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'New' clues from thesis, including Nekht Ankh's Mtdna and yellow skin color in art
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Troll Patrol: [QB] [QUOTE]Originally posted by the lioness: [qb] [QUOTE]Originally posted by Djehuti: [qb] [b]LMAO[/b] @ you intelligent folk playing chase the trolls by their nasty tales. [QUOTE]Originally posted my master: [IMG]http://picturestack.com/538/50/ufKPicture15oLQ.png[/IMG] ^^^^^ well how about Sennefer? Sennefer has the same chocolate complexion that many Africans, Palestinians, Indians, Peruvians, Southern Europeans, Turks etc, etc have. So it doesn't prove something [/qb][/QUOTE]Southern Europeans and Turks have chocolate complexions??!! That's a nasty lie of a tale if I heard one! [b]LOL[/b] [/QUOTE]there are numerous non-Africans with dark skin Turk [IMG]http://www.featurepics.com/FI/Thumb300/20080113/Turkish-Man-574237.jpg[/IMG] Thai [IMG]http://i95.photobucket.com/albums/l128/KING9_2006/Blacks%20From%20All%20over%20the%20World/817200009_600178df6c.jpg[/IMG] Kazanlak Bulgarian [IMG]http://picturestack.com/821/50/6nnPicture2b0z.png[/IMG] Indian [IMG]http://thumbs.dreamstime.com/thumblarge_587/12991513623XZ0ha.jpg[/IMG] Sicilian [IMG]http://www.krisvdv.net/pixelpost/image.php?path=20070916111234_sicilian_man_sigar.jpg&maxwidth=350&maxheight=350[/IMG] ______________________________________ now you can claim, with your true negro concepts (when you use "negro" in quotes) that Africans must be some particular "chocolate" shade of your liking but the point is any one of the above men could be a match for an Egyptian skin complexion tell Nigerian actor Chidi Mokeme he's not "chocolate" enough [IMG]http://www.africanmoviesnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/chidi-Mokeme-1.jpg[/IMG] the Egyptians had a diversity of skin tones, not just "chocolate" and Troll Patty is backing me on this [/qb][/QUOTE]Yes, I patty your head off again. Isn't it ironic everywhere else a variety of color complexion can occur, in your small brain. But When it comes to Africa it can't, in your small brain. Even though people have lived in complete different environments for thousands of years. You are so damn dumb, it's pathetic. [IMG]http://tinyurl.com/bv63jlm[/IMG] Funny how you will post anyone but SOUTH EGYPTIANS. YOU HAVE THE HEART OF A DEMON!!!!! I don't know what a Turk, Indian, Kazanlak Bulgarian, Thai has to do with this...Since,..they don't comprise with ancient Egyptians or tropical African limb portions! [b]The nubian mesolithic: A consideration of the Wadi Halfa remains [/b] This apparent continuity could be explained by in situ cultural evolution producing shifts in selective pressures which may act on teeth, the facial complex, and the cranial vault. A series of 13 Mesolithic skulls from Wadi Halfa, Sudan, are compared to Nubian Neolithic remains by means of extended canonical analysis. Results support recent research which suggests consistent trends of facial reduction and cranial vault expansion [b]from Mesolithic through Neolithic times.[/b] [i] [b]From about 20,000 BCE[/b], there are further refinements in stone technology. Very specialized tools appeared, including arrowheads, fishhooks, grindstones, and awls. These most refined of stone implements have the generic name 'microlithic.' This era of the late Paleolithic also saw the development of complex composite tools such as bows and arrows. As well, fishing equipment, including boats, [b]and even pottery appeared in some environmental niches.[/b] As tools became more specialized and finely made, local variations, including stylistic ones, became more and more the rule... From the standpoint of African history the most important development of the late Stone Age was the emergence of more settled ('sedentary') societies. [b]These probably developed first along the banks of the Upper Nile in the Cataracts region, in modern day southern Egypt and northern Sudan (ancient Nubia). Evidence of barley harvesting there dates from as early as 16,000 BCE.[/b] The ability to make greater use of abundant wild grains, probably coupled with greater exploitation of aquatic resources, led to a more settled existence for some people. These more sedentary peoples were a part of what is now known collectively as the African Aquatic Culture/ Tradition. This way of life spread from the Upper Nile into a much larger area of Africa during the last great wet phase of African climate history, which began about 9,000 and peaked about 7,000 BCE. The higher rainfall levels of the period created numerous very large shallow lakes across what are now the arid southern borderlands of the Sahara desert. Inhabitants of shore communities crafted microlithic tools to exploit a marine environment: fishing and trapping aquatic animals. This provided abundant food supplies, particularly high in protein and supported the earliest known permanent settlements. Culturally and linguistically related peoples ancestral to modern Black Africans established settlements throughout this vast, ancient great lakes area. It is theorized that they spoke the mother Nilo-Saharan tongue. Sophisticated water-related technologies supported not only the development of settled communities, but also the invention of things like pottery, which were formerly thought to be associated exclusively with the Food Production Revolution of the later New Stone Age, or Neolithic. While the African aquatic tradition itself lasted only until the beginning of the modern drier period, around 3,000 BCE, its legacy has been felt ever since.[/i] Basil Davidson, [i]Africa in History[/i] (1975) [/QB][/QUOTE]
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