, requires the same
ancestral clade as E-M78: E-M35! That's all
that is warranted to explain E-M81 in Tamazight
populations. And "guess" what? Upstream E-M35
clades are very rare in Europe. The diversity
of E-M78, supplemented by that of E-M81, in
coastal northwestern Africa eliminates the need
of attainment just by "genetic drift"
secondary to a foreign introduction, as that
diversity would not have been possible without
the presence of E-M35 upstream clades.
quote:If it looks like shyt, smells like shyt, then that's what it is: shyt!
Originally posted by Swenet:
what it sounds like to you, no doubt
quote:At it again, chump: wondering off in your own "realities" instead of the real world. You need to have somebody else, who can read, read notes for you. "how inherently polymorphic something is" is a flight of your own fantasy.
uni-variate and multi-variate analysis lies in
how inherently polymorphic something is
quote:No kidding? Of course it's not "a contention". It is an element of your confusion. You can't distinguish between what constitutes a "marker" and what constitutes "variability".
Variability wasn't even a contention here. You
THINK it is
quote:You've "stated" a shyt load of mindless babble.
Now you're resuming your tenacious habit of lying
through your filthy canary yellow teeth again,
aren't you? I've clearly stated that this language
was spoken by pastoral Proto-Berber speakers who
brought E-M81 to the Maghrebi genepool from
Eastern Africa. STOP LYING, you filthy pig
quote:These nameless "people" would have to be your fellow knuckleheaded chumps. Otherwise it should dawn on them that the only obvious craziness here is how you highlight what are obviously rational prep-schooling points but leave them unfalsified.
Originally posted by Swenet:
quote:Now people can really see that you're
Originally posted by The Explorer:
E-M81 for example, a dominant marker in most
Tamazight populations, requires the same
ancestral clade as E-M78: E-M35! That's all
that is warranted to explain E-M81 in Tamazight
populations. And "guess" what? Upstream E-M35
clades are very rare in Europe. The diversity
of E-M78, supplemented by that of E-M81, in
coastal northwestern Africa eliminates the need
of attainment just by "genetic drift"
secondary to a foreign introduction, as that
diversity would not have been possible without
the presence of E-M35 upstream clades.
crazy.
quote:If by "no one" you are referring to yourself, then that may be an astute observation on your part: you are a "no body".
You just like talking
to no one in particular
quote:That's the only way it can be, chump: counter-views would have to the facts that you have not expressed, obviously. Duh!
, and counter-argue views
that no one expressed. Keep it up jackass.
quote:Coming at me with stupid cartoons is the best you can do as a comeback "argument"? LOL
quote:The demented pig even went as far as fabricating
Originally posted by The Explorer:
To the chump above (swenet), uniparental markers
are not univariate entities. They span
multiple loci, some more variable than others, as
any other segment of the human genome.
quote:
Originally posted by The Explorer:
This is not cranio-morphometric analysis
where individual features are examined for their
variability.
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
That's what it sounds like to you, no doubt; the
equivalent of a flat-earther in the field of
genetics who thinks the difference between
uni-variate and multi-variate analysis lies in
how inherently polymorphic something is, rather
than the amount of chosen categories that
researchers decide to sort individuals or objects
into. Mentally imbalanced bum, educate yourself:
Multivariate statistics is a form of
statistics encompassing the simultaneous
observation and analysis of more than one outcome
variable. The application of multivariate
statistics is multivariate analysis.
Univariate analysis is the simplest form of
quantitative (statistical) analysis.[1] The
analysis is carried out with the description of a
single variable in terms of the applicable unit
of analysis.[1] For example, if the
variable "age" was the subject of the analysis,
the researcher would look at how many subjects
fall into given age attribute categories.
quote:You failed epically.
Originally posted by Swenet:
Cite the evidence, right here, right now along
with your sources. Where is the evidence that:
1) diversity in E-M78 in modern Berbers precludes
genetic drift
quote:You failed here too.
Originally posted by Swenet:
Cite the evidence, right here, right now along
with your sources. Where is the evidence that:
2) that Berber mtDNA lineages evince large
effective population sizes
quote:Here, you failed more than four times in a row.
Originally posted by Swenet:
While you're at it, if drift isn't at work here,
explain the discrepancy between the extreme
rarity of ancestral clades in between E-M81 and
E-M35, even though the former only emerged
~5.6kya from the said predecessors.
quote:Same here: you failed more than four times in a row.
Originally posted by Swenet:
Then demonstrate that the paternal East African
component brought there by Neolithic proto-Berber
speakers (e.g., manifested as E-M81 in Y
Chromosomal analysis) re-emerges as East African
affiliated ancestry when other ancestry
informative markers are consulted
quote:Your PMS-juices are obviously irritating you under the diaper. Where's the substance, chump?
Originally posted by Swenet:
Everyone can see you're a filthy coward. You're
desperately looking for material to fill up your
post, to make it seem to the outside world that
you're not in your usual role; on the victim end
of a severe thrashing. The contents of your posts
have all the trappings of a thrashed bum, who is
in denial of having been routed
quote:Patently stupid is when you can't tell your figment (above) apart from reality...
Here, below, the demented pig went on record
uttering the patently stupid claim that the
difference between univariate and multivariate
analysis lies in the variability of genetic
material.
quote:First your confusion was over "uniparental" and "univariate", then over "marker" and "variability", and now it's over "univariate" and "category". Where does your shameless stupidity end? Nowhere, that's where.
Not only that, note the
contradiction in terms. The filthy dumbass pig
says an ''uniparental marker'', which essentially
means 'single parent inherited marker',
is not a single category used to classify
individuals (univariate analysis)
quote:With all the screen distortion and other noise, this escaped my attention.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
Also Explorer wasn't it you not long ago who when asked about where do all these tawny skinned North Africans come from you would say white women slaves of tha Barbary? -and Troll Patrol adding expulsion of the Moriscos ?
It if that is the case then what are the foreign haplogroups of berbers?
quote:what do you mean favored?
Originally posted by The Explorer:
I did however note, that a good amount of what is considered "foreign" ancestry, in the maternal gene pool, can likely be attributable to a slavery institution that largely favored females.
quote:would you agree that North Africans have more European ancestry than other Africans?
Originally posted by The Explorer:
maternal haplogroup that appear to be a subset of the western European distribution (e.g. elements of H and V clades).
quote:can you give exact qoutes and reference to where Herodotus makes reference to two types of Libyans? I have his book but I don't remember making a reference to two types of libyans. I does say that there are Greek and Carthaginian colonies in North Africa and that those are not natives. THen he goes on to talk about the natives, but at no point do I remember him making mention of color.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:what do you mean favored?
Originally posted by The Explorer:
I did however note, that a good amount of what is considered "foreign" ancestry, in the maternal gene pool, can likely be attributable to a slavery institution that largely favored females.
sorry about attributing "all tawny". I assume you would agree that some tawny skinnedness in North Africans is attributable to European input
quote:would you agree that North Africans have more European ancestry than other Africans?
Originally posted by The Explorer:
maternal haplogroup that appear to be a subset of the western European distribution (e.g. elements of H and V clades).
__________________________________
Below a figure from Tomb of Rameses III Book of Gates:
![]()
Here are two of the Libyans:
![]()
Heroditus describes two types of Libyans.
In some the art you see Libyans
reddish brown in others lighter tan or light yellowish or "tawny"
would you say that because these depictions of Libyans as 1186–1155 BC that it is not due to any
non-African elements such as Sea People etc.?
quote:^ Yet it's plain for all to see that the two Libyans above show traces of darker paint. Unless of course you want to argue that it's 'dirt' or 'smudge'. Suffice to say there are other tomb images showing Libyans with the exact same hair style and attire but with dark/black skin color similar to Egyptians.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
Here are two of the Libyans:
![]()
quote:Yup. That is her M.O. alright. Ask questions answered (debunked) before and wait to repeat them again next time as if the answers will change! LOL
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
^ the problem with this individual lioness is, repetitiveness.
This axact same question has popped up numerous times before, and was answered/ addressed numerous times before.
However, a while from now it will pop up again. And the picture spamming will happen all over again.
The same goes for hair texture. And every other trait that is unusual to the stereotype once created by Eurocentrism on Africans.
quote:It is as plain as day. You don't know what "favor" means?...as in "preference".
Originally posted by the lioness,:
what do you mean favored?
quote:Making false assumptions is a good way to start baseless rumors, especially when they are repeated over and over.
sorry about attributing "all tawny". I assume you would agree that some tawny skinnedness in North Africans is attributable to European input
quote:Coastal North Africa is closer to Europe than other parts of Africa. Is it not?
would you agree that North Africans have more European ancestry than other Africans?
quote:I have no idea who these "Libyans" are, other than what the ancient Egyptian texts tell us about them. I don't even know how much connection, if any, they have with contemporary coastal north African populations. I therefore cannot answer your question, but maybe you can fill me in on the ancestry of these historic figures?
Heroditus describes two types of Libyans.
In some the art you see Libyans
reddish brown in others lighter tan or light yellowish or "tawny"
would you say that because these depictions of Libyans as 1186–1155 BC that it is not due to any
non-African elements such as Sea People etc.?
quote:The Cambridge World History of Slavery: Volume 3, AD 1420-AD 1804
Originally posted by The Explorer:
I did however note, that a good amount of what is considered "foreign" ancestry, in the maternal gene pool, can likely be attributable to a slavery institution that largely favored females.
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
would you agree that North Africans have more European ancestry than other Africans?
quote:It would mean that the average Maghrebian of which over 90% of the population resides in coastal areas have more European ancestry than othe Africans
Originally posted by The Explorer:
Coastal North Africa is closer to Europe than other parts of Africa. Is it not?
A more substantive question would be: Agreeing to such a prospect (in your question) would mean what precisely?
quote:Similarly one could question any connection between Iberomaurusian/Capsians hunter foragers of the green sahara
Originally posted by The Explorer:
quote:I have no idea who these "Libyans" are, other than what the ancient Egyptian texts tell us about them. I don't even know how much connection, if any, they have with contemporary coastal north African populations. I therefore cannot answer your question, but maybe you can fill me in on the ancestry of these historic figures?
Originally posted by the lioness,:
Heroditus describes two types of Libyans.
In some the art you see Libyans
reddish brown in others lighter tan or light yellowish or "tawny"
would you say that because these depictions of Libyans as 1186–1155 BC that it is not due to any
non-African elements such as Sea People etc.?
quote:Where did these "men" go? Back to Europe, while the females supposedly stayed behind?
Originally posted by the lioness,:
The Cambridge World History of Slavery: Volume 3, AD 1420-AD 1804
![]()
However "favored" manifests this book claims that whiteness in Algiers is attributable to female slaves however they go on to say as much as ten times as many male slaves were taken. So they took many more males despite what was "favored".
quote:I can imagine two possible things about the fuss you are making over "European ancestry" in the Maghreb:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
It would mean that the average Maghrebian of which over 90% of the population resides in coastal areas have more European ancestry than othe Africans
quote:I've been questioning a "parent-to-offspring" link between the so-called "Iberomaurusians" and contemporary Imazighen populations of the Maghreb for quite a while. Where have you been?
Originally posted by the lioness,:
Similarly one could question any connection between Iberomaurusian/Capsians hunter foragers of the green sahara
and modern Maghrebians
quote:exactly
Originally posted by The Explorer:
[QB]quote:Where did these "men" go? Back to Europe, while the females supposedly stayed behind?
Originally posted by the lioness,:
The Cambridge World History of Slavery: Volume 3, AD 1420-AD 1804
![]()
However "favored" manifests this book claims that whiteness in Algiers is attributable to female slaves however they go on to say as much as ten times as many male slaves were taken. So they took many more males despite what was "favored".
quote:It says mortality rates were probably higher.
Originally posted by The Explorer:
It's also noticeable that your citation attempts to make a direct comparison between Maghrebi slavery and North American slavery. It appears that the author is driving at drawing up a more cruel handling of Europeans captives than that of African captives in America.
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
It would mean that the average Maghrebian, of which over 90% of the population resides in coastal areas, has more European ancestry than other Africans
quote:No I'm telling you that the average Maghrebian has significant Eurasian ancestry
Originally posted by The Explorer:
I can imagine two possible things about the fuss you are making over "European ancestry" in the Maghreb:
1. Are you trying to tell me that every Maghrebi person must have European ancestry?
quote:No, I'm saying many are very mixed, moreso than other Africans,
Originally posted by The Explorer:
2. Are you trying to tell me that Maghrebi populations are not really African?
What's the deal here; let's cut to the chase!
quote:Two things to note about your answer:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
exactly
quote:Being "possible" is not a substitute for a "fact".
It says mortality rates were probably higher.
That is possible.
quote:You appear to be confused about what you are "telling me". To you, does "average" equate to "every"?
No I'm telling you that the average Maghrebian has significant Eurasian ancestry
quote:I can't imagine an African population that is not "mixed". What makes the Maghrebi any "more mixed", which is what I imagine you are trying to say?
]No, I'm saying many are very mixed, moreso than other Africans
quote:No, the harem role of the women, sex slaves, is entirely different from the role of men. The men probably weren't capable of freeing the women who were situated inside the Pasha's or sultan's residence under guard and army. The men were expendable and would be used for more temporal projects
Originally posted by The Explorer:
quote:Two things to note about your answer:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
exactly
You don't find it odd that male slaves supposedly went back, leaving behind female slaves?
quote:
It says mortality rates were probably higher.
That is possible.
quote:
Originally posted by The Explorer:
The direct comparison between the Maghrebi slavery and the North American one brings attention to possible motive behind the questionable estimation of male slaves.
quote:you are putting "had it worse" as a quote but it's not a quote. They said the attrition rate was estimated at 20%. The exact reasons are not indicated.
Originally posted by The Explorer:
Some have seized on recent reports about the history of Maghrebi slavery of Europeans to make political points in response to "white" guilt" about slavery in the Americas, to say that Europeans supposedly "had it worse" under Africans, and make counterpoints about "reparations" for slavery in North America.
quote:No it means "most"
Originally posted by The Explorer:
You appear to be confused about what you are "telling me". To you, does "average" equate to "every"?
quote:That varies but in this case let's say 25% and up
Originally posted by The Explorer:
And what do you consider "significant"?
quote:A population would be more mixed if frequencies for haplogoups associated with Eurasia are higher in Maghrebians than frequencies of haplogoups associated with Eurasia in other Africans
Originally posted by The Explorer:
I can't imagine an African population that is not "mixed". What makes the Maghrebi any "more mixed", which is what I imagine you are trying to say? [/QB]
quote:It strikes me as odd that of all the historic events of slavery, wherein both men and female slaves were brought in substantial numbers, as opposed to one gender favored over the other, that the males are sent back, leaving behind only a record of female slaves. Can you give me a single documented incidence of this?
Originally posted by the lioness,:
No, the harem role of the women, sex slaves, is entirely different from the role of men. The men probably weren't capable of freeing the women who were situated inside the Pasha's or sultan's residence under guard and army. The men were expendable and would be used for more temporal projects
quote:Yeah, it's called emphasizing a general idea that some group or another holds. I don't have to use quotes only when I'm actually quoting a specific person. Sometimes I get the impression that you just crawled out from under a rock.
you are putting "had it worse" as a quote but it's not a quote.
quote:If you read further down, the citation offers a reason for the attrition. Neither the estimation or the reasons offered are "exact".
They said the attrition rate was estimated at 20%. The exact reasons are not indicated.
quote:Well, newsflash: Your citation only compares European slaves in the Maghreb with the American slaves.
That mortality rate should be considered in context of the mortality rate of all slaves of the Arab/Ottomans, including black African Zanj who were said to die in high numbers in the harsh salt mines of Iraq as well as very high mortality rates when slaves were being transported over land in long distances across Africa,
along various trade routes, Ethiopians and various Africans enslaved by Muslim empires.
quote:I've talked about possible castration of male slaves in my notes on slavery in the Maghreb myself. That doesn't justify a lack of record left by male slaves of the size being insinuated in your citation.
They also castrated certain slaves and simply killed large numbers of slaves at times.
quote:Politics around "white guilt" and "reparations" for slavery in the Americas, particularly North America, is an issue that has re-surfaced on occasion when the topic presents itself. This is not something that a specific date or time can be applied to as a cap.
Europeans in theory could seek reparations from Morocco and Algeria as well as black Africans.
Reparations in America is hardly talked about in America currently and few blacks are pushing hard for it or even raising the issue. There are a tiny few but hardly any.
This is a fact. It was probably more discussed in the 1990s
quote:Of course, most of the time whites in said places would perhaps "rather not talk about this humiliating topic", because said whites do not honestly think they are actual victims of such proportion. Perhaps this plays a part when "slavery" is taken off the table as a likely contributor to supposed "European" component in the Maghreb maternal gene pool. On occasion however, when confronted with "white guilt" talk about European carnage of other people, it becomes enticing to capitalize on such "humiliating topic", and this is not necessarily relegated to a few white supremacist zealots.
The topic of European slaves of Muslim empires was covered in several books including Christian Slaves, Muslim Masters 2004 by Robert C, Davis. The book ranks #173,655 on Amazon.
I'm sure the mainstream of whites in America and Europe would rather not talk about this humiliating topic at all as opposed to a few obscure white supremacists who might like to use it in a "we had it worse than you" argument.
quote:Really? You know this because you sampled "most" Maghrebi folks? I haven't come across any sample that has achieved that.
No it means "most"
quote:Give me the numbers, and the specific markers that would render say, 25% European ancestry, in "most" Maghrebi folks.
That varies but in this case let's say 25% and up
quote:Funny talk aside, if anyone needs to worry, you couldn't be a better candidate:
A population would be more mixed if frequencies for haplogoups associated with Eurasia are higher in Maghrebians than frequencies of haplogoups associated with Eurasia in other Africans
Don't worry so much
quote:
Originally posted by The Explorer:
I did however note, that a good amount of what is considered "foreign" ancestry, in the maternal gene pool, can likely be attributable to a slavery institution that largely favored females.
quote:are you changing your position?
Originally posted by The Explorer:
It strikes me as odd that of all the historic events of slavery, wherein both men and female slaves were brought in substantial numbers, as opposed to one gender favored over the other,
quote:We are talking about pirates who sometimes took over European merchant ships as one of their sources for European slaves and cargo. And they probably also treated these people harshly becuase of pervious European colonial incursions.
Originally posted by The Explorer:
"lioness" productions is apparently a crumbling enterprise.
As decorative as it may be, give copying & pasting a rest, and try this out:
What evidence do you have of European male slaves of the Maghreb being expelled back to Europe, while females stayed behind?
And if you can stomach it, try this too:
Can you give me a single incidence of this happening anywhere in history?
quote:So what percentages are R, I, J, and E? That should answer the question.
Is the European ancestry in modern North Africans primarily due to European slaves?
quote:The fact the European and Arab ancestry is present (also include hap H) does not verify that European slaves were the primary source of this ancestry in North Africans.Ther were also Phoenician. Roman and Vandal occupations, expulsion of Moors including Moriscos and according to the Brenna Henn article on page 1 of this thread a back migration thousands of years prior. Which of these sources as well as Euroepan slaves accounts for most of the European and Arabian ancestry? It's difficult to know
Originally posted by lamin:
] 1)quote:So what percentages are R, I, J, and E? That should answer the question.
[b]Is the European ancestry in modern North Africans primarily due to European slaves?
quote:You need to do more research.
Originally posted by lamin:
2)The idea of unsettled desert trekkers always sparse in number trasnsporting approximately 10 million Africans to sparsely populated non-agricultural, non-industrialised desert areas is not very credible. Wiki should be edited on this. [/qb]
quote:Should I take it that your attempt at changing the subject means you do not have answers to the simple questions I asked of you?
Originally posted by the lioness,:
We are talking about pirates who sometimes took over European merchant ships as one of their sources for European slaves and cargo.
quote:Raiding ships predominantly manned by men probably made a good business platform through the demand of ransoms, but given the choices available at the time in the Maghreb, it would not have been a considerable labor pool for hard slave labor...unless of course, the ships were magnets for the capture of females.
And they probably also treated these people harshly becuase of pervious European colonial incursions.
quote:If I do, then you must be even less knowledgeable. Copying & pasting sources that you are easily suckered into believing, without critical thinking, does not make you knowledgeable about the subject matter.
I don't know all the details yet but you know less on this topic.
quote:This confidence must be driven by emotion, or should I dare you to provide proof?
I am confident that there were a lot more male slaves then women.
quote:It does. You are telling a story that is not apparent in tangible evidence. The scenario you have presented is historically an unlikely one.
The main point here is that it doesn't matter to what extent European male slaves returned to Europe.
quote:The European male contribution into the Maghrebi gene pool is essentially negligible. You have not offered a single reason that is demonstrable by evidence for your "greater male slaves" theory.
There were a lot more males slaves. There could be various reasons that there male DNA is maybe not more reflective of their greater proprtion compared to women slaves.
quote:You are dosing off to your imaginary land, and/or too dense to read properly. I haven't changed my position about what genetics is telling me, nor have I said anything about this so-called "both" other than to question your theory.
I actually read some things about this topic.
You come in saying they favored woemen implying they captured more of them. Then you are talking about "both", You are simply making up stuff.
quote:I'd say evidence and history so far tend to favor my viewpoint over yours. If you don't happen to like that state of affairs, then do something about it: prove your case!
Do some actual reserach on this topic before you step to the lioness. You are merely trying to prove me wrong for it's own sake an basing it not on research but on rhetoric alone.
quote:You seem so emotional, and here you are advising someone else to "lighten up".
You are the ultimate nitpicker with a very confrontional humourless uptight style.
quote:You've lost your marbles. It was you who baited me to this subject, and I bit; now you are crying about being confronted. LOL
Haven't I told you to lighten up and take life less seriously?
And tangling with me just to get away from Swenet?
quote:Speaking of rhetoric, this sounds like a cop-out rhetoric.
Explorer. I'm not going to argue with you based purly on rhetoric
It's boring and there is not much learning involved.
quote:And that, I have: It's called genetics and history. What have you got, other than blindly copying & pasting stories by others, that you cannot possibly authenticate?
If somebody has a dispute with what I'm saying come at me with some research. documentation
quote:It's funny, you like directing questions at me, but hate answering questions I direct at you. Your question is not important, it is simply redundant, as I have already spoken on the subject multiple times in no vague terms. My question is actually the more important one, which no less has gone unanswered, which I think tells us a lot about your viewpoints.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
Bottom line Explorer, the important question is
Is the European ancestry in modern North Africans primarily due to European slaves?
quote:lioness, (aka Professor whining troll), I have taken note, but I'm not convinced by your speculative posts. Try applying critical thinking and evidence.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
Explorer (aka Professor Nitpick) take note, males once again, slave armies both black and white utilized by Islamic regimes, women used as domestic servants and sometimes as concubine sex slaves.
quote:I posted references on the topic of slavery of Europeans in the Islamic empires.
Originally posted by The Explorer:
[QB]quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:If I do, then you must be even less knowledgeable. Copying & pasting sources that you are easily suckered into believing, without critical thinking, does not make you knowledgeable about the subject matter.
I don't know all the details yet but you know less on this topic.
quote:LOL Just be glad she actually cited sources properly for a change instead of copying and pasting stuff in plagiarist style as she usually does.
Originally posted by The Explorer:
quote:lioness, (aka Professor whining troll), I have taken note, but I'm not convinced by your speculative posts. Try applying critical thinking and evidence.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
Explorer (aka Professor Nitpick) take note, males once again, slave armies both black and white utilized by Islamic regimes, women used as domestic servants and sometimes as concubine sex slaves.
quote:I did give you credit for copy & pasting without critical thinking, did I not?
Originally posted by the lioness,:
I posted references on the topic of slavery of Europeans in the Islamic empires.
quote:I've made my case on several occasions using genetics and history. You are simply too intellectually challenged to have noticed. Only in my case, genetics matches the allegations made in historical narration for the Maghreb. None of your allegations, except for the part about enslaving females and pirates raiding ships, are either logical from a historical standpoint or backed by available evidence.
You put up none
quote:You sound like a broken record. Try a new accusation that hasn't already been refuted.
you know little of that particular history unless you are now researching it and have been relying on "critical thinking" alone, maybe this and maybe that.
quote:As evidenced by what? It's just one of your fairy tales.
You think one slavery should be like another slavery.
quote:You haven't said anything about the ship raids that has not already been discussed in this board long before you showed up here. You are Johnny-come-lately and you think you are bringing some grand new revelation to ES. LOL
I pointed out the raiding of other ships for cargo and to enslave crews and only now do you notice the gender implications of that.
quote:As I said above, you are notorious for being too ignorant to keep up with topics that have already been discussed, over and over.
You only employ "critcial thinking' after I bring up historical details that you didn't think of until that point. Castration?
quote:I gather then your "hard work" is gullibility, which sure requires "intense" brain activity, and blindly copying & pasting stuff from the net?
That is a topic requiring book research which you are too lazy to do.
quote:Nitpicking to you is a code word for your frustration out of being challenged on topics that you baited with no less.
would rather win points against me on nitpicking. And you are anti-emotion in rhetoric at the same time as displaying emotion.
quote:No, I didn't know that white male slaves died out from castration in the Maghreb. Your evidence for this is?
Did you know that many men died during these castration proceedures?
quote:Sure, that's how your filthy lying ass
Originally posted by The Explorer:
Patently stupid is when you can't tell your
figment (above) apart from reality...
quote:
Originally posted by The Explorer:
quote:To the chump above (swenet), uniparental markers
Originally posted by Swenet:
quote:You don't even know
Originally posted by The Explorer:
This chump thinks uniparental markers are
"univariate" vs. the "multivariate" supposed
"genomewide" analysis.
what uni/multi-variate analysis is, just like you
don't know what PCA or body linearity is.
Prove me wrong that you know what uni/multi-
variate analysis is, and that it contradicts with
what I said!
are not univariate entities. They span
multiple loci, some more variable than
others, as any other segment of the human
genome. This is not cranio-morphometric analysis
where individual features are examined for their
variability.
quote:--Achilli et al 2005
The recent molecular dissection of other
mtDNA haplogroups reveals some clues. H1 and H3,
two frequent subhaplogroups of H, display
frequency peaks centered in Iberia and
surrounding populations, including the Berbers of
Morocco, and coalescence ages of ∼11 ky
(Achilli et al. 2004). Furthermore, their
frequency patterns and ages resemble those
reported for haplogroup V (Torroni et al. 2001a
—which, similar to U5b1b, is extremely common
only in the Saami (together, U5b1b and V
encompass almost 90% of the Saami mtDNAs)
(Torroni et al. 1996; Tambets et al. 2004). Thus,
although these previous studies have highlighted
the role of the Franco-Cantabrian refuge area as
a major source of the hunter-gatherer populations
that gradually repopulated much of central and
northern Europe when climatic conditions began to
improve ∼15 ky ago, the identification of
U5b1b now unequivocally links the maternal
gene pool of the ancestral Berbers to the same
refuge area and indicates that European
hunter-gatherers also moved toward the south and,
by crossing the Strait of Gibraltar,
contributed their U5b1b, H1, H3, and V mtDNAs
to modern North Africans.
quote:--Ennafaa 2009
In addition, it has to be taken into
account that half of the H lineages detected
in North Africa are not shared with other regions
and that this percentage is even greater in the
putative source regions of the Near East (70%)
and the Iberian Peninsula (76%). These facts
point to a higher differentiation among regions
and between populations than those observed
previously. Indeed, complete or nearly
complete sequencing of some apparently identical
samples indicates that the real genetic
heterogeneity among regions is greater than those
estimated above (Figure 2). To begin with,
the HVSI motif 16093 -16189 that characterizes
subgroup H1f was found in an individual (Mor
2047) from Morocco (Figure 2) also in an H1
background. This sub-group is particularly
abundant and mainly restricted to Finland and the
surrounding populations [36]. At first sight,
this coincidence would seem to point to a new
link between North European with North African
populations like that found previously for U5b1b
[26]. However, in this case, further analysis of
the coding region in the North African sample
revealed a lack of the three coding region
mutations that additionally characterize the
Finish H1f subgroup [38] (Figure 2).
quote:--Ennafaa 2009
In addition to the CRS, the 16189 and the
16311 HVSI motifs are quite abundant in North
Africa (see Additional file 1). However, when
these samples were screened for the coding region
positions observed in completely sequenced
European or Middle East individuals that held the
same HVSI motifs (Figure 2), none of these
positions appeared in the North African samples.
quote:
Originally posted by Tukuler:
quote:yes but you seem to be going on forever with him
Originally posted by Swenet:
[QB] Who cares? Explorer compulsively lies his
ass off, what makes you think arguing with him is
going to take you anywhere
quote:The number of Vandals wasn't I significant. It was quite large. And have you ever wondered from where the Vandals originally came?
Originally posted by the lioness,:
Swenet, I don't know if you've been reading on this white slavery stuff in Arab and Ottman empires.
There are a few more additional book pages in my white slaves thread. I think it's reasonable that some of them have become intermixed with the North African population. I'm convinced there were a lot more men, these girls were expensive and most were in Ottoman or Moroccan Sultan's exclusive harems. Nevertheless they could have had an impact of the make up of North Africans. One quote I had up speculated the look of the people of Algiers is influenced by this slave Euroepan admixture.
How much of an influence do you think that might have been on the whole Maghreb in terms of the spread of European haplogroups? I don't know
Some people seem to imply there was no back migration 12kya, Vandals and Romans etc. were insignificant, that the presence of these European haplogoups are due to raped white women.
And then if you inquire what are the European hpalogoups showing this the same people argue that these haplogoups are really African.
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
quote:--Achilli et al 2005
The recent molecular dissection of other
mtDNA haplogroups reveals some clues. H1 and H3,
two frequent subhaplogroups of H, display
frequency peaks centered in Iberia and
surrounding populations, including the Berbers of
Morocco, and coalescence ages of ∼11 ky
(Achilli et al. 2004). Furthermore, their
frequency patterns and ages resemble those
reported for haplogroup V (Torroni et al. 2001a
—which, similar to U5b1b, is extremely common
only in the Saami (together, U5b1b and V
encompass almost 90% of the Saami mtDNAs)
(Torroni et al. 1996; Tambets et al. 2004). Thus,
although these previous studies have highlighted
the role of the Franco-Cantabrian refuge area as
a major source of the hunter-gatherer populations
that gradually repopulated much of central and
northern Europe when climatic conditions began to
improve ∼15 ky ago, the identification of
U5b1b now unequivocally links the maternal
gene pool of the ancestral Berbers to the same
refuge area and indicates that European
hunter-gatherers also moved toward the south and,
by crossing the Strait of Gibraltar,
contributed their U5b1b, H1, H3, and V mtDNAs
to modern North Africans.
The haplotypes implied here have differentiated
in Africa and are simply not explicable in terms
of recent slave trade:
quote:You have presented no evidence whatsoever of either a lopsided white "male" slavery, or of their genetic contribution into the Maghreb gene pool.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
There are a few more additional book pages in my white slaves thread. I think it's reasonable that some of them have become intermixed with the North African population.
quote:You convince yourself; might as well, since you shouldn't be able to convince anyone who is rational.
I'm convinced there were a lot more men, these girls were expensive and most were in Ottoman or Moroccan Sultan's exclusive harems.
quote:Those pieces you quote must really look like biblical pages to you, don't they? A lot of people of faith simply believe biblical narrations without any critical and independent thinking.
Nevertheless they could have had an impact of the make up of North Africans. One quote I had up speculated the look of the people of Algiers is influenced by this slave Euroepan admixture.
quote:Well, I'm all ears: What can you tell us about this European back-migration that supposedly happened 12kya, since you seem to believe it happened?
How much of an influence do you think that might have been on the whole Maghreb in terms of the spread of European haplogroups? I don't know
Some people seem to imply there was no back migration 12kya, Vandals and Romans etc.
quote:Provide examples of these "some people" who "imply the above"!
were insignificant, that the presence of these European haplogoups are due to raped white women.
quote:Examples!
And then if you inquire what are the European hpalogoups showing this the same people argue that these haplogoups are really African.
quote:Yet you are the one who is complaining about being challenged? LOL
Originally posted by the lioness,:
Explorer has a deep need to be right
quote:Nope, just your fairy tale. When you are ready to confront the real world, keep in touch!
Originally posted by Swenet:
Sure, that's how your filthy lying ass
likes to spin it, but, unfortunately for your
lying ass, you went on record saying uni/multi-
variate analysis is the same as a moderately
variably/highly variable locus!
quote:.
Originally posted by The Explorer:
The Vandals and Romans must have had negligible, if any at all, genetic impact on the Maghrebi. Only those people who like to wish away North Africans as "transplanted Europeans" refer to supposed Roman and Vandal connections.
quote:
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
The number of Vandals wasn't insignificant. It was quite large. And have you ever wondered from where the Vandals originally came?
"During historic times, Berbers experienced a long and complicated history with many invasions, conquests, and migrations by Phoenicians, Romans, Vandals, Byzantines, Arabs, Bedouins, Spanish, Turks, Andalusians, sub-Saharans (communities settled in Jerba and Gabes in the 16th–19th centuries), and French (Brett and Fentress 1996). During these invasions, Berbers were forced back to the mountains and to certain villages in southern Tunisia (Fadhlaoui-Zid et al. 2004)."
We can sit here acting as if none of this ever happened. But in Morocco and other parts of the Maghreb all this is well known. The problem here is that Henn et al don't mention anything on these recorded events. Which seems odd, at least
Ancient History Sourcebook: Procopius of Caesarea: Gaiseric & The Vandal Conquest of North Africa, 406 - 477 CE
"And yet the number of the Vandals and Alans was said in former times, at least, to amount to no more than fifty thousand men. However, after that time by their natural increase among themselves and by associating other barbarians with them they came to be an exceedingly numerous people."
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/ancient/procopius-vandals.html
Source:
From: Procopius, History of the Wars, 7 vols., trans. H. B. Dewing (Cambridge, Mass., and London: Harvard University Press & Wm. Heinemann, 1914; reprint ed., 1953-54), II.23-73.
quote:Funny you should mention Ennafaa et al. 2009, because I have a different take on their data:
Originally posted by Swenet:
The haplotypes implied here have differentiated
in Africa and are simply not explicable in terms
of recent slave trade:
quote:--Ennafaa 2009
In addition, it has to be taken into
account that half of the H lineages detected
in North Africa are not shared with other regions
and that this percentage is even greater in the
putative source regions of the Near East (70%)
and the Iberian Peninsula (76%). These facts
point to a higher differentiation among regions
and between populations than those observed
previously. Indeed, complete or nearly
complete sequencing of some apparently identical
samples indicates that the real genetic
heterogeneity among regions is greater than those
estimated above (Figure 2). To begin with,
the HVSI motif 16093 -16189 that characterizes
subgroup H1f was found in an individual (Mor
2047) from Morocco (Figure 2) also in an H1
background. This sub-group is particularly
abundant and mainly restricted to Finland and the
surrounding populations [36]. At first sight,
this coincidence would seem to point to a new
link between North European with North African
populations like that found previously for U5b1b
[26]. However, in this case, further analysis of
the coding region in the North African sample
revealed a lack of the three coding region
mutations that additionally characterize the
Finish H1f subgroup [38] (Figure 2).
...
quote:I guess from this, I'm supposed to bow down because you are quoting Troll Patrol, who happened to be quoting someone else? LOL, you are truly funny...not in the sense of laughing with you, but at you!
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:.
Originally posted by The Explorer:
The Vandals and Romans must have had negligible, if any at all, genetic impact on the Maghrebi. Only those people who like to wish away North Africans as "transplanted Europeans" refer to supposed Roman and Vandal connections.
.
quote:
Originally posted by Troll Patrol:
The number of Vandals wasn't insignificant. It was quite large. And have you ever wondered from where the Vandals originally came?
"During historic times, Berbers experienced a long and complicated history with many invasions, conquests, and migrations by Phoenicians, Romans, Vandals, Byzantines, Arabs, Bedouins, Spanish, Turks, Andalusians, sub-Saharans (communities settled in Jerba and Gabes in the 16th–19th centuries), and French (Brett and Fentress 1996). During these invasions, Berbers were forced back to the mountains and to certain villages in southern Tunisia (Fadhlaoui-Zid et al. 2004)."
We can sit here acting as if none of this ever happened. But in Morocco and other parts of the Maghreb all this is well known. The problem here is that Henn et al don't mention anything on these recorded events. Which seems odd, at least
Ancient History Sourcebook: Procopius of Caesarea: Gaiseric & The Vandal Conquest of North Africa, 406 - 477 CE
"And yet the number of the Vandals and Alans was said in former times, at least, to amount to no more than fifty thousand men. However, after that time by their natural increase among themselves and by associating other barbarians with them they came to be an exceedingly numerous people."
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/ancient/procopius-vandals.html
Source:
From: Procopius, History of the Wars, 7 vols., trans. H. B. Dewing (Cambridge, Mass., and London: Harvard University Press & Wm. Heinemann, 1914; reprint ed., 1953-54), II.23-73.
quote:
Originally posted by The Explorer:
The point being, that pointing to H does not necessarily serve as unequivocal proof of a European origin. This is not to say that elements of Hg H are not due to European gene pool, but that not all the clade is necessarily implicated in such a gene flow. That aside, dating estimates are just that, estimates, and are a subject to the methodology applied and assumptions that went along with that, by the authors. I've noted this time and again, and can't stress it enough!
quote:yeah? what genetic evidence might that be?
Originally posted by The Explorer:
I did however note, that a good amount of what is considered "foreign" ancestry, in the maternal gene pool, can likely be attributable to a slavery institution that largely favored females.
quote:you still have to come up with 'favored females' ancestry
Originally posted by The Explorer:
Yeah I'm too scared. Now, how about fetching me the answer to the request around the Vandal ancestry?
quote:^What is there that he doesn't have yet to
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:you still have to come up
Originally posted by The Explorer:
Yeah I'm too scared. Now, how about fetching me
the answer to the request around the Vandal
ancestry?
with 'favored females' ancestry
quote:^These are all manipulative fallacies expected of
Originally posted by The Explorer:
The point being, that pointing to H does not
necessarily serve as unequivocal proof of a
European origin. This is not to say that
elements of Hg H are not due to European gene
pool, but that not all the clade is necessarily
implicated in such a gene flow. That aside,
dating estimates are just that, estimates, and
are a subject to the methodology applied and
assumptions that went along with that, by the
authors. I've noted this time and again, and
can't stress it enough!
quote:--Ennafaa 2009
the identification of U5b1b now unequivocally
links the maternal gene pool of the ancestral
Berbers to the same refuge area and indicates
that European hunter-gatherers also moved toward
the south
quote:What's tha matta, charlatan, does it pain you to
Originally posted by The Explorer:
PS: You keep reminding readers of what a total
nutcase you are in your incessant blind and dumb
reliance on Kefi et al.'s discredited reports.
quote:-- Maca Myer et al 2003
Table 3 compares haplogroup frequencies
between the aborigines and the present day
Canarians. By far, haplogroup H/HV/U*/R(-CRS)
is the most abundant, encompassing more than 30%
of the sample.
quote:
Originally posted by The Explorer:
can likely be attributable to .....
quote:
Originally posted by The Explorer:
does not necessarily .....
quote:
Originally posted by The Explorer:
can likely be attributable to .....
quote:
Originally posted by The Explorer:
does not necessarily .....
quote:Now a lioness minion, are you?
Originally posted by Swenet:
^What is there that he doesn't have yet to
produce?
quote:Well it's easy to make dumb toothless accusations. Backing them up is quite another!
^These are all manipulative fallacies expected of
a delusional charlatan.
quote:And you are basing this on what nucleotide characteristics? other than "swenet" the chump says so?
The facts of the matter
are:
1) H1, H3, U51b1 and V were brought there by
Europeans and represent European ancestry.
quote:I don't know how applying science is "emotionally troubling", but the chump seems to think that's the case. LOL
Whether some forms were brought to Northern
Africa, or differentiated locally thereafter, is
of no consequence to what you've trouble
emotionally coping with
quote:You call it a "fact", I call it your emotional assumption. Disagree? Explain why the only match mentioned, as your own reference (Ennafaa et al. 2009) notes as per my citation, between the Maghreb and Iberia, is the one that implicates a North African ancestry in Iberia, as opposed to Iberian ancestry in the Maghreb?
the fact that their mere
existence attests to ancient migration to
the Maghreb and the fact that your earlier claims
about a lack of ancient geneflow to North Africa
are just sick lies.
quote:Let's test the veracity of your seemingly absent-minded accusation: How have you figured that the H clades that have been implicated in Ennafaa et al.'s report came from the "same refuge area" as the supposedly European U5b1b? Of course, other than just parroting what you were told by someone else, without having any deep insight?
Even now you're lying to
yourself by telling yourself that the existence
of locally differentiated forms of H, V and U5
somehow contradict the inescapable conclusion
that:
quote:--Ennafaa 2009
the identification of U5b1b now unequivocally
links the maternal gene pool of the ancestral
Berbers to the same refuge area and indicates
that European hunter-gatherers also moved toward
the south
quote:I've never treated them otherwise. You'll be hard-pressed to find a situation to the contrary, against your wishes.
2) Estimates are just assumption laden claims,
whenever they disagree with you.
quote:Your way of authenticating your silly accusations is to fall back on someone else's falsified emotional accusations?
Altakruri has
already noted this inherently pathological
condition in your personality where you attempt
(but fail) to reduce common academic processes
and practices to fringe theories when they've
been applied to produce conclusions that you have
trouble coping with.
quote:You imagine I'm lying, just as say, you are lying your dumbass off about this so-called "pre-defeat", a nonsensical word?
Here too, your dumbass
is lying your ass off. You've went through all
these lengths to show that these H clades evince
local differentiation in Northern Africa, but,
yet, still delude yourself into thinking that
this in and of itself doesn't pre-defeat your
pathetic objection that these ancient TMRCA dates
have nothing going for them other than that
they're assumptions of some biased researcher.
quote:Even with this stupid rambling, Kefi et al.'s report remains discredited, and there is nothing you can do about it other than, well, what crackpots do: continue to rely on discredited information.
What's tha matta, charlatan, does it pain you to
see H/CRS and V attested in your precious Taforalt
specimen? You might as well brace yourself,
filthy pig, there is more where that came from!
The lineages cited in the Kefi and Ennafaa reports
(H, V, various U clades) have been found along
with many other Eurasian lineages in Canary
Island aDNA and... drum roll please ...
aboriginal Canary Island populations share
haplotypes with Eurasian lineages common in
Berber speakers. Did the aboriginal Canary Island
populations practice medieval Mediterranean slave
trade, too?
quote:I take it from your playing with cartoons and incomplete quotes, that you have given up on what was requested of you?
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:
Originally posted by The Explorer:
can likely be attributable to .....quote:
Originally posted by The Explorer:
does not necessarily .....quote:
Originally posted by The Explorer:
can likely be attributable to .....quote:
Originally posted by The Explorer:
does not necessarily .....![]()
quote:Because there is no credible alternative
Originally posted by The Explorer:
And you are basing on this on what nucleotide
characteristics? other than "swenet" the chump
says so?
quote:Of course you do. That's why you have a track
Originally posted by The Explorer:
I don't how applying science is "emotionally
troubling"
quote:Filthy pig, the low amount of precise matches
Originally posted by The Explorer:
Explain why the only match mentioned, as your own
reference (Ennafaa et al. 2009) notes as per my
citation, between the Maghreb and Iberia, is the
one that implicates a North African ancestry in
Iberia, as opposed to Iberian ancestry in the
Maghreb?
quote:Because, piece of pork, this haplogroup is
Originally posted by The Explorer:
How have you figured that U5b1b came with the H
clades that have been implicated in Ennafaa et
al.'s report came from the "same refuge area" as
the supposedly European U5b1b?
quote:No, lying piece of pork. What I DO remember, is
Originally posted by The Explorer:
You'll be hard-pressed to find a situation to the
contrary, against your wishes.
quote:Filthy pig, are you saying that your earlier
Originally posted by The Explorer:
You imagine I'm lying
quote:In your dreams,
Originally posted by The Explorer:
Even with this stupid rambling, Kefi et al.'s
report remains discredited
quote:This is of course a shining expression of a lack of a nucleotide premise for your silly assumptions.
Originally posted by Swenet:
Because there is no credible alternative
scenario, which you will confirm in your next
post by your glaring inability to present one.
quote:Apparently your supernatural abilities allow you to see some capacity in me that I possibly can't myself: Why then don't you tell me how my habit of applying science, the very opposite of what you do, can possibly be an "emotionally troubling" experience.
Of course you do. That's why you have a track
record of dodging and running away from my posts,
like the little pop-sh!t-and-run-off coward that
you are.
quote:Thinking through your numbass again: half of the H lineages
Filthy pig, the low amount of precise matches
between Iberia and the Maghreb is state of
affairs that poses no problem to my case, as I'm
telling your dumbass for the 2nd time that these
clades have been locally differentiating for
millennia on both sides of the Mediterranean.
quote:Why? Never advanced the idea that all H clades must have come from Europe, let alone relegated to European female slavery. You are a knuckleheaded ignoramus, and so naturally, you drew up that clumsy assumption on your own.
It
does, however, pose a problem to your retarded
view that these lineages are candidates for
medieval female oriented slave trade.
quote:You are merely repeating what you were just questioned on, fuckhead. Talk about being stuck on broken record.
Because, piece of pork, this haplogroup is
implicated, along with H and V, as having
undergone local differentiation in the Maghreb,
and because the idea of it coming from that area
mirrors what has been said about the lineages
implicated in the re-settlement of Europe from
the Franco-Cantabrian region, for years. Of
course, you wouldn't know this, being the
charlatan that you are.
quote:It's not about rejecting a possibility for an estimation; it's about understanding its assumptive nature and applying it as such, silly chump.
No, lying piece of pork. What I DO remember, is
that you selectively jump on and off the TMRCA
bandwagon, like the sly, deceitful pig that you
are. For instance, when Casas et al 2006 argued
for Upper Palaeolithic migration from North
Africa to Iberia, based on some inference that is
much weaker than Ennafaa's TMRCAs, you graciously
latched on to that bandwagon like a needy leech:
quote:The best you can do is to dig like a madman for a post that was taking you at task for misrepresenting Casas et al.? LOL
As for Casas et al.’s report, it’s about
making sure misinformation about their findings
does not go unabated. Their findings point to
Upper Paleolithic origins of the European L1b,
which is what you seem to be having a lot of
trouble coming to terms with.
--Explorer
quote:A lie? I'll be damned if I even know what your thinking-retardant skull is talking about. For instance, I know for a fact that I don't use stupid imaginary words like "extra-TMRCA". Won't be a stretch for everything else in that wimping above to be imaginary as well.
Filthy pig, are you saying that your earlier
claim about the lack of extra-TMRCA ''assumption-
based'' evidence for early dates of H, V in
Northern Africa (e.g., local differentiation,
appearance in Canary Island aDNA, etc) wasn't a
lie?
quote:fuckface, those were Taforalt remains! Already you are unable to distinguish between EpiPaleolithic and the contemporary populations, even though your monkey ass was informed to the contrary multiple times.
In your dreams,
charlatan. All the sequences have been accounted
for in modern Berbers.
quote:It's simple for me, numbnut: Cite all the nucleotides that Kefi et al. report, and describe the accuracies about them.
There is mtDNA continuity
from the sampled Taforalt specimen to today, and
it pains you to no end. It pains you that these
results mirror modern Berber mtDNAs and that this
is mathematically impossible if these results are
inauthentic, doesn't it, filthy pig?
quote:Silly lying ass pig is now on record lying again
Originally posted by The Explorer:
This is of course a shining expression of a lack
of a nucleotide premise for your silly
assumptions.
quote:Lying ass pig, since you know so much about the
Originally posted by The Explorer:
Do you realize how much of a population expansion
that would require to generate that kind of a
difference?
quote:You're saying that as if you have any optional
Originally posted by The Explorer:
Why? Never advanced the idea that all H clades
must have come from Europe, let alone
relegated to European female slavery.
quote:Lying pig, you asked me how I figured it was the
Originally posted by The Explorer:
You are merely repeating what you were just
questioned on,
quote:Lol, flip flopping slippery snake. How are they
Originally posted by The Explorer:
It's not about rejecting a possibility for an
estimation; it's about understanding its
assumptive nature and applying it as such, silly
chump.
quote:Never said you did, however, the fact that you're
Originally posted by The Explorer:
For instance, I know for a fact that I don't use
stupid imaginary words like "extra-TMRCA".
quote:Lying again, aren't you, filthy pig? How does
Originally posted by The Explorer:
those were Taforalt remains! Already you are
unable to distinguish between EpiPaleolithic and
the contemporary populations
quote:You are such a phuckin' cretin. Taking about
Originally posted by The Explorer:
It's simple for me, numbnut: Cite all the
nucleotides that Kefi et al. report, and describe
the accuracies about them.
quote:If I'm "lying" stupid monkey, why then the hold up on your elusive nucleotide-specific premise?
Originally posted by Swenet:
Silly lying ass pig is now on record lying again
that none of my arguments included nucleotide
specifics.
quote:How would you know what said "matrix" looks like, when you base your thoughtlessness on thin air rather than nucleotide specifics? A fairy tale is making thoughtless wild guesses about ancestry out of anything but a genetic basis.
Not that I needed those; the fairy
tale nature of the prospect of these mtDNAs
spawning in Northern Africa is self-evident given
the absence of any indigenous mtDNA that could
have served as a matrix.
quote:That's just it, chump: I can't think of any case in an mtDNA parent-offspring scenario where this much discordance, as that inferred between Maghrebi and Iberian sub-clades and haplogroups, is attained in that time span, while on the other hand, something like this was allegedly happening:
Lying ass pig, since you know so much about the
population expansions this would require, and
since you're so sure that something out of the
ordinary is going on here, prove that the
dynamics implicated here are any different in
similar cases where a divergence in the last
10kya is established, like say, certain European
L types.
quote:You are right, these "non H1, H3, V and U5" would be imaginary, born out of your imagination. Many clades of Europe (as Y-DNA also shows) rarely originate in Europe, including these very clades you name here, but of course that would surprise any slave-minded basket case like you.
You're saying that as if you have any optional
other groups to assign this fictional narrative.
Post these imaginary non H1, H3, V and U5
lineages that are simultaneously non-Near
Eastern, along with your sources.
quote:By showing me that you have figured it out of a lack of thinking, since you merely repeated what was questioned only moments ago?
]Lying pig, you asked me how I figured it was the
case, and I answered your stupid question.
quote:Get a new line; incomplete quotation directed at refuting your bungled understanding of Casas et al is old and tired, and cannot demonstrate inconsistency in my stance on the subjective component of age simulations any more than when it was first used. By contrast, like the fuckheaded sucker you are, you actually believed/believe in the idea that solid dates could accurately be attained from these simulations.
Lol, flip flopping slippery snake. How are they
merely ''assumptions'' when they don't gel with
your case, but ''point to Upper Paleolithic
origins of the European L1b'' when they agree
with you?
quote:Dancing around "the issue" that only makes about as much sense (per your thinking-retardant skull) as your "extra-TMRCA"? LOL
Never said you did, however, the fact that you're
now dancing around the issue like the snake that
you are is indicative of the fact that you know
you phucked up when you marginalized the
independently established old age of the H1 and
H3 clades as merely based on ''assumptions''.
quote:There cannot be "continuity" between illusionary DNA and real DNA, you stupid chump.
Lying again, aren't you, filthy pig? How does
saying there is continuity between modern Berber
speakers and Taforalt remains equal confounding
the two?
quote:Then you must not have compared this imagined "retardation" against your silly usage of a discredited material as supporting evidence. That's because you are that retarded (you are too retarded to know what is actually retarded).
You are such a phuckin' cretin. Taking about
''describe the accuracies about them''. That has
to be the most retarded nondescript question I've
ever read.
quote:Had you said that this is the "most retarded nondescript question I've ever read" instead of its irrelevant application above, then you would have been on firm grounding, and established that you are capable of a glimmer of critical thinking. Be a good little puppy, and dig up what I noted about H clades for instance, only moments ago.
What are Berber shared Eurasian mtDNA
haplotypes to the tune of >75%, supposedly
obtained from European female oriented slave
trade, doing in pre-colonial Canary Island aDNA?
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:
Figure 1. Y-Chromosomal Haplogroups in Iberian, North African, and Sephardic Jewish Samples
Binary marker phylogeny of the Y chromosome, showing mutations on the branches of the tree, and shorthand haplogroup names40 immediately beneath. Haplogroups unobserved in any sample are indicated by dashed branches on the tree. Below the phylogeny are given the percentages of chromosomes carrying the observed haplogroup. Abbreviations are as follows: n, sample size; h, Nei’s unbiased estimator of gene diversity. Data on North African populations are from the literature (see footnotes).
a Data from Bosch et al.34
b Data from Arredi et al.,47 with haplogroup prediction for hgG.
c Subhaplogroups of R1b3 were not typed in the Sephardic Jewish sample.
quote:
Figure 2. Haplogroup Distributions in Iberian, North African, and Sephardic Jewish Populations
Haplogroup profiles of samples from the Iberian Peninsula and the Balearic Islands, published North African samples,34,47 and a Sephardic Jewish sample. Sectors in pie charts are colored according to haplogroup in the schematic tree to the right, and sector areas are propor- tional to haplogroup frequency. Sample names, abbreviations, and sizes (within pie charts) are indicated. Subhaplogroups of R1b3 were not typed in the Sephardic Jewish sample.
quote:
Figure 4. Iberian, North African, and Sephardic Jewish Admixture Proportions among Iberian Peninsula Samples
Mean North African, Sephardic Jewish, and Iberian admixture proportions among Iberian samples, based on the mY estimator and on Moroccan, Sephardic Jewish, and Basque parental populations, are represented on a map as shaded bars on bar charts. Error bars indicate standard deviations, and three-letter codes indicate populations, as given in Figure 1.
quote:Susan M. Adams, Mark A. Jobling et al.
Figure 6. Diversity of Y-STR Haplotypes Belonging to Haplogroup R1b3
Reduced median network53 containing the eight-locus Y-STR (DYS19, DYS389I, DYS389II-I, DYS390, DYS391, DYS392, DYS393, DYS439) haplotypes of 767 hgR1b3 chromosomes, from Iberian populations and the Sephardic Jewish and Moroccan parental samples used in admix- ture analysis. Circles represent haplotypes, with area proportional to frequency and colored according to population, as shown in the key. For Iberian data, hgs R1b3b, R1b3d, R1b3f, and R1b3g have been combined into hgR1b3, because these sublineages were not distin- guished in the Sephardic Jewish sample.
quote:
Most studies of European genetic diversity have focused on large-scale variation and interpretations based on events in prehistory, but migrations and invasions in historical times could also have had profound effects on the genetic landscape.The geographical distribution of North African ancestry in the peninsula does not reflect the initial colonization and subsequent withdrawal and is likely to result from later enforced population movement—more marked in some regions than in others—plus the effects of genetic drift.
quote:Etc...
The established population of the Iberian Peninsula prior to 711 CE has been estimated at 7–8 million people, ruled by about 200,000 Germanic Visigoths,19 who had entered from the north in the sixth century. Though the initial invading North African force was between 10,000 and 15,000 strong, the scale of subsequent migration and settlement is uncertain, with some claiming numbers in the hundreds of thousands. 20 Islamization of the populace after the invasion was certainly rapid, but it has been argued that this reflects an exponential social process of religious conversion rather than a substantial immigration;21 a sizeable proportion of the indigenous population (the so-called Mozarabs) was allowed to retain its Christian practices, as a result of the religious tolerance of the Muslim rulers.22 There is also doubt about the extent of intermarriage between indigenous people and settlers in the early phase.20 After the overthrow of Islamic rule in most of the peninsula, a period of tolerant coexistence (convivencia) ensued in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, but after 1492 (1496 in Portugal), religious intolerance forced Spanish Muslims to either convert to Christianity (as so-called moriscos) or leave.23 After the fifteenth century, moriscos were relocated across Spain on occasion, and, finally, during 1609–1616, over 200,000 were expelled, mostly from Valencia.
quote:Of course you're lying. The TMRCA dates I listed,
Originally posted by The Explorer:
If I'm "lying" stupid
quote:Non-replies aside, I notice that your explanation
Originally posted by The Explorer:
How would you know what said "matrix" looks like,
when you base your thoughtlessness on thin air
rather than nucleotide specifics?
quote:What do you mean ''this much discordance''. WTF
Originally posted by The Explorer:
That's just it, chump: I can't think of any case
in an mtDNA parent-offspring scenario where this
much discordance
quote:Yes, dumbass, this situation is exactly parallel
Originally posted by The Explorer:
Can you think of African-sourced European L
clades that fit the bill?'
quote:Who says they lack a ''male correspondence'',
Originally posted by The Explorer:
lacks a male correspondence?
quote:Strawman. Stop lying, pig. No one is talking
Originally posted by The Explorer:
Many clades of Europe (as Y-DNA also shows)
rarely originate in Europe, including these very
clades you name here
quote:This shows how truly retarded you are. If I'm
Originally posted by The Explorer:
By showing me that you have figured it out of a
lack of thinking since you merely repeated what
was questioned only moments ago?
quote:So it's settled then. In your feeble mind, TMRCA
Originally posted by The Explorer:
Get a new line; incomplete quotation directed at
refuting your bungled understanding of Casas et
al is old and tired
quote:No lying ass troll. I actually know, unlike you,
Originally posted by The Explorer:
By contrast, like the fuckheaded sucker you are,
you actually believed/believe in the idea that
solid dates could accurately be attained from
these simulations.
quote:Dancing around the issue for a second time, pig!
Originally posted by The Explorer:
Dancing around "the issue" that only makes about
as much sense (per your thinking-retardant skull)
as your "extra-TMRCA"?
quote:Non-reply. I asked your lying ass how your false
Originally posted by The Explorer:
There cannot be "continuity" between illusionary
DNA and real DNA
quote:''list the accuracies about them''--Explorer
Originally posted by The Explorer:
Then you must not have compared this imagined
"retardation" against your silly usage of a
discredited material as supporting evidence.
quote:Blablabla. Filthy pig, I know it pains you to no
Originally posted by The Explorer:
Had you said that this is the "most retarded
nondescript question I've ever read" instead of
its irrelevant application above
quote:You are too stupid to even tell the difference between a supposed date and nucleotide sequence. They are all the same to you, chump.
Originally posted by Swenet:
Of course you're lying. The TMRCA dates I listed,
are after all, based on nucleotide data.
quote:I brought up "fore-runners of Maghreb" in this thread, where, fuckhead? And no fake paraphrasing, just quotes, and complete at that.
Non-replies aside, I notice that your explanation
regarding the imaginary fore-runners of Maghrebi
H1, H3, V and U5 is still pending. You brought it
up, cretin, and you fail to make a coherent case
for it.
quote:Yes dud-head, they were undoubtedly referring to different clusters (subclades) of a single lineage (clade). However, they were also referring to different haplogroups. So, it's not an either/or. You are too fuckheaded to understand that, no doubt.
What do you mean ''this much discordance''. WTF
are you talking about? This report is talking
about shared sublineages occuring on both sides
of the Mediterranean, which are only
differentiated by their haplotypes or they share
haplotypes and are differentiated at an even
finer resolution.
quote:shythead, it's the question of the degree of discordance between a supposed parental population and the derivative population. Given the limited geographical range of contemporary Maghrebi populations and given the time depth, that level of discordance is too stark. The only way for a discordance like that to happen in a relatively short time span, is for the derivative population to undergo extraordinary expansion events. Dig it now, idiot?
Prove that something is out of
the ordinary here and that other haplogroups with
a common ancestor 10kya don't have the same local
differentiation bespeaking peculiarities at their
phylogenetic tips.
quote:fuckhead, you base the level of discordance between a parental population and a derivative one on a single clade, and a single transition, and have the nerve to call somebody else dumb?
Yes, dumbass, this situation is exactly parallel
to Casas et al's European specific L1b with the
16175 transition.
quote:You are too retarded to know why are discussing with me, and even more retarded about the subject you are discussing with me.
That you can't even think of a
single example without having to be held by hand
just goes to show how out of touch with reality
you are. I'm not even sure why I'm talking to
your dumbass.
quote:DNA sequencing results says so, Mrs. dufus!
Who says they lack a ''male correspondence'',
cretin?
quote:R1b distribution is negligible in the Maghreb, whereas the maternal gene pool that you love to call "Eurasian" makes up a substantial component of certain coastal Maghrebi samples. Only a dickhead will use a negligible to non-existent distribution of R1b as evidence of the paternal correspondence of such a gene pool.
I'm not sure that they do, but since
you're apparently convinced of this
unsubstantiated belief, prove that all coastal
R1b(xV88) lineages in the Maghreb are ruled out
from representing such a male contribution.
quote:As implied where, douche-bag? Quotes -- not your brainless snippets of incomplete quotes.
Strawman. Stop lying, pig. No one is talking
about ultimate origin. Since you say you're not
implicating Franco-Cantabrian lineages in your
medieval European slave trade fairytale
quote:It's easy to blame me for your brainless regurgitated non-replies to a question you were too thick in the skull to answer, which again was this:
This shows how truly retarded you are. If I'm
basing an observation on a piece of material, how
is asking me the same question going to change
that reality? Am I supposed to fetch your dumbass
new lines of reasoning because you ask the same
question twice? Talk about being a complete airhead.
quote:What's settled, is that you are too fucked in the head to know when you are being refuted for your mangled up understanding of Casas et al., which is why you are incessantly using the same incomplete quote as a supposed inconsistency on my part, with regards to knowing the subjective aspect of age estimations. In fact, I was correcting you then as well, in relation to this subjective nature. Of course, correcting you is a wasteful undertaking, unless one is doing it for the benefit of readers who have working brains.
So it's settled then. In your feeble mind, TMRCA
estimates point to specific periods of
immigration whenever they agree with your
beliefs, but whenever they disagree with
your beliefs, they are mere ''assumptions''.
quote:"NO", my ass, fuckhead. So you are now self-convinced that you were never too suckered and dead in the head to have believed in a solid date ascribed to a skin pigmentation allele, namely SLC24A5? LOL
No lying ass troll.
quote:Tell me how goldie locks, by explaining to a numb head like you that age estimations generally rely on certain assumptions made by the researchers, I am supposed to have fucked up?
Again, you phucked up when you marginalized the
independently established old age of the H1 and
H3 clades as merely based on ''assumptions''. You
totally phuched up!
quote:Your brain is simply too rotted to tell when you have been answered. So, I'll try a different way, knowing that it too will not work: You cannot use erroneous or questionable DNA information as evidence of "continuity", idiot! But you do, because you imagine it helps advance your ideological zealotry.
quote:Non-reply. I asked your lying ass how your false
Originally posted by The Explorer:
There cannot be "continuity" between illusionary
DNA and real DNA
accusation about confounding Taforalt specimen
with modern Berbers applies to my statement that
there is mtDNA continuity between the two.
quote:You are stinking retarded to know when not to use information that has specifically been discredited. How then can you not be able to effortlessly prove otherwise, now that someone else did the heavy lifting of examining the veracity of the work (which you claim is an impossible undertaking) you fuckheaded monkey?
''list the accuracies about them''--Explorer
^As if anyone can vouch for the accuracy of the
empirical results of ANY authors' data.
Yet, that's what you asked of me. This is how
monstrously retarded you are.
quote:I thought I told you to be a good little puppy and do this: dig up what I noted about H clades for instance, only moments ago.
Blablabla. Filthy pig, I know it pains you to no
end to see your ''slave trade'' fairy-tale
disintegrate in front of your eyes like that, but
stop running away from the inevitable, for once.
What are supposedly ''slave trade'' lineages
doing in the aDNA of isolated Canary Island
communities?
quote:I'm sure that that's the lie you tell
Originally posted by The Explorer:
You are too stupid to even tell the difference
between a supposed date and nucleotide sequence.
quote:You'll just keep lying won't you? I'm telling
Originally posted by The Explorer:
I brought up "fore-runners of Maghreb" in
this thread, where
quote:Stop lying, sicko. The piece you cited, which I
Originally posted by The Explorer:
However, they were also referring to
different haplogroups.
quote:When I ask you to prove that the discordance is
Originally posted by The Explorer:
Given the limited geographical range of
contemporary Maghrebi populations and given the
time depth, that level of discordance is too
stark.
quote:Dishonest lying piece of sh!t. The piece I'm
Originally posted by The Explorer:
you base the level of discordance between a
parental population and a derivative one on a
single clade, and a single transition
quote:Moving the goal post. The original issue that
Originally posted by The Explorer:
R1b distribution is negligible in the Maghreb,
whereas the maternal gene pool that you love to
call "Eurasian" makes up a substantial component
of certain coastal Maghrebi samples.
quote:^Misplacing your own responsibilities onto others.
Originally posted by The Explorer:
To top that, the burden is on YOU to prove that
the minuscule R1b that you find here and there
are in fact prehistoric clades that supposedly
came with said maternal gene pool, supposedly
from Iberia.
quote:Lying pig, when it downed on you that the very
Originally posted by The Explorer:
As implied where, douchebag?
quote:You have to seriously be phuched in the head to
Originally posted by The Explorer:
It's easy to blame me for your brainless
regurgitated non-replies to a question you were
too thick in the skull to answer
quote:LMAO. You were resisting Cerezo et al's revision
Originally posted by The Explorer:
In fact, I was correcting you then as
well, in relation to this subjective nature.
quote:Lying again. What that piece that you're
Originally posted by The Explorer:
by explaining to a numb head like you
that age estimations generally rely on certain
assumptions made by the researchers, I am
supposed to have fucked up?
quote:Non-reply. **How** does my earlier statement fit
Originally posted by The Explorer:
Your brain is simply too rotted to tell when you
have been answered.
quote:Yeah, they are discredited and inauthentic
Originally posted by The Explorer:
You are stinking retarded to know when not to use
information that has specifically been discredited.
quote:LMAO. It pains you so much that the pre-Medieval
Originally posted by The Explorer:
I thought I told you to be a good little
puppy and do this: dig up what I noted about H
clades for instance, only moments go.
quote:Your "real world" is a make-believe chump world. In the real world, you were asked to produce nucleotide specifics, and you give me some numb-minded bullshit about "dates". A cockroach can do a better job of understanding and answering that request.
Originally posted by Swenet:
I'm sure that that's the lie you tell
yourself. In the real world, however, you denied
that my observations regarding H1, H3, V and U5
involved nucleotide specifics, which, as it turns
out, was a lie as well, given the fact that I
cited the TMRCA estimates of some of them.
quote:fuckhead, saying that I have a different take from your emotionally fanatic interpretation of the same data, is not "bring up fore-bearers of the Maghreb".
You'll just keep lying won't you? I'm telling
your dumbass that your explanation is pending,
right after you said ''I have a different take on
their data'' and that Ennafaa is supposedly also
consistent with the H clades being discussed here,
originating ''outside of Europe''.
quote:Read and learn, dickhead:
Stop lying, sicko. The piece you cited, which I
responded to, only made mention of shared
sublineages with a measure of variability at their
tips on both sides of the Mediterranean. The
piece you quoted the last time speaks of a single
coding region mutation. Again, dumbass, how does
this evince ''much discordance''.
quote:You are a complete dead headed piece of shyt. The situation would only be anomalous, if the "parent-derivative" theory was considered, numbnut, and I already described why. So, it is not as if, there cannot be other theories about the Maghreb maternal gene pool. The aforementioned wouldn't be anomalous, if there are many other instances like it, fuckhead...which is what you are asking of me, jackass.
When I ask you to prove that the discordance is
out of the ordinary, relative to parallel
situations, you ''can't think of anything'', yet,
your profoundly retarded dumbass still thinks it's
on to something and that ''that level of
discordance is too stark''. In other words, you
postulated the existence of a anomalous degree of
differentiation based on a comparative situation
you can't even think of. What is keeping me and
other readers from making the observation that
you're not just full of sh!t, but habitually so?
quote:Yeah fuckhead, a single haplotype with a single transition is "no different" from a gene pool of multiple haplogroups and their sub-clades. LOL
Dishonest lying piece of sh!t. The piece I'm
responding to with a parallel example is no
different in the characteristics you mention.
quote:It's ironic that you mention "figment", because any prospect of "discordance" being "noted in H1 clade" with said polymorphism is your figment.
The
imaginary extraordinary discordance you noted in
the H1 clade with the 10257 mutation is all but a
figment of your imagination. As is your figment
that these specifics warrant ''another take of
Ennafaa et al''.
quote:You have your head right up your ass, talking about some insignificant negligible clade (Maghrebi context) as the embodiment of male correspondence for astronomically larger maternal gene pool. If this is not a shining indicator of the state of your utter desperation, I don't know what else is. You are obviously looking at something as absurdly insignificant as R1b, because it by chance, happens to be one of clades that are frequent in Europe. Unlike normal people, you never consider a genetic basis for your retarded speculations. LOL
Moving the goal post. The original issue that
stumped your misfiring neurones was why there was
a supposed lack of male lineages, that are
consistent with fulfilling this complementary
role. Lineages capable of fulfilling this role
are not, as you've stated, absent. Game over.
quote:Sure dick pirate. You bring up the negligible R1b as the corresponding male gene pool to Maghrebi gene pools, and it's my job to prove it for you! LOL
^Misplacing your own responsibilities onto others.
quote:You imagined that I "denied such complementary male gene pool exists", simply because I didn't stoop to taking you seriously, as opposed to anything more than a fat joke, on your buffoonery about the negligible R1b being that gene pool?
The burden is on you since you denied such
complementary male lineages exist
quote:Then you were merely not doing what was specifically asked of you, shithead.
; I merely
offered R1b(xV88) up as potential hitch-hikers of
this Franco-Cantabrian migration to the Maghreb.
quote:Since there is apprently no actual quote for this brainless accusation, I'll take it that you are full of hot air.
Lying pig, when it downed on you that the very
''discordance'' between European and Maghrebi H
clades are utterly inconsistent with Medieval
female slave trade, you switched your pitch and
said that you weren't implicating the H clades we
were discussing.
quote:I'd ask you to produce an actual quote, not an imaginary gobbledygook that you love to offer in lieu, mentnioning "discordant polymorphisms", but I know you'll only offer more of that imaginary gobbledygook hot-air.
With Maghrebi H1, H3, V and U5 all
bearing the ''discordant'' (your word)
polymorphisms compared to Iberian examples
quote:So then, you are hereby admitting that your post was a substance-free and anecdotal gobbledygook, which reflects on a lack of your independent and critical thinking?
You have to seriously be phuched in the head to
think that what you're saying here undermines
what I just told your lying pig face: If I'm
basing an observation on a piece of material, how
is asking me the same question going to change
that reality?
quote:Even though this is just another bullshit pulled right outta your ass, it nevertheless serves as a falsifier of your original use of the incomplete quote as supposed evidence of inconsistency in my mindfulness of the subjective aspect of age estimations.
LMAO. You were resisting Cerezo et al's revision
of this clade's TMRCA based on whole genome
sequencing, and latching onto Casas et al's much
weaker TMRCA, which was just a lazy generalized
inference based on the discovery of a single
transition. STOP LYING, immoral lying ass pig.
quote:Thanks for reminding me, douchebag, what I said in this thread. Now, why is the statement wrong?
That aside, dating estimates are just that,
estimates, and are a subject to the
methodology applied and assumptions that went
along with that, by the authors.
--Explorer
quote:The only things that are fucked up, is your mind and your interpretation of what was said. So I noted that age estimations are as I described; big deal! H1 was not even specifically mentioned in the actual quote, numbnut [even though you still manage to "quote" me otherwise], and rightly so, since it was not meant to apply just to H1.
Lying again. What that piece that you're
responding to is telling you, is that you phucked
up when you marginalized the old age of the H1
and H3 clades as merely based on ''assumptions'',
even though local differentiation in the Maghreb
is another independent clue testifying to their
old age.
quote:Idiot, you can't even remember the stupid crap you do. You used discredited material as evidence of "continuity". How can I make this any clearer; by shoving it up your fat ass, since your thick skull does not work? LOL
Non-reply. **How** does my earlier statement fit
your empty lying ass accusation that I'm of the
mindset that the Taforalt and Berbers are the
same?
quote:You bet they are! And there is nothing your dumbass can do about it, other than just use discredited material anyway, to advance your zealotry.
Yeah, they are discredited and inauthentic
al right.
quote:What "happens" to "occur" in modern day "Berbers" is not substitute for what authentic DNA reading for the Taforalt specimens should be. The Taforalt group is NOT the source population of modern day "Berbers" at that, as you were told countless times. Do I have to shove this too up your fat ass, to make you understand?
They just ''happen'' to occur in modern
day Berbers. Tell me how inauthentic aDNA
essentially replicates the mtDNA pool of modern
day inhabitants of that area, rather than
randomly showing hgs that have no or little
regional attestation.
quote:He is deliberately lying and deliberately
Many studies have attempted to describe
the genetic structure of Tunisian populations
using different autoso-mal markers: the GM and KM
allotypes (Chaabani et al., 1984; Loueslati et
al., 2001; Fadhlaoui-Zid et al., 2004a), HLA
class II polymorphisms (Guenounou et al., 2006;
adhlaoui-Zid et al., 2010), autosomal short
tandem repeats (STRs) (Bosch et al., 2001a;
hodjet-El-Khil et al., 2008), and polymorphic Alu
insertions (Ennafaa et al., 2006; Frigi et al.,
2010). These results have suggested a certain
inter-population diversity in Tunisia compared
with Europe and sub-Saharan Africa, with
migrations from both neighboring regions but
with a greater Eurasian contribution.
quote:To keep his ''lopsidedly
The E1b11b1b/M81 subclade has a TMRCA of
4-9kya and expansion around 2kya. It is
therefore relatively new or perhaps recently
emerged from a bottleneck and is subject to
genetic drift (high frequency of genetic
signature, low complexity or variation) in its
isolation.
quote:--Fadhlaoui-Zid et al 2011
Small effective sizes, founder
effects, and isolation processes followed by
genetic drift have been postulated as the
main factors contributing to current population
differentiation of these Berber
samples
quote:--Ennafaa 2009
Although there is no archaeological
evidence to justify such a demic flow from Iberia
to North Africa, based on the phylogeographic
range, comparative gene diversity and ages of
several mitochondrial haplogroups such as V,
H1, H3, and U5b1b [25,37,26], the presence of
these haplogroups in North Africa is thought to
be the result of a southward expansion of
Palaeolithic hunter-gatherers from the Franco-
Cantabrian refuge after the Last Glacial Maximum.
quote:--Explorer
The coalescent age of European L1b clade
has been estimated to be around 20,180 +/- 16,144
years, according Casas et al. (2005), which had
already been cited. Again, pointing to
Paleolithic African contribution. Not sure
what led to equation of Cerezo et al.'s (2012)
L1b1a8 with Casas et al.'s transition 16175-
bearing L1b clades, besides the presence of a
Russian L1b1a8 haplotype.
quote:--The Explorer
^Given that microsatellite Y-DNA analysis suggested that the population ancestral to contemporary northwest African Imazighen ("Berbers") emerged ca. 8.2 kya or so in northeast Africa, the northwest African samples here are all too old to be associated with them. The Mechta-el-Arbi specimen is the only set that comes close to any age associated with contemporary Imazighen speakers, just based on the age given to it; but even here, it is questionable, given that Imazighen expansion in northwest Africa is dated even more recently than the 8 kya time frame -- that expansion dates to ca. 2.3 kya or so. The point is, although some find it tempting to associate contemporary Imazighens with these EpiPaleolithic and early Holocene Neolithic era northwest African specimens, available data suggest otherwise.
quote:--Explorer
That aside, dating estimates are just
that, estimates, and are a subject to the
methodology applied and assumptions that went
along with that, by the authors.
quote:I can get a more intelligent response from a brick wall in discussing genetics than I apparently can with you, chump. I reckon that the chump discusses something as way over the chump's thinking-retardant skull as molecular genetics, because the chump is a chat room attention-whore par excellence; without the internet chat room, the chump realizes that its existence is much worth less than even the fecal matter that comes out of the chump's fat ass.
Originally posted by Swenet:
--''The Explorer'' obsessively cites high
frequencies of E-M81 in Maghrebi populations as
representing a realistic amount of African
ancestry. However, when prompted to replicate
this with other, autosomal, ancestry informative
markers, ''The Explorer'' runs off with his tail
tucked between his legs.
quote:By "East African", who even knows what the dumb fat ass is referring to. East Africa covers the entire span of coastal north Africa to the south of the equator.
Originally posted by Swenet:
He does this because
it's commonly understood that the high frequency
of East African NRY chromosomes in Berbers
speakers is misleading and not representative of
their real amount of East African ancestry, which
is closer to ~10%.
quote:Staying true to form, the dumbass chump merely parrots what others say, with no modicum of independent or critical thinking.
quote:
Many studies have attempted to describe
the genetic structure of Tunisian populations
using different autoso-mal markers: the GM and KM
allotypes (Chaabani et al., 1984; Loueslati et
al., 2001; Fadhlaoui-Zid et al., 2004a), HLA
class II polymorphisms (Guenounou et al., 2006;
adhlaoui-Zid et al., 2010), autosomal short
tandem repeats (STRs) (Bosch et al., 2001a;
hodjet-El-Khil et al., 2008), and polymorphic Alu
insertions (Ennafaa et al., 2006; Frigi et al.,
2010). These results have suggested a certain
inter-population diversity in Tunisia compared
with Europe and sub-Saharan Africa, with
migrations from both neighboring regions but
with a greater Eurasian contribution.
quote:Every nuclear DNA can attribute "drift" as a factor in frequency, moron. That's besides the point, as I have already told your numb head. I am not going to go over those points endlessly, which is where this will go, if I let your stupidity drag me along. The outstanding questions holding your feet to the fire are still on these pages. Keep me posted when you are not too yellow and dumb to finally confront them.
He is deliberately lying and deliberately
misleading everyone when he talks about the
Berber NRY pool being ''lopsidedly African'',
without the side-note that high levels of E-M81
in Maghrebi populations are only due to drift
quote:This too has been covered, with regards to the diversity of Maghrebi E-M35 derived gene pool, and how its correlation to the Maghrebi maternal gene pool argues against "genetic drift" as the prime reason for the lopsided "African" paternal gene pool, which doubtlessly, was simply ignored, i.e. the easy way out of hot waters. If the primary paternal ancestry of the Maghrebi populations was not "African", no amount of genetic drift is going to magically turn it into "African". None of this, of course, is going to soak into that dickhead's impenetrable skull.
quote:
The E1b11b1b/M81 subclade has a TMRCA of
4-9kya and expansion around 2kya. It is
therefore relatively new or perhaps recently
emerged from a bottleneck and is subject to
genetic drift (high frequency of genetic
signature, low complexity or variation) in its
isolation.
quote:Just as you are confused about what and what not "univariate" is, you are unable to distinguish between when someone is schooling you and when someone is denying something.
--When he was told that uni-parental analysis is
inherently inferior to autosomal analysis when it
comes to guaging admixture, due to the fact that
the former is uni-variate and the latter is
(usually) multi-variate, ''The Explorer''
vehemently denied that uniparental analysis is
uni-variate.
quote:The knucklehead forgot to highlight this bit, in the post above:
quote:--Ennafaa 2009
Although there is no archaeological
evidence to justify such a demic flow from Iberia
to North Africa, based on the phylogeographic
range, comparative gene diversity and ages of
several mitochondrial haplogroups such as V,
H1, H3, and U5b1b [25,37,26], the presence of
these haplogroups in North Africa is thought to
be the result of a southward expansion of
Palaeolithic hunter-gatherers from the Franco-
Cantabrian refuge after the Last Glacial Maximum.
quote:Only an idiot will take you seriously, given your shitheaded Casas et al. fiasco, which you tried to use as "proof" of inconsistency with miserable results...when in fact it spoke squarely to your utter mindlessness even when people are merely correcting your fucked-in-the-head understanding of real world things. Get a brain, sucker!
the very instant TMRCA estimates disagree with
his postion, like when Ennafaa cite TMRCA
estimates of mtDNA H1, H3, V and U5, showing them
to have a very ancient presence in the Maghrebi