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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Swenet: [QB] [QUOTE]Originally posted by .Charlie Bass.: [QUOTE]Originally posted by Swenet: [QUOTE]Originally posted by .Charlie Bass.: why would wouldn't they have a somewhat Saharan/North African component?[/QUOTE]Lol. Charlie said "somewhat North African". Both the light grey and the light blue include North African-like ancestry. Charlie thought I was just talking about the relatively minor "Mozabite" light blue in these Sahelian populations. [/QUOTE][b]"North African" like can just as well be Saharan[/b]. Both Sahelians and North Africans would [b]share such a component[/b] since they have [b]ancestors from the Sahara and migrated North and South when it dried up.[/b][/QUOTE]Just admit that different ancestry components in North Africa and Sub Saharan Africa have completely different evolutionary histories. You don't have to mystify this by talking about bidirectional north south migrations and "sharing" of ancestry. What does "sharing" even mean? Granted, it's shared [i]today[/i], but it's still North African in origin. You insist on this type of mystifying language because you don't want to call it North African, but "bidirectional". I've already called you out on your dubious word game tactics in 2014. [QUOTE] Originally posted by Swenet: [QUOTE]Originally posted by .Charlie Bass.: [b]Where do you think the ancestors of modern West Africans come from? The Sahara,[/b] that is before it dried up. [/QUOTE]You're now comparing populations who migrated to northern regions and returned to equatorial Africa mostly unaltered genetically, to populations whose language phylum originated in the Sahara and who actually had/have uniparental lineages and lithic industries that testify to their deeply intertwined histories with the Sahara and extinct Saharan populations (e.g. Teda, Fulani, Ancient Egyptians Lower Nubians)? What is your point exactly? I have no idea where you're going with this or how anything you're saying refutes what got your panties up in a bunch repeatedly, re: the strong SSA/Sahara divide with certain variables (e.g. Brace 1993, Irish, Hanihara), and a more mild, but still noticeable divide using other variables (e.g. Keita's variable set).[/QUOTE] [/QB][/QUOTE]
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