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Received: 22,992/717 Given: 20,147/1,181 |
Here it is:
Dominant Y-DNA by region at the onset of the Neolithization of Europe:
Region: dominant "indigeneous" Y-DNA haplogroups
1. Western and Central Europe: I2a, I1, I2c, C1a2
2. European part of Russia: R1a, R1b, Q1a
3. Caucasus region (Georgia): J1b, J2a
4. Western Asia*: G2, E1, J2, R2, T, G1, H2, L1, F3
*Samples from Anatolia, from the Levant and from Iran.
The most mysterious - due to their scarcity in aDNA so far - are J1 and N1c.
We have J1b in a hunter-gatherer from Georgia, but then there is a long "gap" and the next relevant sample - J1a dated to 2500-1950 BC - is from the Levant (Ain Ghazal, Early Bronze Age). When it comes to N1c the oldest sample in Europe, dated to 2500 BC, is from the region of Smolensk.
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Received: 3,850/547 Given: 3,643/223 |
so R1ethelions - go back home to mother Russia
(jk)
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Received: 3,850/547 Given: 3,643/223 |
j2 is 28000 years
https://www.yfull.com/tree/J2/
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Received: 8,479/720 Given: 10,728/0 |
One guy obviously being killed by R1 in the forest and being dropped into pit.
They did not like each other, especially R1-men did not probably like Q-men,
even if sometimes were stilling Q's Redskin women for further reproduction...
But much older are from Manchuria, so logically, they wereWhen it comes to N1c the oldest sample in Europe, dated to 2500 BC, is from the region of Smolensk.
wandering and some small group was at the moment in Smoleńsk.
Last edited by Rethel; 09-04-2016 at 10:04 PM.
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