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[QUOTE]Originally posted by the lioness,: [QB] [QUOTE]Originally posted by Mike111: [qb] [QUOTE]Originally posted by lamin: [qb] Mike, if you believe that Sykes's work is problematic then show some contrary evidence. [/qb][/QUOTE]You dumb bastard, what do you think the attached link is? http://realhistoryww.com./world_history/ancient/Whites/NG_admits.htm Sorry folks, if you give idiot trolls respect, they see it as a reason to do more of same. [/qb][/QUOTE]. . The article at the above links says [QUOTE] DNA recovered from ancient skeletons reveals that the genetic makeup of modern Europe was established around 4,500 B.C. in the mid-Neolithic—or 6,500 years ago—and not by the first farmers who arrived in the area around 7,500 years ago or by earlier hunter-gatherer groups... Archeologists call these first Central European farmers the linear pottery culture (LBK) The details of this "genetic turnover" event are murky. Scientists don't know what prompted it, or even where the new colonizers came from. "The extent or nature of this genetic turnover are not clear, and we don't know how widespread it is," Cooper said. If this turnover were widespread, it could have been prompted by climate change or disease, he said. "All we know is that the descendants of the LBK farmers disappeared from Central Europe about 4,500 [B.C.], clearing the way for the rise of populations from elsewhere, with their own unique H signatures." Peter Bogucki, an archeologist at Princeton University who has studied early farming societies in Europe, called the finding "really interesting" and noted the timing of the genetic turnover is curious. "At the end of the fifth millennium—[about] 4,000 B.C.—there are a lot of changes in the archeological record," [/QUOTE]Another quote [QUOTE] About 7,500 years ago during the early Neolithic period, another wave of humans expanded into Europe, this time from the Middle East. They carried in their genes a variant of the H haplogroup, and in their minds knowledge of how to grow and raise crops. [/QUOTE]Now if we go prior to this it's a long prehistoric period the article: [QUOTE] The first modern humans to reach Europe arrived from Africa 35,000 to 40,000 years ago. By about 30,000 years ago, they were widespread throughout the area while their close cousins, the Neanderthals, disappeared. Hardly any of these early hunter-gatherers carried the H haplogroup in their DNA. [/QUOTE]In other words ----the period at which Europe was inhabited by Africans 40,000 years ago - 7,500 years ago they were hunter gathers ---7,500 years ago - 6,500 years ago,the the African hunter gatherers were replaced by farmers from the Middle East whose DNA was Haplogroup H ---6,500 years ago, to the present (aka 4,500 B.C. - present) the Middle East farmers were replaced by people whowere also of Haplogroup H DNA but different sub-clades of of it. These people adopted farming from the farmers but also went on to develop cities, cathedrals, the Renaissance, the Industrial Revolution and the present electronic age of today [/QB][/QUOTE]
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