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A European population in Minoan Bronze Age Crete
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by the lioness,: [QB] [QUOTE]Originally posted by xyyman: [qb] Just read some of the supplementals? Are these people for real. Ha! Ha! Ha! Aha! Aha! Aha! Are they kidding me?! Clyde is correct... [IMG]http://i44.tinypic.com/2irvlhl.jpg[/IMG] Lioness?? Here are more that I like. He! He! [/qb][/QUOTE] http://www.nature.com/ncomms/journal/v4/n5/extref/ncomms2871-s1.pdf Your modus operandi is always the same. The first thing you try to impress people with is that you looked at the suppliments as if that is a conspiratorial hiding place. Then you chop out and circle anything African, disregarding the context and this you use to assume African origin of any topic being discussed. (the C & C method, Chop and Circle) the supplimental data has charts A - H You cut out A - D and circle E - H thinking it's in Africa not realizing in these hard to read maps that you actually circled the Levant, lol [QUOTE] It is likely, says Stamatoyannopoulos, that the Minoans descended from Neolithic populations that migrated to Europe from the Middle East and Turkey. [/QUOTE] [QUOTE] The Minoan mtDNA haplotypes resembled those of the European populations (Figs 2b, 3a and 4; Supplementary Figs S1–S3). The majority of Minoans were classified in haplogroups H (43.2%), T (18.9%), K (16.2%) and I (8.1%). Haplogroups U5A, W, J2, U, X and J were each identified in a single individual. The greatest percentage of shared Minoan haplotypes was observed with European populations, particularly with individuals from Northern and Western Europe (26.98% and 29.28%, respectively) (Figs 2, 3, 4; Supplementary Table S7). Notably, in Fig. 4, a gradient can be observed, with the lowest affinity for Minoans found with Northern African populations and the percentage of haplotype sharing increasing as we move through the Middle East, Caucasus and the Mediterranean islands, southern Europe and mainland Europe (Fig. 4a). Of notice also is the high percentage of haplotype sharing with Bronze Age (Fig. 4c) and Neolithic (Fig. 4d) European populations.[/QUOTE] [/QB][/QUOTE]
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