Probably not unique, although more "European" looking women are usually featured in the media.
Posts: 117 | From: Earth | Registered: Feb 2014
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quote:Originally posted by Elite Diasporan: @Ish Geber
Dang, did not know North Africans traveled Latin America like that.
Also is it true that Berbers of Sahrawi have significant SSA admixture or is that a Eurocentric myth to explain away their more "African leaning" features?
Yes, there is a study on that. I have posted it, but forgot about the authors. If I'll find it I'll posted. For what I know it was a reference to paper by DNA-tribes.
And later another paper confirmed it also. I posted it 2016-2017 in a thread about Hg V88, pertaining Berbers from Central-Africa, and Northwest vs Northeast Berbers. However, they had one of the highest scores in M81, with "sub Saharan" L-lineage.
Posts: 22234 | From: האם אינכם כילדי הכרית אלי בני ישראל | Registered: Nov 2010
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posted
^^Do you remember what were those "L-lineages" because if it were L3 then it cant be explained away via "slavery."
Posts: 1891 | From: NY | Registered: Sep 2014
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quote:Originally posted by Elite Diasporan: ^^Do you remember what were those "L-lineages" because if it were L3 then it cant be explained away via "slavery."
No it was not slavery. I think it was L2 etc.
Posts: 22234 | From: האם אינכם כילדי הכרית אלי בני ישראל | Registered: Nov 2010
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According to lioness this is due to recent slaves / slavery from the "sub-Sahara"
Love this one, the one on the right looks like my sister. My mother calls her "bossie-kop" which might translate into 'bushy head or busy hair'.
-------------------- “Three things cannot be long hidden: the sun, the moon, and the truth.” Posts: 195 | From: Southern Africa(Azania) | Registered: Mar 2017
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I've been to her Instagram page and if I recall right her mother or grandmother has a negroid phenotype so her look isn't unsual.
Posts: 1123 | From: New York | Registered: Feb 2016
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^ If by "recent SSA" you mean 'black' then I disagree because such phenotype is indigenous to North Africa as well. This is why I am weary of the whole SSA vs. NA with the former implying black while the latter 'non-black'. As for "pseudo-Mulatto", her complexion is is actually darker than typical "mulatto" types which is usually what is held up as the standard form of beauty in North Africa.
-------------------- Mahirap gisingin ang nagtutulog-tulugan. Posts: 26238 | From: Atlanta, Georgia, USA | Registered: Feb 2005
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@dj misread your comment,my response was based of that. The stereotype of a mulatto look is somewhere in between both parents isn't always true, though the lighting is a bit of here is imaam hamman with friends Cindy bruna,half Italian and African,Riley Montana who is a black American.
quote:Originally posted by the lioness,: what does the average North American look like?
Do you mean from before or after the annihilation of the indigenous people.
quote:Originally posted by the lioness,: what does the average Algerian man look like?
Your favorite source:
quote:“Turkish corsair and admiral Hayreddin Barbarossa in 1516, captured the city of Algiers from the Holy Roman Empire. Although initially Barbaros and his brothers were independent, after his elder brother's death, Barbaros appealed to Selim for protection.[3] In 1532, during the reign of Suleiman I (the Magnificent), Barbaros was appointed as the grand admiral of the Ottoman Navy and Algeria became an Ottoman possession. Eventually the Ottomans began controlling the hinterland also. In 1552, Salih Reis an Ottoman admiral, marched over the Sahara and captured Touggourt.“
quote: The Turks in Algeria, also commonly referred to as Algerian Turks,[3][4][5][6][7] Algerian-Turkish[8][9] Algero-Turkish[10] and Turkish-Algerians[11] (Arabic: أتراك الجزائر; French: Turcs d'Algérie; Turkish: Cezayir Türkleri[12]) are ethnic Turkish descendants who, alongside the Arabs and Berbers, constitute a strong admixture to Algeria's population.[13][14][15][16] During Ottoman rule, Turkish settlers began to migrate to the region predominately from Anatolia[17][18] and many intermarried with the native population; the male offspring of these marriages were referred to as Kouloughlis (Turkish: kuloğlu) due to their mixed Turkish and central Maghrebi blood.[19][20] Consequently, the terms "Turks" and "Kouloughlis" have traditionally been used to distinguish between those of full and partial Turkish ancestry.[21]