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Ancient Egyptian DNA from 1300BC to 426 AD
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Tukuler: [QB] I think genetics and Linguistics are way too different for one to validate the other. but one may or may not support the other, just like other disciplines. The Mantel test can measure correlation between genetics and [i]languages[/i] among other things. For me to know about a people, when trying to figure them out in relation with other people, I use genetics, 'linguistics', physical anthropology, cultural anthropology, etc, in a multidisciplinary approach. If a genetics paper interpretation don't jibe with at least a few from the above and/or historical accounts, something's wrong, ergo Skoglund & Reich and that original Gallego-Llorente (2015) paper. The peer review referees? Wheah dey azz wz @? [QUOTE] ... these changes are reflected in the corrected Fig 2b, fig S6, and table S5. Tables S6 and S7 have been removed from the corrected Supplementary Material, [URL=http://ndrln] because there is no detectable Western Eurasian component in Yoruba and Mbuti. [/URL].[/QUOTE]Now somebody tell Gurdasani (2015) that. He who sees ~8000 year old Mbukushu-Oroqen admix event in Yoruba. [QUOTE]Originally posted by Elmaestro: [qb] Will we use genetics to validate Linguistics While at the same time using linguistics to explain genetics. Snake eats one end of the another snake eating the former. Phylogentic placement of Afrasian OOA makes sense, just as much sense as placing it in Africa. The arguments on both sides are fine, but what needs to be refined is the phylum itself. If you look at Berber and how it represents a distant branch in Afroasiatic simultaneously with how they genetically represent an early split from soon to be Neolithic populations, MtDNA U, etc. you'll see it makes perfect sense, and supports an early back-migration. But once again, we act as if languages can't converge, as genomes can, when two populations meet and culturally exchange concepts... lets take it east and look at Omotic and Cushitic and the "Nilo-Saharan/Eastafrican" roots both linguistically and genetically... Is there no pattern? if there is lets revisit the nile and the Geographical history as well as the Demographic history and see which groups could have possible converged there, what would that say about AfroAsiatic, as it relates to the genetic under tone. [IMG]https://s16.postimg.org/842a48cc5/African_Humid_Phase.png[/IMG] I will get heat for this on here but I'll come straight out and say it. I personally feel like we can't put Semetic in east africa or the Sahara, or Africa at all. Afroasiatic as a phylum however is a work in progress, period. [/qb][/QUOTE] [/QB][/QUOTE]
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