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Egyptian DNA, Forumbiodiversity, sub-Saharan Africa
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Ish Gebor: [QB] [QUOTE]Originally posted by Cass/: [qb] [QUOTE]Originally posted by Punos_Rey: [qb] I like how no one is pointing out how Cass is parading around how hes been stating AE were Saharans compared to the Afroloons, yet hes spent the past few weeks claiming AE were Levantine Hamitics and that Musa Keita of Mali was an Arab. d-_-b [/qb][/QUOTE]~Explain the ancient DNA. "[Ancient Egyptians] cluster w. Neolithic & Bronze Age Levant. STRUCTURE: important Natufian component, some Anatolian, Iran Neolithic." https://twitter.com/amwkim/status/847912486196002816 Shifting from a autochthonous Egyptian [Saharan] model to Hamiticism isn't too problematic. Hypothetically the Proto-Hamitic urheimat was in south Levant or Arabia, right next door to Egypt, so migration was not over a long distance. In recent years ancient DNA has shown substantial Anatolian ancestry in Early Neolithic southern Europeans, like Aegeans. Something similar to this is going to show for North Africa via Levant, but the admixture took place end of the Epipaleolithic or Mesolithic (early Holocene) rather than Neolithic (?). Not sure why you're criticizing me for changing my views in response to new evidence/data; the Afrocentrists in contrast just come up with excuses to dismiss the ancient DNA because it doesn't fit their theory. [/qb][/QUOTE]It remains interesting, at best. [QUOTE] [i]She lacked the derived variant (rs16891982) of the SLC45A2 gene associated with light skin pigmentation but had at least one copy of the derived SLC24A5 allele (rs1426654) associated with the same trait. [/i][/QUOTE]—M. Gallego-Llorente, R. Pinhasi et al. The genetics of an early Neolithic pastoralist from the Zagros, Iran [QUOTE] Populations for which the ancient Caucasus genomes are best ancestral approximations include those of the Southern Caucasus and interestingly, South and Central Asia. Western Europe tends to be a mix of early farmers and western/eastern hunter-gatherers while Middle Eastern genomes are described as a mix of early farmers and Africans. […] Caucasus hunter-gatherer contribution to subsequent populations. We next explored the extent to which Bichon and CHG contributed to contemporary populations using outgroup f3(African; modern, ancient) statistics, which measure the shared genetic history between an ancient genome and a modern population since they diverged from an African outgroup. Discussion [b]Given their geographic origin, it seems likely that CHG and EF are the descendants of early colonists from Africa who stopped south of the Caucasus, in an area stretching south to the Levant and possibly east towards Central and South Asia.[/b] WHG, on the other hand, are likely the descendants of a wave that expanded further into Europe. The separation of these populations is one that stretches back before the Holocene, as indicated by local continuity through the Late Palaeolithic/Mesolithic boundary and deep coalescence estimates, which date to around the LGM and earlier. [/QUOTE]—Jones, E. R., G. Gonzalez-Fortes, S. Connell, V. Siska, A. Eriksson, R. Martiniano, R. L. McLaughlin, et al. 2015. “Upper Palaeolithic genomes reveal deep roots of modern Eurasians.” Nature Communications 6 (1): 8912. doi:10.1038/ncomms9912. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ncomms9912. Origin and spread of proto-Afrasan, Afrasan and / into substratum of Semitic. [IMG]http://oi56.tinypic.com/29270jo.jpg[/IMG] [/QB][/QUOTE]
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