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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Mike111: [QB] [QUOTE]Originally posted by lamin: [qb] Habsburg, Looks like you have fallen for the Mike syndrome disease of the mind. Let me give you a simple lesson on how the world was peopled over the millenia. I accept the OOA hypothesis which means that humankind began somewhere in East-Southern Africa some 180-200,000 years ago. The climate was tropical/sub-tropical which produced humans who were adaptive to that African ecology and climate. First, there was migration to all parts of Africa then after 120,000 years or so in Africa some of the groups migrated--of course, they did not know where they were going--out of what is now called Africa. Some groups traveled due East into Asia then some split off and migrated Northwards into the temperate zones. Other groups migrated northwards in places like Spain, Southern France and Italy. Archeological findings in the Grimaldi area in Italy created much discussion because the "Grimaldi negroids" had phenotypical traits that were characterised as "Negroid"--traits that were seen as distinct from the Neanderthals and the Cro-Magnons. At that time there was no naming of continents and the very extensive land mass stretching from extreme East Asia to the peninsula now called Europe was the land to which larger groups from Asia settled some 40,000-50,000 years ago. For whatever reasons the Grimaldi types became marginalised and the groups that settled East Asia, Central Asia and Europe multiplied and grew in numbers. More groups migrated into Europe from the Levant and other proximate areas. These settlements began some 40,000 years ago and lasted till some 15-20,000 years ago. DNA analysis traces these population movements in time. A crucial point to note is that the flora and fauna of nature are never static. There are always adaptive pressures at work--all within a mix of genetic drift, bottle-necking, selective mating, and the adapting of certain traits to the environment. It is for this reason that East Asians from North East Asia are genotypically and phenotypically distinct from those populations that adapted to the colder and more variable climates of Europe stretching from 0 degrees GMT to some 90 degrees East. This is how nature operates: adaptations and mutations all subject to the demands of the environment. It is for this reason that the sabre-tooth tiger eventually gave way to the modern tiger of Asia. Darwin observed the same natural processes in the Galapagos Islands. The finches there all descended originally from a single type but then over time they differentiated into distinct types. Some species had thin beaks while others had heavier and more robust beaks--all for feeding on different kinds of vegetation. And humans have done the same thing with dogs--all descended from the domesticated wolf. My point is that over 40,000 years environmental pressures transformed the original African migrants into Eurasia and Europe into populations that are phenotypically and genotypically distinct from those who remained in the tropical and subtropical environments of Africa. It is on this basis that the short-statured Twa from the tall Dinka and Masai. Same for the yellow-coloured Khosian and the very dark Dinka. In Asia one finds the process at work: A South Asian(Indian) is usually easily distinguishable from a South-East Asian(Thailand, Burma, Laos, etc.) The Paleo-Asians that crossed the Bering Straits to settle all of North America some 10-15,000 years ago are phenotypically distinct from those that might have migrated in boats from South East Asia. Have Africans traveled great distances while retaining their original traits notwithstanding evident mutational experiences at the haplogroup level? Yes. Examples are the peoples of the Pacific such as Fijians, Solomon Islanders, New Guineans, and some Polynesians. There are also some marginalised groups in Asia such as the Andaman Islanders and the so-called "Negrito" populations of the Philippines and further South such as Java and parts of Indonesia. Hope the above brief statement answers your questions. [/qb][/QUOTE] [QUOTE]Originally posted by Mike111: It's always painful to watch an idiot attempt to bamboozle with Bullsh1t. Really? Blacks - the strongest, most resilient Humans, just kind of "Faded Away". Now you see my dilemma in determining whether lamin is an Albino fronting Black, in order to disperse false information, or just a really, really stupid African. Who of you can say they know with certainty? [/QUOTE] [/QB][/QUOTE]
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