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Berbers are primarily not African ?
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Trollkillah # Ish Gebor: [QB] [QUOTE]Originally posted by the lioness,: [qb] [QUOTE]Originally posted by Trollkillah # Ish Gebor: You are as stupid as you are amusing. Speaking of cherry picking. You first posted about the inhabitation of 12Kya. I then post sources on Africans inhabiting the region, as I posted from different discipline. Then to you made up stupid excuses, as you do so often. [/QUOTE]You are stupid. What you posted did not contradict what I posted. You don't like the DNA so you ran off to another discipline. Ok fine, what you continue to not understand is that Africans were inhabiting the region as well as Europeans and mixing. So the fact that you show data that Africans were inhabiting the region does not means non-Africans were not also inhabiting the same region, the Mt and Y tell the story, deal with it You see , in this world not everything is black or white [/qb][/QUOTE]I am waiting for you to post evidence physical remains of Eurasian presence during the Paleolithic, Holocene , Mesolithic Neolithic. Stop waisting my time with all other nonsense. [QUOTE]No southwest Asian specific clades for M1 or U6 were discovered. U6 and M1 frequencies in North Africa, the Middle East and Europe do not follow similar patterns, and their sub- clade divisions do not appear to be compatible with their shared history reaching back to the Early Upper Palaeolithic." [...] Some M1 and U6 sub-clades could be linked with certain events. For example, U6a1 and M1b, with their coalescent ages of ~20,000-22,000 years ago and earliest inferred expansion in northwest Africa, could coincide with the flourishing of the Iberomaurusian industry, whilst U6b and M1b1 appeared at the time of the Capsian culture. [/QUOTE]--Erwan Pennarun, Toomas Kivisild et al. Divorcing the Late Upper Palaeolithic demographic histories of mtDNA haplogroups M1 and U6 in Africa [QUOTE]Although Haplogroup M differentiated soon after the out of Africa exit and it is widely distributed in Asia (east Asia and India) and Oceania, there is an interesting exception for one of its more than 40 sub-clades: M1.. Indeed this lineage is mainly limited to the African continent with peaks in the Horn of Africa." [/QUOTE]--Paola Spinozzi, Alessandro Zironi . (2010). Origins as a Paradigm in the Sciences and in the Humanities. Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht. pp. 48-50 [QUOTE] “..the M1 presence in the Arabian peninsula signals a predominant East African influence since the Neolithic onwards.“ [/QUOTE]-- Petraglia, M and Rose, J (2010). The Evolution of Human Populations in Arabia: [/QB][/QUOTE]
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