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OT: Etruscans, A MultiEthnic People
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by xyyman: [QB] Mike. That's the point I am making. Greece and all of Southern Europe was a multi-ethnic community. ==== It seems likely that the Greek-speaking peoples [b]moved in on a darker race, pre-inhabiting the region. [/b] ==== Etruscans show closer relationships both to [b]North Africans [/b]and to[b] Turks[/b] than any contemporary population. ====== [i] Dark Greeks Lots of dark people speak Greek today. Western Europeans usually think of Greeks as dark-haired, dark-eyed and darker skinned. But this tends to be a characteristic of all the Mediterranean peoples. It seems likely that the Greek-speaking peoples moved in on a darker race, pre-inhabiting the region. [/i] [QUOTE]Originally posted by Mike111: [qb] [b]xyyman - You missed the conclusion from this rather Whitenized study.[/b] The Etruscans: A Population-Genetic Study Cristiano Vernesi,1 David Caramelli,2 Isabelle Dupanloup,1,* Giorgio Bertorelle,1 Martina Lari,2 Enrico Cappellini,2 Jacopo Moggi-Cecchi,2 Brunetto Chiarelli,2 Loredana Castrı`,3 Antonella Casoli,4 Francesco Mallegni,5 Carles Lalueza-Fox,6 and Guido Barbujani1 [b]Etruscans show closer relationships both to North Africans and to Turks than any contemporary population. In particular, the Turkish component in their gene pool appears three times as large as in the other populations. [i]This is a very good example of how Whites falsify even the truth. They do not say that they are looking and the admixture genes in modern Turks; because as we know, the type of people who make up the modern population of Turkey, did not exist at the time of the Etruscans.[/i][/b] [b]Ancient Etruscans Unlikely Ancestors Of Modern Tuscans, Testing Reveals.[/b] News story from the Science Daily — For the first time, Stanford university researchers have used statistical computer modeling to simulate demographic processes affecting the population of the Tuscany region of Italy over a 2,500-year time span. Rigorous tests used by the researchers have ruled out a genetic link between Ancient Etruscans, the original inhabitants of central Italy, and the region's modern day residents. The findings indicate (as is obvious from the pictured artifacts), that the Ancient Etruscans had little in common with the people who later came to Italy, said Joanna Mountain, assistant professor of anthropological sciences. The findings as documented in ''Serial Coalescent Simulations” indicate a Weak Genealogical Relationship Between Etruscans and Modern Tuscans. The study was published May 15, 2006 in the online version of the National Academy of Sciences. Uma Ramakrishnan, a former Stanford postdoctoral fellow, and Elise M. S. Belle along with Guido Barbujani of the University of Ferrara in Italy, co-authored the paper with Mountain. To date; the Etruscans are the only pre-classical European population that has been genetically analyzed, Mountain said. Two years ago, Italian geneticists extracted maternally inherited mitochondrial DNA from the bones of 27 people called Etruscans found in six different necropolises (burial sites) in Tuscany. The female lineage was investigated because, unlike the male Y chromosome, many copies of mitochondrial DNA are found in each cell and thus are easier to extract, Mountain explained. The finding is important because it questions the common assumption that residents of a particular place are descendants of its earlier inhabitants, Mountain said. Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by Stanford University. [/qb][/QUOTE] [/QB][/QUOTE]
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