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[QUOTE]Originally posted by S.Mohammad: [QB] [QUOTE]Originally posted by Evil Euro: [b]The Afronuts are fond of using this quote to establish the racial type of pre-historic East Africans (i.e. E3b-carriers): [i]The oldest remains of Homo sapiens sapiens found in East Africa [resemble] several living populations of East Africa, like the Tutsi of Rwanda and Burundi, who are very dark skinned and differ greatly from Europeans in a number of body proportions. There is every reason to believe that they are ancestral to the living 'Elongated East Africans'. They should not be considered closely related to Europeans. [...] In skin colour, the Tutsi are darker than the Hutu, in the reverse direction to that leading to the caucasoids. Lip thickness provides a similar case: on an average the lips of the Tutsi are thicker than those of the Hutu.[/i] [Jean Hiernaux, "The People of Africa"] But according to [URL=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&dopt=Abstract&list_uids=14973781]Luis et al. 2004[/URL], 80% of Rwandan Tutsi Y-chromosomes belong to Bantu haplogroup E3a. Thus, the Tutsi are [i]not[/i] representative of pre-historic East Africans, but rather a product of the Bantu expansion, like all modern sub-Saharan Africans. Their dark skin and thick lips were obviously absent in pre-historic East African populations. Such traits (among others) are West African Negroid accretions. [/QUOTE] On the contrary, Evil Euro is exposed once again for leaving out passages in a genetic study.... [i]Although the E3a-M2 subclade is prevalent in our East African groups (Tutsi, Hutu, Kenya, and Tanzania) as well, [b]these collections contain several additional Y-chromosomal types[/b] and, thus, demonstrate a much higher level of NRY diversity. [b]Therefore, unlike its hegemony in the west, E3a-M2's contribution to the genetic landscape of East Africa was not great enough to completely erase pre-existing Y haplogroups[/b] and may have been diluted further by subsequent migratory movements from the north involving other Y chromosomes[/i] From the same study you quoted from, do you always distort and leave out relevant passages? Your post in effect does NOT refuted the notion that Tutsis evolved biologically in East Africa. [/QB][/QUOTE]
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