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Of course there were 'Horner' pharaohs
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Amun-Ra The Ultimate: [QB] [QUOTE]Originally posted by .Charlie Bass.: [qb] [QUOTE]Originally posted by Amun-Ra The Ultimate: [qb] [QUOTE]Originally posted by .Charlie Bass.: [QUOTE]Originally posted by Swenet: [QUOTE] Originally posted by Charlie Bass: The only one associating broaf trend morphology with stereotypical West Africans is you and Swenet[/QUOTE]Not at all. The very reason why you brought that up is BECAUSE you tacitly wanted to make that deterministic link between West Africa and the broad trend in northeast Africa. Again, anyone even remotely familiar with my posts knows that I've NEVER denied the presence of the broad trend in North Africa. Why even bring up the broad trend of the Natufians, and ask me to clarify something if your tacit suggestion wasn't ultimately to make link between West Africans and Natufians? There is no inconsistency on my part in simultaneously accepting the broad trend in North Africa and my other claims you have issues with, so why ask me to clarify if you didn't think it was a cute segue into attributing the broad trend to something beyond the Nile Valley and adjacent areas? [/QUOTE][b]Dude, stop building strawman[/b] , I never implied anything like that, smh, I asked a simply question, as I said again, my point is that bROAD TREND morphology isn't limited to specific areas in Africa [/qb][/QUOTE]You've just taken out 99.9% of his posts contents. It's all about strawman argumentation. Waste of time. Mildly entertaining. Those 2 idiots, still try to avoid the fact that East and West Africans, before any back migrations, share common ancestors for most of their genome well after the OOA migrations of non-Africans. As discussed here: http://www.egyptsearch.com/forums/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic;f=8;t=008966;p=12#000550 and here: http://www.egyptsearch.com/forums/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic;f=8;t=009022;p=8#000351 [/qb][/QUOTE]They may indeed share a common origin from way back, but have been differentiated long enough to be distinct from each other. Modern West Africans appear to be more recent [/QB][/QUOTE]I agree with that. But it must be noted that the differention with modern East African due to genetic drift and adaptation to new lifestyles, etc, is complicated by the recent back migrations of non-African in the region mostly since the end of the Ancient Egyptian empire (a bit during pre-dynastic time, much more during the dynastic era (think Hyksos, late foreign dynasties), and even much more so in recent times accompanied by demographic expansion after the dynastic era). Basically, all African populations are their own people, with their own characteristics but at the same time they are related to each other through common origin (after OOA of course). [/QB][/QUOTE]
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