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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 Swenet: [QB] [QUOTE]Originally posted by Swenet: Cite the evidence, right here, right now along with your sources. Where is the evidence that: 1) diversity in E-M78 in modern Berbers precludes genetic drift[/QUOTE]You failed epically. [QUOTE]Originally posted by Swenet: Cite the evidence, right here, right now along with your sources. Where is the evidence that: 2) that Berber mtDNA lineages evince large effective population sizes[/QUOTE]You failed here too. [QUOTE]Originally posted by Swenet: While you're at it, if drift isn't at work here, explain the discrepancy between the extreme rarity of ancestral clades in between E-M81 and E-M35, even though the former only emerged ~5.6kya from the said predecessors.[/QUOTE]Here, you failed more than three times in a row. [QUOTE]Originally posted by Swenet: Then demonstrate that the paternal East African component brought there by Neolithic proto-Berber speakers (e.g., manifested as E-M81 in Y Chromosomal analysis) re-emerges as East African affiliated ancestry when other ancestry informative markers are consulted[/QUOTE]Same here: you failed more than 3 times in a row. [QUOTE]Originally posted by The Explorer: Stop rambling through your ass[/QUOTE]That's what it sounds like to you, no doubt; the equivalent of a flat-earther in the field of genetics who thinks the difference between uni-variate and multi-variate analysis lies in how inherently polymorphic something is, rather than the amount of chosen categories that researchers decide to sort individuals or objects into. Mentally imbalanced bum, educate yourself: [i]Multivariate statistics is a form of statistics encompassing [b]the simultaneous observation and analysis of more than one outcome variable.[/b] The application of multivariate statistics is multivariate analysis.[/i] [i]Univariate analysis is the simplest form of quantitative (statistical) analysis.[1] The analysis is carried out with the description of a single variable [b]in terms of the applicable unit of analysis.[1][/b] For example, [b]if the variable "age" was the subject of the analysis, the researcher would look at how many subjects fall into given age attribute categories.[/b][/i] [QUOTE]Originally posted by The Explorer: you don't know the difference between a "marker" and "variability".[/QUOTE]Variability wasn't even a contention here. You THINK it is, because your mental retardation is leading you to think uni-variate vs multi-variate analysis is an issue of whether some polymorphic locus inherently varies mildly or a lot, hence, your bewildered crack induced discourse into variable loci in the genome, hence your confused rejection of what I'm telling you, hence you being exposed, for the umpteenth time now, for knowing next to nothing about Physical Anthropology. [QUOTE]Originally posted by The Explorer: Still unable to forge a reason to wish away the Tamazight language phylum.[/QUOTE]Now you're resuming your tenacious habit of lying through your filthy canary yellow teeth again, aren't you? I've clearly stated that this language was spoken by pastoral Proto-Berber speakers who brought E-M81 to the Maghrebi genepool from Eastern Africa. STOP LYING, you filthy pig. [/QB][/QUOTE]
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