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They are inventing Multiregionalism-in-Africa
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by xyyman: [QB] Lol! You are such a clown. You just repeated what I just posted. I said 18% E1b1a, E1b1b-M35 is 15% add J and G takes it up to 29% North African. Then there is R1b (?). Cape Verdeans do NOT carry a majority West African lineage of E1b1a. Stop the BS. I am digging into R1b-92R7. Which is not only found on Cape Verde but the R1b-92R7 is also found in throughout coastal West Africa. Like Guinea Bissau and.....Mali!!!! tic! Toc! Cite the source? He! He! He! I do not know enough about the mutation 92R7 to break it down. Cape Verdean male lineage is majority North African and "European" NOT West African. The "European" lineage of above 42% is unbelievable and impossible. That R1b needs to be deeply analyzed. [QUOTE]Originally posted by the lioness,: [Q] ^ people ignore this no primary sources cited [QUOTE] [b]The most frequent haplogroup in the total sample is R1b1b2 (R-M269) (42.7%), followed by E1b1a (18.8%);[/b] for all other haplogroups, frequencies are lower than 10%. R1b1b2 is the most common lineage in European populations, with frequencies ranging from 20% to 80% at the continental level [42] and from 59% to 66% in the Iberia Peninsula [43], [34]. E1b1a is typical of Africa, comprising ∼60–85% of NRY lineages in sub-Saharan populations, and specifically 81–85% in West African populations --- The Admixture Structure and Genetic Variation of the Archipelago of Cape Verde and Its Implications for Admixture Mapping Studies Sandra Beleza 2012 [/Q]. so it's you who doesn't know what you are talking about, that 18% E1b1a is the [b]highest[/b] frequency E clade there and the R1b is M269 [/QB][/QUOTE] :rolleyes: [/QB][/QUOTE]
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