ButlerKing
07-07-2013, 01:18 AM
I really don't care if Finns are closest to Cro-magnum and there is no data to suggestn Uralic were Cro-magnum. There is one thing you can't deny and that is the frequencies of haplogroup I in finns.;)
Haplogroup I which makes up for 29% of Y-DNA of Finns. Even the mtDNA of Finns are nearly indistinguishable from Norwegian and Swedish. You couldn't possibly be a originally Uralic population.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/b6/I_Distribution.jpg
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~villandra/McKinstry/I2b1/haplogroupI1.gif
" With regard to the Y-chromosome, the most common haplogroups of the Finns are N1c (58%), I (29%), R1a (7.5%) and R1b (3.5%).[41] Haplogroup N1c, which is found only in a few countries in Europe (Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Finland and Russia), is a subgroup of the haplogroup N (Y-DNA) distributed across northern Eurasia and estimated in a recent study to be 10,000–20,000 years old and suggested to have entered Europe about 12,000–14,000 years ago from Asia.[42]
Haplogroup I which makes up for 29% of Y-DNA of Finns. Even the mtDNA of Finns are nearly indistinguishable from Norwegian and Swedish. You couldn't possibly be a originally Uralic population.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/b6/I_Distribution.jpg
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~villandra/McKinstry/I2b1/haplogroupI1.gif
" With regard to the Y-chromosome, the most common haplogroups of the Finns are N1c (58%), I (29%), R1a (7.5%) and R1b (3.5%).[41] Haplogroup N1c, which is found only in a few countries in Europe (Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Finland and Russia), is a subgroup of the haplogroup N (Y-DNA) distributed across northern Eurasia and estimated in a recent study to be 10,000–20,000 years old and suggested to have entered Europe about 12,000–14,000 years ago from Asia.[42]