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It always happens that it is not as one would have imagined. More oriental than I would have imagined.
https://www.yfull.com/tree/E-BY7449/
E-V22 - E-BY7449 - E-BY7566 - E-FT155550
According to oral family tradition E-FT155550 comes from a deserter of Napoleon's troops (1808-1813) who stayed in Spain and changed his surname.
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Guys from Arkhangelsk
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Northern Russians, a map of genetic distances by Y-chromosome haplogroups
http://генофонд.рф/?page_id=5412
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The originality of the Pomors of the Onega Peninsula and the Zimny Coast in the genetic context of northern Europe https://vestnik.rsmu.press/archive/2...ontent?lang=en
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They look like what they are: a mixture of "Ukrainian"-like individuals with Finns. 60% of these faces pass as typical in Kiev, 30% as a more "Great" Russian look and 10% don't pass (those looking too mixed). Even so, as all East Slavic groups, the Slavic element is in strong majority. The Szekelers in Romania display a higher rate of textbook lapponoids and fenno-nordics (even if most look just Romanian), so I'd say the latter influence in Russians is even smaller.
Conclusion: Slavs were too numerous to be greatly influenced by the sparse people of the North
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Traits of Finno-Ugric appearance of Russians depends on region, it is available in the north and in the Volga region.
South Russians do resemble Ukrainians, but the settlement of central and northern Russia went through the territory of modern Belarus
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