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Are Mestizos Jealousy of Afro-American History
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Clyde Winters: [QB] [b] Let's look at the evolution of homo sapiens. Note that the forehead of the earliest humans were larger than contemporary Blacks.[/b] [IMG]http://olmec98.net/3euro.JPG[/IMG] The Eves were also African [IMG]http://olmec98.net/2euro.JPG[/IMG] The Aurignacian people who replaced the Neanderthal looked like this Below is the ancestor of Neanderthals and Australians. [IMG]http://shadowness.com/file/item3/58292/image_t6.jpg[/IMG] The Australians retain the physiology of the first homo sapiens. It appears that the first anatomically modern humans may have had straight hair. The original migrants OOA population had different features than the contemporary Africans. Here is an Australian note the brow ridges and hair. Australoids/Australian negroes on the other hand have curly, wavy or straight hair and abundant body hair. [IMG]https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/originals/b3/69/fb/b369fb8bd66a586fa39e6b86b6acacb3.jpg[/IMG] Here is a contemporary African.The African Negroes are characterized by wooly black hair and sparse body hair [IMG]http://www.africarte.it/foto-storiche/Mongo-%20Bantu%20Congolese.JPG[/IMG] You can clearly see differences between the Australian and African type; while both individuals are described as Negroes you will note that the forehead of the Australian matches in many ways the cranium of earlier hominid forms dating back to the rise of homo sapiens sapiens in Africa. [IMG]http://olmec98.net/AusRod.png[/IMG] Any physical anthropologists would note these changes. The coastal Melanesians usually show mixed Australian-African features or features commonly found among Africans--not Australians.\ Fijians [IMG]http://www.worldatlas.com/webimage/countrys/oceania/fiji/fjpics/famouspics/kaicolo.jpg[/IMG] Australians [IMG]http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2008/02/13/world/13aborig.600.1.jpg[/IMG] A simple observation of Melanesians and Aborigines make it clear that the former population resemble Africans moreso than Aborigines--the original settlers of Asia. The ancestors of the Melanesians and Polynesians probably lived in East Asia. The late appearance of Melanoid people from East Asia on the shore areas of Oceania would explain the differences between the genetic make up of Melanesians living in the highlands and Melanesians living along the shore [1-2]. The skeletal evidence from East Asia [3-7,12] suggests that the TMRCAs of the Polynesians and some of the coastal Melanesians may be mainland East Asia, not Taiwan. The ancestral population for the shoreline Melanesians was probably forced from East Asia by Proto-Polynesians as they were pushed into Southeast Asia by the Han or contemporary Chinese. This would explain the genetic diversity existing among shoreline Melanesians, in comparison to the genetic homogeneity among isolated inland Melanesian, like the Highland New Guineans. There were two Shang Dynasties, one Melanoid (Qiang-Shang) and the other Proto-Polynesian (Yin-Shang). The first Shang Dynasty was founded by Proto-Melanesians or Melanoids belonging to the Yueh tribe called Qiang [7]. The Qiang lived in Qiangfeng, a country to the west of Yin-Shang, Shensi and Yunnan [7-11,13]. The archaeological evidence also indicates that the Polynesians probably originated in East Asia [4,6-7,12-13]. Consequently, the Polynesian migration probably began in East Asia, not Southeast Asia. Taiwan genetically probably belongs to the early Polynesians who settled Taiwan before they expanded into outer Oceania. Given the archaeological record of intimate contact between Proto-Polynesians and Proto-Melanoids, neither a “slow boat” or “express train” explains the genetic relationship between the Melanesian and Polynesian populations. This record makes it clear that these populations lived in intimate contact for thousands of years and during this extended period of interactions both groups probably exchanged genes. References 1. Manfred Kayser, Oscar Lao, Kathrin Saar, Silke Brauer, Xingyu Wang, Peter Nürnberg, Ronald J. Trent, Mark Stoneking Genome-wide Analysis Indicates More Asian than Melanesian Ancestry of Polynesians. The American Journal of Human Genetics - 10 January 2008, 82 (1); pp. 194-198. 2. J. S. Fredlaender, F.R. Friedlaender, J.A. Hodgson, M. Stoltz, G. Koki, G. Horvat,S. Zhadanov, T. G. Schurr and D.A. Merriwether, Melanesian mtDNA complexity, PLoS ONE, 2(2) 2007: e248. 3 F. Weidenreich F., Bull. Nat. Hist. Soc. Peiping 13, (1938-40): p. 163. 4. Kwang-chih Chang, Archaeology of ancient China (Yale University Press, 1986) p. 64. 5. G. H. R. von Koenigswald, A giant fossil hominoid from the pleistocene of Southern China, Anthropology Pap. Am Museum of Natural History, no.43, 1952, pp. 301-309). 6. K. C. Chang, The archaeology of ancient China, (Yale University Press: New Haven, 1977): p. 76 7. Winters, Clyde Ahmad, “The Far Eastern Origin of the Tamils”, Journal of Tamil Studies, no27 (June 1985), pp. 65-92. 8. K. C. Chang, Shang Civilization, (Yale University Press: New Haven, 1980) pp. 227-230. 9. C. A. Winters, The Dravido-Harappa Colonization of Central Asia, Central Asiatic Journal, (1990) 34 (1-2), pp. 120-144. 10. Y. Kan, The Bronze culture of western Yunnan, Bull. Of the Ancient Orient Museum (Tokyo), 7 (1985), pp. 47-91. 11. S. S. Ling, A study of the Raft, Outrigger, Double, and Deck canoes of ancient China, the Pacific, and the Indian Ocean. The Institute of Ethnology Academic Sinica. Nankang, Taipei Taiwan, 1970. 12. Kwang-chih Chang, “Prehistoric and early historic culture horizons and traditions in South China”, Current Anthropology, 5 (1964): pp. 359-375: 375). 13. Winters,Clyde Ahmad, “Dravidian Settlements in ancient Polynesia”, India Past and Present 3, no2 (1986): pp. 225-241. [/QB][/QUOTE] [/QB][/QUOTE]
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