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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Autshumato: [QB] [QUOTE]Originally posted by Ish Gebor: [qb] [QUOTE]Originally posted by the lioness,: [qb] [QUOTE]Originally posted by Autshumato: [qb] [QUOTE]Originally posted by the lioness,: [qb] [QUOTE]Originally posted by Ish Gebor: It's simple. Romans introduced written script all over Europe. This is why they use Roman icons in Germanic and Latin based languages. The first people who knew how to read and write were monks and aristocrats. The first books were bibles translated from Latin and later from Greek. [/QUOTE]The Romans and Greeks were European [/qb][/QUOTE]Yes, but there were NOT whites​. [/qb][/QUOTE]white people with tans [/qb][/QUOTE]Or people with admixture? [IMG]http://oi57.tinypic.com/k1z1xx.jpg[/IMG] [IMG]http://i68.tinypic.com/ftlele.png[/IMG] https://twitter.com/arianagrande/status/454424967937916929 [IMG]https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CeH5LOaUUAARFkk.jpg[/IMG] [IMG]http://www.billboard.com/files/styles/article_main_image/public/media/Ariana-Grande-Star-Wars-clip-2015-billboard-650.jpg[/IMG] [QUOTE]Firstly, [b]E-M81 is the most common haplogroup in North Africa showing its highest concentrations in Northwestern Africa (76 % in Saharawis in Morocco [/b] (Arredi et al., 2004)) with cline frequencies decreasing eastward: Algeria (45 %), Libya (34 %) and Egypt (10 %) (Robino et al., 2008; Triki-Fendri et al., submitted; Arredi et al., 2004). [b]Besides, Ottoni et al., (2011) have reported that E-M81 appear to constitute a common paternal genetic matrix in the Tuareg populations where it was encountered at high frequency (89 %).[/b] Hence, the distribution of this haplogroup in Africa closely matches the present area of Berber-speaking population’s allocation on the continent, suggesting a close haplogroup-ethnic group parallelism (Bosch et al., 2001; Cruciani et al., 2002; 2004; Arredi et al., 2004; Fadhlaoui-Zid et al., 2011; Bekada et al., 2013). However, knowing that the Berber dialects have been replaced by Arabic in North African populations, carriers of E-M81 haplogroup are currently Arab-speaking peoples whose ancestors were Berber-speaking. [b]Outside of Africa, E-M81[/b] is almost absent in the Middle East and in Europe (with the exception of Iberia and [b]Sicily[/b]). The presence of E-M81 in the Iberian Peninsula (12 % in southern Portugal) (Cruciani et al., 2004) has been attributed to trans-Mediterranean contacts linked to the Islamic influence, since it is typically Berber (Bosch et al., 2001; Semino et al., 2004; Beleza et al., 2006; Alvarez et al., 2009; Cruciani et al., 2007; Trombetta et al., 2011).[/QUOTE]—S Triki-Fendri, A Rebai 2015 Synthetic review on the genetic relatedness between North Africa and Arabia deduced from paternal lineage distributions [QUOTE]Originally posted by Cass/: And there's not a European genetic cluster; Northern Europeans & Southern Europeans can also easily be distinguished into two separate groups based on autosomal DNA: [QUOTE]Using a genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) panel, we observed population structure in a diverse group of Europeans and European Americans. Under a variety of conditions and tests, there is a consistent and reproducible [b]distinction between “northern” and “southern” European population groups: most individual participants with southern European ancestry (Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, and Greek) have >85% membership in the “southern” population; and most northern, western, eastern, and central Europeans have >90% in the “northern” population group.[/b] [/QUOTE] http://journals.plos.org/plosgenetics/article?id=10.1371/journal.pgen.0020143 [/QUOTE][/qb][/QUOTE]Exactly, or just an Ethiopian, Somalian or Dravidian group of people. [/QB][/QUOTE]
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