Ofcourse the AS migration was smaller numerically than white emigration to America. But my point is, unless there is a very small population movement causing a large number of founder effects with haplogroups, then there's no reason to think that the AS U106 lineages would have to coalless to...
This is flawed reasoning. If we look at European American lineages, we don't see them coalescing to less than 400 years ago., This is because, during the migration, the Euros didn't go under a bottleneck.
So if the Anglo-Saxon and Viking migration did indeed bring most of the U106 to the...
How ridiculous. Hg E runs to about 10 percent in Austria, so Hitler or any other Austrian man has a 1/10 chance of being E. It's likely an agricultural adition to Europe, so saying this is a "Jewish" haplogroup is a slander? And for what reason? Hitler and the National Socialists are all long...
The problem is not just Islamic extremism. Islam is unarguably an anti-women anti-non-muslim ideology and whether it's followers are actually violent, I don't want it anywhere near our countries.
Anti-racist = anti-white
Let me post the mantra:
ASIA FOR THE ASIANS, AFRICA FOR THE AFRICANS, WHITE COUNTRIES FOR EVERYBODY!
Everybody says there is this RACE problem. Everybody says this RACE problem will be solved when the third world pours into EVERY white country and ONLY into white...
In another paper including the same authors, they come to a different conclusion for I:
(Table 2)
22,200 (15,300–30,000) YBP
New binary polymorphisms reshape and increase resolution of the human Y chromosomal haplogroup tree. Genome Res. 2008 May;18(5):830-8
...It did. I quoted TRMCA dates for some of the major I2 subclades, and they came out to about 5500 years before present. So maybe this lineage too went through a bottleneck?
Origins of I
Nordvedt wrote:
The huge European y haplogroup I1 seems to have a TMRCA of only about 4500 years. Yet, our best present knowledge is that the y tree branch line leading to the I1 founder parted ways from the rest of the haplogroup I tree over 20,000 years ago. We have no evidence...
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