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YAP, E, M1 and U6 are all Asian, not African
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Evergreen: [QB] [QUOTE]Originally posted by Evergreen: [qb] [QUOTE]Originally posted by Djehuti: [qb] [b]LOL[/b] Osrion, what you highlight is pretty much a well accepted fact--- there was contact between Egypt and SW Asia during predynastic times via trade but exactly [i]how[/i] does this imply any communities of Asiatic immigrants in the Delta??! [/qb][/QUOTE]Evergreen Writes: I would want to understand what one means when one refers to "Asiatics" in the southern Levant during this timeframe? We have [b]mesolithic [/b] populations from this region with phenetic and genetic characteristics derived within Africa. We have [b]neolithic [/b]populations moving out of this region and into SW Europe with phenetic and genetic characteristics derived within Africa as well. Then we have Upper Egyptians "colonizing" the southern Levant during the [b]proto-Dynastic era[/b]. Within this context the term "Asiatics" has to be used tongue-in-cheek. Many of these "Asiatics" would have to ride on the "back of the bus" in the Segregated South. [/qb][/QUOTE]Evergreen Writes: But if we wanted to learn more about the influx of stereotypical "Asiatics" into the southern Levant and Nile Delta we should look to the Middle Bronze Age. Evergreen Posts: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/04/090423142541.htm Mystery Of Horse Domestication Solved? enlarge Wild horses running in the desert mountains of Kazakhstan. ScienceDaily (Apr. 24, 2009) — Wild horses were domesticated in the Ponto-Caspian steppe region (today Russia, Kazakhstan, Ukraine, Romania) in the 3rd millennium B.C. Despite the pivotal role horses have played in the history of human societies, the process of their domestication is not well understood. In a new study published in the scientific journal Science, an analysis by German researchers from the Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research, Berlin, the German Archaeological Institute, the Humboldt University Berlin, the Max Planck Institute of Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, in cooperation with American and Spanish scientists, has unravelled the mystery about the domestication of the horse. Based on ancient DNA spanning the time between the Late Pleistocene and the Middle Ages, targeting nuclear genes responsible for coat colorations allows to shed light on the timing and place of horse domestication. Furthermore the study demonstrates how rapid the number of colorations increased as one result of the domestication. As well, it shows very clearly that the huge variability of coloration in domestic horses which can be observed today is a result of selective breeding by ancient farmers. Our modern human societies were founded on the Neolithic revolution, which was the transformation of wild plants and animals into domestic ones available for human nutrition. Within all domestic animals, no other species has had such a significant impact on the [b]warfare[/b], transportation and communication capabilities of human societies as the horse. For many millennia, horses were linked to human history changing societies on a continent-wide scale, be it with Alexander the Great’s or Genghis Khan’s armies invading most of Asia and Eastern Europe or Francis Pizarro destroying the Inca Empire with about 30 mounted warriors. The horse was a costly and prestigious animal in all times, featured in gifts from one sovereign to another as a nobleman’s mark. [/QB][/QUOTE]
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