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There are many traces,In great andamanese there were tested haplogroup P*and R*,Maniq people of Thailand tested haplogroup K,Aeta people of Luzon,haplogroup,K,S,M,and P.
Semang people of Malaysia are majority C and O but still has K,suggest they are mixed.
All of those Negritos all have overwhelming Papua autosomal.
Haplogroup K is just a black haplogroup,You really can't tell the difference of them from africans,They maybe little light than Africans,but thats it
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Some underlooked facts presented.K is surely some kind of very old southeast asian folk, but if they looked black or whatever is unclear.
Negritos are D.



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The great andamanese have haplogroup P*,The andamanese are mixed,Some suggest the haplogroup D migrant later,Ten thousand years ago.
ALL Other Negritos in southeast Asia are just Haplogroup K(MSP) people,That sometimes mixed with other people,But I am certain that if They had not been mixed They are pure black Negritos.
Or there was two Negritos:Haplogroup K and Haplogroup D
Last edited by Gaoyuan; 10-08-2022 at 02:27 AM.




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Is there a genetic difference between Negritos, Melanesians and Aborigine-Australians?
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Don't they have crazy amounts of Neanderthal DNA though? If we are referring to black = SSA, then they wouldn't pass since they are not SSA. Not to mention that only Haplogroup A and B are known to be African-proper.



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There was an African american that had a y dna that was even more ancient than the ones used on y full.
https://www.sci.news/genetics/articl...%20years%20ago.
About 300,000 years ago falls around the time the Neanderthals are believed to have split from the ancestral human lineage. It was not until more than 100,000 years later that anatomically modern humans appear in the fossil record. They differ from the more archaic forms by a more lightly built skeleton, a smaller face tucked under a high forehead, the absence of a cranial ridge and smaller chins.
Prof Hammer said that the newly discovered Y chromosome variation is extremely rare. Through large database searches, his team eventually was able to find a similar chromosome in the Mbo, a population living in a tiny area of western Cameroon in sub-Saharan Africa.
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