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More proof of "black" Moors
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by MindoverMatter718: [QB] [QUOTE]Originally posted by TheAmericanPatriot: [qb] You cannot prove Europeans recieved migrations from africa [/qb][/QUOTE]The genetic fact that southern Europeans carry an African genetic marker at high frequencies, of which these African lineages are also found in ancient European remains, anthropological evidence identifies clear sub Saharan affinities amongst early farmers in Europe. African cattle genetic sequences found in ancient Europe and still prevalent to this day is irrelevant to you? You do indeed suffer from mental retardation, I'm starting to feel sorry for you. [QUOTE] Y-chromosomal evidence of the cultural diffusion of agriculture in southeast Europe. Battaglia et al. [i]“The presence of E-M78* Y chromosomes in the Balkans (two Albanians) , previously described virtually only in northeast Africa, upper Nile, gives rise to the question of what the original source of the E-M78 may have been. Correlations between human-occupation sites and radiocarbon-dated climatic fluctuations in the eastern Sahara and Nile Valley during the Holocene provide a framework for interpreting the main southeast European centric distribution of E-V13. A recent archaeological study reveals that during a desiccation period in North Africa, while the eastern Sahara was depopulated, a refugium existed on the border of present-day Sudan and Egypt, near Lake Nubia, until the onset of a humid phase around 8500 BC (radiocarbon-calibrated date). The rapid arrival of wet conditions during this Early Holocene period provided an impetus for population movement into habitat that was quickly settled afterwards. Hg E-M78* representatives, although rare overall, still occur in Egypt, which is a hub for the distribution of the various geographically localized M78-related sub-clades. The northward-moving rainfall belts during this period could have also spurred a rapid migration of Mesolithic foragers northwards in Africa, the Levant and ultimately onwards to Asia Minor and Europe, where they each eventually differentiated their regionally distinctive branches.”[/i] [/QUOTE] [/QB][/QUOTE]
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