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High frequencies of Y chromosome lineages characterized by E3b1, DYS19-11, DYS392-12
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Evil Euro: [QB] [QUOTE]Originally posted by [b]rasol[/b]: E3b did not reach Europe until the Neolithic farmers baring E3b from Black Africa and J from West Asia introduced it to Europe (along with farming).[/QUOTE] [URL=http://www.egyptsearch.com/forums/Forum8/HTML/001695.html][b]Subracial Types of Neolithic Agriculturalists[/b][/URL] [QUOTE]Disney would be less bad off using the bogus 'hybrid' theory to explain the Paternal ancestry from Black Africa in Southern Europeans[/QUOTE] I fail to see how an environmentally selected gene from [b]West[/b] Africa helps your case regarding a non-recombining Y-chromosome marker from [b]East[/b] Africa. Evidently, you've sunk to the incoherent "kitchen sink" approach instinctively resorted to when one is [URL=http://www.egyptsearch.com/forums/Forum8/HTML/001660.html]drowning[/URL]. That said, Southern Europeans are, of course, not hybrid. Whereas East Africans most certainly are. Which brings us right back to the [URL=http://www.egyptsearch.com/forums/Forum8/HTML/001582.html]Bottom Line[/URL] and your painfully obvious lack of answers. [QUOTE][i]Dark skin evolved pari passu with the loss of body hair and was the [b]original state[/b] for the genus Homo.[/i] - Nina G. Jablonski Department of Anthropology, California Academy of Sciences, San Francisco, [Annual Review of Anthropology] Oct 2004 East Africans are Black because they always have been.[/QUOTE] We've been over this before. Jablonsky says "dark" skin, not "Black". And I've never claimed that East Africans were once light-skinned. They were, however, skeletally Caucasoid and not Negroid. [/QB][/QUOTE]
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