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Received: 25,622 Given: 21,626 |
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Received: 7,076 Given: 6,670 |
Target: Luso
Distance: 1.0988% / 0.01098827
35.6 Iberian_South
23.2 Iberian_North
12.4 North_African_1
11.2 French_South
6.4 Italy_North
3.2 North_West_Celtic
2.6 Finnic
2.6 Northern_India
1.8 Africa_east
1.0 Levantine
Distance to: Luso
0.01452928 Iberian_South:I10895
0.02332252 Iberian_North:I3758
0.02879201 French_South:I12879
0.03164174 Italy_North:RMPR121
0.03448666 Italy_south:VK535
0.03505410 Sicilian:RMPR1544
0.03652616 East_Mediterranean:RMPR107
0.03752772 North_West_Celtic:6DT22
0.04289137 Nordic_Germanic:VK548
0.04451910 North_West_Celtic:VK207
0.04479274 North_African_1:RMPR132
0.05050842 Nordic_Germanic:VK390
0.05098137 North_West_Germanic:I0157
0.05535865 Levantine:SI-42
0.05560791 Alan_CaucasusA160
0.05587155 Levantine:QED-2
0.05593317 Slavic:Sunghir6
0.05923504 Slavic:VK541
0.06033158 West_Iranian_1:I1955
0.06246911 Alan_CaucasusA164
0.06260974 Finnic:JK1968
0.06596582 North_West_Pakistan:I2959
0.06985478 Baltic:VK471
0.07351442 Baltic:VK472
0.07855603 FinnicA238
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Received: 25,622 Given: 21,626 |
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Received: 3,234 Given: 978 |
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Received: 7,076 Given: 6,670 |
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Received: 25,622 Given: 21,626 |
From Roman period, I think that was a Punic settler in Sardinia island. Not a good distance because is unscaled, but quite odd that you dont´t score in anything else.
Running it in modern averages:Code:ITA_Rome_Imperial:RMPR132,0.0025,0.0137,-0.0024,-0.023,0.0085,-0.0106,-0.0074,0.0015,0.0247,0.017,0.0028,-0.0012,0.0026,-0.0055,0.0044,-0.0087,0.0008,-0.0027,-0.0205,-0.0025,-0.0072,-0.0141,0.0092,-0.0092,0.0045
Distance: 0.5878% / 0.00587801
Target: North_African_1:RMPR132
48.0 Berber_Tunisia_Chen
25.0 Sardinian
18.2 Samaritan
3.9 Somali
1.7 Ju_hoan_North
1.5 Yakut
0.9 Georgian_Laz
0.7 Gelao
0.1 Mlabri
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Received: 3,234 Given: 978 |
This is on scaled:
Distance to: ITA_Rome_Imperial:RMPR132
0.05053780 Algerian:ALG200
0.05529022 Moroccan_North:MNA3
0.06072751 Moroccan_North:MOJ2
0.06316090 Libyan:LIB9
0.06318090 Algerian:ALG900
0.06362976 Tunisian_Jew:TunisianJew1507
0.06447088 Libyan_Jew:LibyanJew1263
0.06470698 Libyan_Jew:LibyanJew1438
0.06580427 Moroccan_North:MNA4
0.06612975 Moroccan_North:MNA6
0.06703790 Moroccan_North:MNA1
0.06793300 Tunisian_Jew:TunisianJew1763
0.06898361 Algerian:ALG270
0.06935315 Tunisian_Jew:TunisianJew1544
0.06947377 Berber_Tunisia_Chen:T43
0.07029473 Moroccan_North:MCH13
0.07103671 Moroccan_Jew:MoroccanJew4789
0.07109350 Mozabite:HGDP01263
0.07123698 Berber_Tunisia_Chen:T35
0.07129441 Moroccan_Jew:MoroccanJew5126
0.07178209 Algerian:ALG600
0.07202613 Berber_Tunisia_Chen:T42
0.07205863 Libyan:LIB50
0.07240746 Libyan:LIB5
0.07252638 Moroccan_Jew:MoroccanJew5168
its closest modern population is Algerian.
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Received: 25,622 Given: 21,626 |
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Received: 25,622 Given: 21,626 |
I suposed it by numeration that could be another sample from Beroni trube from the archeological site of La Hoya, near Laguardia, the other sample is one of the ancient samples closest to my mother.
(I´ve checked and it is) I3758/LHY136: 365–204 cal BCE (2215±20 BP, PSUAMS-3466)
************************************************** ***************************************La Hoya (Laguardia, Araba/Álava, Basque Country, Spain)
Contact: Armando Llanos
This site was described in Nuñez et al. 2016 (38). We analyzed three adult individuals
from the Celtiberian period of the site.
I3757/LHY 142-T: 400–300 BCE
I3759/LHY073: 361–195 cal BCE (2195±25 BP, PSUAMS-2078)
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I3758/LHY136: 365–204 cal BCE (2215±20 BP, PSUAMS-3466)
And the other comes also from Olalde paper:
I10895/SJR'15-1828: 777–981 cal CE (1140±30 BP, Beta-448953)
More modern one, but just during the muslim invasion(SJR=Sant Julià de Ramis):
I add also:Sant Julià de Ramis (Girona, Catalonia, Spain)
Contact: Neus Coromina, Josep Burch, David Vivó
The necropolis of Sant Julià de Ramis is located on the top of the mountain of the same
name (79). The first stable habitat established in this place was an Iberian Iron Age
settlement in the mid/second half of the 6th century BCE. When it was abandoned, a small
rural establishment was constructed at the bottom of the mountain that survived, with
successive alterations, until the mid-4th century CE. This period coincided with the
32
building of a large fort on the top of the mountain, whose strategic situation should be
considered in light of the fact that it was adjacent to the Via Augusta and close to the city
of Gerunda. Even when the Western Roman Empire fell, the fort was not deserted.
Instead, it underwent extensive remodeling. Subsequently, in association with the fort, a
group of houses were built on top of the mountain and over time were organized around
a chapel built in the same period.
The Muslim conquest of the area at the beginning of the 8th century led to the
abandonment of the fort which rapidly became a ruin, as described in documentary
sources from the 9th century CE. However, the archaeological excavations completed to
date have revealed that in the second half/end of the 8th century, a cemetery developed
around the chapel that would be in use until the start of the 21st century. The vitality of
the place, which became the center of a parish in the medieval period, is further reflected
in the construction of a new church at the end of the 10th century-start of the 11th century,
dedicated to Sant Julià.
Is not a Southern archeological site, but it´s results were quite southern for nowadays standards, was a christian, but already with 3.4% NA admixture.
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