...
Post A Reply
my profile
|
directory
login
|
register
|
search
|
faq
|
forum home
»
EgyptSearch Forums
»
Egyptology
»
Early Back-to-Africa Migration into the Horn of Africa, Hodgson, 2014
» Post A Reply
Post A Reply
Login Name:
Password:
Message Icon:
Message:
HTML is not enabled.
UBB Code™ is enabled.
[QUOTE]Originally posted by Swenet: [QB] [QUOTE] Originally posted by Amun Ra the ultimate: So there was indeed a substructure in Africa before the OOA migrations which affected OOA migrants [b]but it was between the Y-DNA CT carriers and the non-CT carriers (A and B haplogroup carriers). As well as between MtDNA L3 carriers and non-L3 carriers.[/b][/QUOTE]Amun Ra the ultimate cowardly clown. Known on ES for popping sh!t, fleeing the scene when it gets too hot under your feet, only to later resurface with the same fraudulent, thoroughly debunked fairy tales and fake snake act of not remembering the previous time you were forced to abandon your fabricated claims the last time you brought them up. Let's continue exposing your lies concerning Ehret, Hirbo and Tishkoff, shall we? Let's start with your moronic attempt to cite Hirbo in support of your fabrication that the only substructure in pre- historic Africa was between CT and non CT carriers and L3 and non-L3 carriers (which you've pulled out of your ass, as usual) or that West/central African populations coalesce recently with East African populations. Let's see what Hirbo actually states when we start fact-checking your faith- based crap: [QUOTE]However, based on results from the present study [b]there might have been as many as three ancestral clusters[/b]. Both Y chromosome and mtDNA lineages clearly show restricted geographical distribution (Appendix 6, Table 3.3.3, Table 3.4.2, Table A15.1). [b]Derived variants of the putatively most ancestral Y chromosome haplogroup, A, form three separate geographical distributions.[/b] The A1 haplotype lineage [b]is observed only in Central/West Africa,[/b] the [b]A3b2 is observed commonly in East Africa[/b] while [b]A2 and A3b1 lineages are observed only in southern African populations[/b] (Table A15.1, Appendix 6a, Table 3.3.3). Moreover, [b]the slightly younger Y chromosome B haplogroup shows a distribution consistent with three different ancestral population clusters corresponding to the same geographical clusters as observed for the A haplogroup[/b] (Table A15.1, Appendix 6a, Table 3.3.3). Y chromosome haplotype lineages [b]B* and B1 are observed mostly in Central Africa,[/b] while [b]B2a is observed mostly in East African populations.[/b] However, the ancestral variant of B2b, B2b* is found in all the three regions (Central/western, eastern and southern Africa) but is at highest frequency in East African hunter-gatherers (Table A15.1, Appendix 6a, Table 3.3.3).[/QUOTE]--Hirbo [QUOTE]Mitochondrial haplotypes [b]with deep lineages, specifically L0d and L0k (southern Africa), L1 and L2 (Central/west Africa) and L0b, L0f, L5 and L4 (East Africa) mirror what is observed for Y chromosome haplogroup A (Table A15.1, Appendix 6b, Table 3.4.2).[/b] Similar to what is observed for the Y chromosome lineages, the younger mtDNA L3 lineages are mostly observed in Central/West Africa (L3b, L3d, L3e) and in East Africa (L3a, L3h, L3i & L3x, L6) (Table A15.1, Appendix 6b, Table 3.4.2).[/QUOTE]--Hirbo [/QB][/QUOTE]
Instant Graemlins
Instant UBB Code™
What is UBB Code™?
Options
Disable Graemlins in this post.
*** Click here to review this topic. ***
Contact Us
|
EgyptSearch!
(c) 2015 EgyptSearch.com
Powered by UBB.classic™ 6.7.3