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Berbers are primarily not African ?
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Swenet: [QB] Even though the mainstream tries to hide this data, I can post plenty of exceptions to the usual code of silence on this topic in the literature, which support the fact that even Russians and West Eurasian in general have substantial African admixture. They need not have acquired all of this directly from Africans. In fact, most of it was probably brought there by mixed West Asian intermediaries. Fact is though, African-like features have been observed in Kurgan remains near southern Russia. [QUOTE]Originally posted by Evergreen: New Developments in Siberian Archreology By CHESTER S. CHARD [i] v. P. Alekseev discussed the racial types of the Altai-Sayan uplands during the Neolithic and Bronze Age. On the basis of geological and palreo climatic evidence, he feels that the initial human settlement of the area could have taken place as far back as the Lower Palreolithic (which in Soviet usage includes the Mousterian). Judging by the Afontova Gora II cranial fragment, the Upper Palreolithic population evidently must be assigned to the Mongoloid race. The Europeoid component begins to penetrate into certain areas during the Neolithic-especially into the southern part of the Krasnoyarsk Territory. [qb]Alekseev identifies in this latter area a morphologically Negroid type which would indicate contact with_ southern regions.[/qb][/i] Russian Source Materials for the Racial History of Northern Eurasia Author(s): Chester S. ChardSource: Arctic Anthropology, Vol. 1, No. 1 (1962), pp. 117-125 [i]Along with many Mongoloid features it displays prognathism and a wide nose. The latter confirm previous evidence from this area suggesting that [qb]there was a southern element (Negroid- Australoid) in the Neolithic population here which persisted into the Bronze Age.[/i][/qb] [/QUOTE] [QUOTE]Originally posted by Evergreen: [QUOTE]Originally posted by Evergreen: The Palaeolithic of the Urals and the Peopling of the North Author(s): O. N. Bader and Richard G. KleinSource: Arctic Anthropology, Vol. 3, No. 1 (1965), pp. 77-90 [i] In the Holocene, when the continental glacier disappeared from the north and the immediate consequences of the glaciations were overcome, ancient Mesolithic hunters of the region of the Urals settled in the peri-Arctic territory leaving traces of their stay even in the Bol'shezemel'skaia tundra (Chernov 1948). In the region of the Urals, as apparently in the forested zone of Siberia, the transition to the Mesolithic was accomplished by macrolithic tool users (Golii Kamen1 near Nizhnii Tagil) and only later, as the consequences of glaciation were gradually overcome and the landscape zones were displaced to the north, were the Urals settled on both flanks by people with a well-developed microlithic technique (Bader I960). These people came from the south - from the Ponto-Caspian region. This southern wave probably strengthened the Europoid element in the Urals [qb] and possibly brought with it an attenuated Negroid type which later is found west of the Urals in the late Neolithic (Gavrilovka), in the Bronze Age (the Algashinskii burial ground of the Abashevo culture), and even in the Iron Age (the Mari burial grounds).[/qb][/i][/QUOTE][/QUOTE][URL=http://www.egyptsearch.com/forums/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic;f=15;t=003803;p=1#000026]link[/URL] [/QB][/QUOTE]
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