...
Post A Reply
my profile
|
directory
login
|
register
|
search
|
faq
|
forum home
»
EgyptSearch Forums
»
Deshret
»
Challenge to Negrocentric-Egyptomaniacs
» Post A Reply
Post A Reply
Login Name:
Password:
Message Icon:
Message:
HTML is not enabled.
UBB Code™ is enabled.
[QUOTE]Originally posted by Calabooz': [QB] [QUOTE]Calabooz, despite extensive influence from Arabia, you can still find Somalis and Ethiopians with negroid features including lips that stick out beyond their noses, as you can among most sub-saharan peoples: eg: http://www.unhcr.org/thumb1/4a44d7276.jpg [/QUOTE]Influence from Arabia has nothing to do with narrow features as you insinuate. Furthermore, you missed my point entirely. You said that Somalis are black, right? You also maintain that prognathism is a black person trait, even though Egyptians were more prognathic than the Somalis you call black! [QUOTE]I call self-styled Afriocentrists 'negrocentrists' instead, because north Africans who are sick of having their heritage usurped coined the phrase. Negrocentrists appear to be more interested in claiming civilizations for an imagined pan-African negro race more than anything else.[/QUOTE]Noone is trying to claim Egyptian civilization here. You're the dumbass white boy who comes here spouting Bullshit about the origins of ancient Egyptian civilization and then has the audacity to name himself as an ancient Egyptians LOL. [QUOTE]Hence 'Egyptomaniacs', obsession with the race of the Ancient Egyptians and equating it with that of the rest of the coninent.[/QUOTE]Black isn't a race. And Egyptians DID come from below the Sahara. [QUOTE]If they think they belong to the same race as the ancient Egyptians, such features as I have described should crop up with some regularity among ancient Egyptians. I'm waiting to see them.[/QUOTE]I just cited the evidence for you to see for yourself: [QUOTE]Originally posted by Calabooz: Furthermore: [QUOTE][b]As a result of their facial prognathism,[/b] the Badarian sample has been described as forming a morphological cluster with [b]Nubian, Tigrean, and other southern (or "Negroid") groups[/b] (Morant, 1935, 1937; Mukherjee et al., 1955; Nutter, 1958, Strouhal, 1971; Angel, 1972; Keita, 1990). Cranial nonmetric trait studies have found this group to be [b]**similar to other Egyptians, including much later material**[/b] (Berry and Berry, 1967, 1972), but also to be significantly different from LPD material (Berry et al., 1967). Similarly, the study of dental nonmetric traits has suggested that the [b]**Badarian population is at the centroid of Egyptian dental samples (Irish, 2006), thereby suggesting similarity and hence continuity across Egyptian time periods.**[/b][/QUOTE]--(Sonia R. Zakrzewski. (2007). Population Continuity or Population Change: Formation of the Ancient Egyptian State. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY 132:501-509) So, the Badarian were extremely prognathic and were generally quite representative of other Egyptian groups.[/QUOTE]Read it and weep and consider yourself PWNED [QUOTE]I'll consider myself pwned when I see a load of ancient Egyptians whose lips that protrude beyond their noses, and not before.[/QUOTE]Ancient Egyptians aren't alive ahaha! But we do have morphological evidence of which I just posted. [QUOTE]Amarna style won't cut it either, by the way, because there are more naturalistic images where he doesn't have anything like the featres I described, and I specified relative realism.[/QUOTE]Art is subjective and open to interpretation. Actual reconstructions of some artwork with a northern phenotype have shown them to more resemble southern Africans [/QB][/QUOTE]
Instant Graemlins
Instant UBB Code™
What is UBB Code™?
Options
Disable Graemlins in this post.
*** Click here to review this topic. ***
Contact Us
|
EgyptSearch!
(c) 2015 EgyptSearch.com
Powered by UBB.classic™ 6.7.3