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The 'Average' Northwest African Phenotype/Origins of Northwest Africans
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Troll Patrol: [QB] The above is obviously baseless babble by someone who has never been the location to experience what actually can cause these traits such as thin hair texture etc...nor does the map subscribe to anything of main importance. Consequence of interpretation. It's funny because the explanation to why Eurasians whites etc... are the way they are is left without bother. As if their traits appeared from thin air. Poof. LOL What I like to see, lioness is the transgression faces from stereotype African to stereotype European / Eurasian. LOL Show the intermediate faces. You dullard. Repost, African Archaeological Review John E. Yellen National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, Virginia 22230 Abstract [i] Examination of African barbed bone points recovered from Holocene sites provides a context to interpret three Late Pleistocene occurrences from Katanda and Ishango, Zaire, and White Paintings Shelter, Botswana.[b] In sites dated to ca. 10,000 BP and younger, such artifacts are found widely distributed across the Sahara Desert, the Sahel, the Nile, and the East African Lakes. [/b]They are present in both ceramic and aceramic contexts, sometimes associated with domesticates. The almost-universal presence of fish remains indicates a subsistence adaptation which incorporates a riverine/lacustrine component. Typologically these points exhibit sufficient similarity in form and method of manufacture to be subsumed within a single African “tradition.”They are absent at Fayum, where a distinct Natufian form occurs. [b]Specimens dating to ca. 20,000 BP at Ishango, possibly a similar age at White Paintings Shelter, and up to 90,000 BP at Katanda clearly fall within this same African tradition and thus indicate a very long-term continuity which crosses traditionally conceived sub-Saharan cultural boundaries.[/b][/i] And more recent sources: Volume 300, 25 June 2013, Pages 153–170 The Middle Palaeolithic in the Desert The Middle Stone Age of the Central Sahara: Biogeographical opportunities and technological strategies in later human evolution [IMG]http://origin-ars.els-cdn.com/content/image/1-s2.0-S1040618212033848-gr1.jpg[/IMG] [IMG]http://origin-ars.els-cdn.com/content/image/1-s2.0-S1040618212033848-gr2.jpg[/IMG] [IMG]http://origin-ars.els-cdn.com/content/image/1-s2.0-S1040618212033848-gr3.jpg[/IMG] http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1040618212033848 Successes and failures of human dispersals from North Africa (2011) [IMG]http://origin-ars.els-cdn.com/content/image/1-s2.0-S1040618211003612-gr1.jpg[/IMG] [IMG]http://origin-ars.els-cdn.com/content/image/1-s2.0-S1040618211003612-gr2.jpg[/IMG] [IMG]http://origin-ars.els-cdn.com/content/image/1-s2.0-S1040618211003612-gr3.jpg[/IMG] http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1040618211003612 [/QB][/QUOTE]
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