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Genomic Ancestry of North Africans Supports Back-to-Africa Migrations Brenna M. Henn
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by the lioness,: [QB] [QUOTE]Originally posted by The Explorer: [QUOTE]Originally posted by the lioness,: As I mentioned these 3 points are not even applying the back-migration theory and speak to who the Maghrebians are today, I suggest more similar to Eurasians ( incl Arabs and Europeans) than they are to other Africans - on average. [/QUOTE]How are you connecting "Maghrebi" of today with something that happened in the Upper Paleolithic, when they would not have arrived until well after mid-early Holocene? [/QUOTE]I just said the 3 points are inependant of the back migrtaion theory. - but if you do then apply that back-migration theory it does contradict point 3 if to apply to modern popualtions. That Henn theory might have a continuity problem [QUOTE]Originally posted by The Explorer:Again your comparisons are subjective, as you are ignoring data that seemingly conflicts with your opinion. [/QUOTE]It's strong circumstancial evidence, historical anthropological information which is mentioned in genetics articles, spread of islam, colonization etc. origins of haplogroups has a subjective element as well. But affinity is not origins. If a population has higher frequencies of a hap another population might be more similar to them on that basis compared to another group regardless of the originsl origin of the hap. So modern Magrebians may be more similar to Eurasians than other Africans regardless of the origin of the DNA [QUOTE]Originally posted by The Explorer: And the claim about "2-4000" year gap of "no evidence of human settlement" is not entirely accurate. There are areas of the north which feature relative continuous occupation. [/QUOTE]please identify these areas in the Maghreb and cultural names [/QUOTE]" [QUOTE]Originally posted by The Explorer: North Africa" was the context used in your post, and an example of this, would be in the Libyan region, where the so-called "Ibero-Maurusian" and "Caspian" traditions appear to have extended. [/qb][/QUOTE]give and example of a human settlement or remains in Libya after the Capsian but before the Phoenicians a gap period of 2-4000 years [/QB][/QUOTE]
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