-
Post stereotypical Scots faces
-
-
-
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Not a Cop
How about this?
Can he grow a ginger beard? Scots Stereotype looks a bit rough. Like they have been lost trekking for a month in wilderness..That or redheads & freckles.
He can pass as a Scot. Not sure on stereotype. That is for you to say.
That is good Pleurat. Haha
-
My phenotype on average. Would be something in-between Brunn & Keltic-Nordid. Can grow a red beard(men), freckles.. Smallish mouth & pointy straight nose, big forehead.
-
-
-
I got these people from Coons work. Are these figures typical for Scots?
Ireland was first settled in the post-glacial Mesolithic by people of Upper Palaeolithic type coming overland from Scotland. The Mesolithic cultural period was long and full in Ireland, and the subsequent invaders of this westernmost fringe of Europe have been unable to effect a genetic displacement of the strain introduced by the earliest human occupants. This strain has undergone an evolution of its own in Ireland, as the presence side by side of individuals showing various stages and types of change will make clear, .
FIG. 1 (3 views). A Scotsman from Aberdeen, with blue eyes and dark brown hair. This brachycephalic Aberdonian is Alpine in head form and in most facial features; the length of the face and of the nose, however, are aberrant and point to non-Alpine in- fluences. The predominant Alpine element present in this individual is presumably that which entered Scotland from the Continent during the Bronze Age with the Short Cist People. Other brachycephalic Scotsmen sometimes show Borreby features.
http://www.theapricity.com/snpa/bilder/troe131.jpg
FIG. 4 (3 views). A Mediterranean Scotsman from Paisley; typical of the industrial population of the Glasgow district.
http://www.theapricity.com/snpa/bilder/troe254.jpg
FIG. 4 (3 views). A Scotsman from Ayrshire. An excellent example of the British Long Barrow type and a direct Neolithic survival.
http://www.theapricity.com/snpa/bilder/troe244.jpg
These people were chosen to represent specific types but I don't know if these types that are not mixed are typical.
-
Yes, they all have typical face shapes of working class Scots. Go to a Scotland game, you see all those sorts, from all over.
There was another scot from that set of pictures not included. Highlands from what I can remember. He was a good example also
-
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Graham
Yes, they all have typical face shapes of working class Scots. Go to a Scotland game, you see all those sorts, from all over.
There was another scot from that set of pictures not included. Highlands from what I can remember. He was a good example also
I found him.I seen his picture all the time because he is supposed to represent the Tronder type.
Fig. 4 (3 views).A Highland Scot from Morayshire; tall, large-headed, brown-haired, with an extremely long face and a high cranial vault, he represents a local North British Trondelag approximation, either through the absorption of indigenous Upper Palaeolithic elements, or through importation from Ireland with the Gaelic invasions, or from Scandinavia.
http://www.theapricity.com/snpa/bilder/troe324.jpg