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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 beyoku: [QB] [QUOTE]Originally posted by xyyman: [qb] Beyoku...? You don't even understand what Beyoku did. he is quoting shyte he doesn't understand. Quoting Dienkess, eg who basically said the same thing as I. Being slick, leaving off data(K2-8) ...thinking it would NOT be noticed. . [/qb][/QUOTE]Yawn. YOu have a short attention span and you do not pay attention to details. A quick google would have brought up the Li et al article which was the source of the Bedouin. [URL=http://www.eecis.udel.edu/~lliao/archive/worldwide_human_relationships_inferred_from_genome_wide_patterns_of_variation.pdf]It can be found HERE[/URL] ********TAKE NOTICE THAT IS THE K=7 ANALYSIS********. I DIDNT INCLUDE THE PREVIOUS K'S BECAUSE THEY ARE NOT IN THE STUDY. BUT THEY ARE IN THE SUPPORTING MATERIAL: [URL=http://www.sciencemag.org/content/suppl/2008/02/21/319.5866.1100.DC1/Li_SOM.pdf]FOUND HERE[/URL] Lets see what else Li. says about K=7 and the Bedouin: [QUOTE] Individuals from different populations can often be distinguished, including highly similar ones such as Han Chinese recruited in northern China versus those recruited in the US (who are mostly southern and central Chinese), Bantus in Kenya versus those in South Africa, [b]two subgroups of Bedouins[/b], as well as Pathan versus Sindhi, and Brahui versus Makrani. [/QUOTE]Hmm, "Two subgroups of Bedouins"......I wounder what is the difference between these two groups..........Lets continue. [QUOTE] [b]Frappe analysis reveals that, at K = 7[/b] and with a 2% threshold, 21 of the 51 populations derived ancestry from at least two ancestral components. In Figure 1A, the Mozabite from the northern Sahara bear contributions from sub-Saharan Africa, the Middle East, and Europe; this group in fact originates from the Middle East. In Europe, only the Adygei, who live to the north of the Caucuses, have a significant South/Central Asian component, whereas the Russian individuals have minor contributions from South/Central Asia, East Asia, and America. [b]In the Middle East, a small subset of the Bedouins appears to have substantially higher Middle Eastern ancestry than the Palestinians, Druze and the ***other Bedouins.***[/b] [/QUOTE][IMG]http://i204.photobucket.com/albums/bb178/beyoku/Lietal_zpsc543e516.png[/IMG] Hmm, which Bedouin have "higher Middle Eastern ancestry" than the other Bedouin? Could it be the ones that stand out with their entire genome being that One component: Brown? Why does Li call that component "Middle Eastern" and not North Africa. Why does Li posit a Middle Eastern origin of the Mozabite? [IMG]http://24.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_mbhs0p4u7G1rhhbuoo1_400.jpg[/IMG] [/QB][/QUOTE]
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