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The Beja: Closest relatives to the Ancient Egyptians
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Doctoris Scientia: [QB] [QUOTE]Originally posted by Djehuti: [qb] ^ [b]LOL[/b] The fool produced a study that said Beja like Amhara carry J1 lineages at around 40% which is still less than 50% of the population meaning that the majority lineages around 60% are still African! How does this count as "high percentage"?? On the flip-side, what about the high admixture of African lineages among Southwest Asians?? The hypocrisy is glaring. Falseprophet also said: "You know what is surprising about Beja is their high admixture of West Asian ancestry. So if beauty is a measure of genetic diversity I can see it on her face." In other words, the guy is like 'toothless lion'-- he disdains anything he conceives as 'pure African' and favors admixture. In his eyes, for that Beja girl to look attractive she [i]must[/i] be mixed! :rolleyes: I don't know who is worse, the white-supremacists or the mixo-supremacists. :o [/qb][/QUOTE]True, but the fact that the J found among East Africans is likely of indigenous East African-Socotra/Hadhramaut... makes it even more annoying. Both J* and J1, in particular J1-M267, are found in abundant numbers in the vincinity of East Africa, Hadhramaut, and Socotra. J2 is also found but in much decreased numbers. Haplogroup J is found at it's highest freguency in that particular East African/Southern Yemeni region, reaching numbers as high as 80%. In regard to other regions, East African J is mush more diversified to those found in the general "Middle East". Undifferentiated paragroup J* is only found on the East African island of Socotra. "Haplogroup J* includes all of J except for J1 and J2. J* is rarely found outside of the island of Socotra, where it is quite frequent at 71.4%." Also, East African J dosen't match those found else where, therefore most likely not due to any gene-flow from any "Near Eastern" areas. And both the Caucasus and North Africa have been eliminated in regard to the origin of J1-M267 J (Y-DNA) originated in East Africa. J1 moved into Yemen, While J2 spread from Egypt into the Levant. J1 were Nomads similar to the Beja, While J2 were farmers similar to more Nile Valley affiliated peoples. Areas like East African Socotra still have the highest % of J* The IJK lineages are also likely of African origin. And being that East Africans are the local descendants of the OOA migrants, them possessing lineages, along side those lineages commonly shared among all Africans (West-Central Africans, Southern Africans etc.) due to common ancestral origins, which are "ancestral" to those found in non-Africans, i.e. M1, N, and even IJK, shouldn't be a surprise in that regard. [/QB][/QUOTE]
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