-1


| Thumbs Up/Down |
| Received: 4,083/175 Given: 1,712/89 |
Based on what? Why are you saying random shit? In the PCA I provided they're clearly with Iberians, if you have counter evidence, provide it. One sample? All these samples in this study cluster with N. Italians and will soon actually be shown to cluster inbetween N. Italians and Iberians, some with Iberians.
That K15 plot has nothing to do.. with anything.
I was the one who made this:
then was later convinced it's inaccurate because it's a modern calc being used on ancient samples. It's only accurate for the later samples like the Hinxton Britons/Anglo-Saxons and the neolithic farmers, everything else, especially BA Hungary, Sintashta(Sintashta are east Ukrainian like, not Scandinavian), etc). Need to use PCA or an ancient calc. I'm not biased and I admitted I was wrong, you should do the same.
The Guanche skulls as a whole are unlike those of modern European Mediterraneans, and resemble northern European series most closely, especially those in which a brachycephalic element is present, as in Burgundian and Alemanni series.divided them into clearly differentiated types, which include a Mediterranean, a Nordic, a "Guanche," and an Alpine. The "Guanche" accounts for 50 per cent of the whole on the four islands of Teneriffe, Gomera, Gran Canaria, and Hierro; the Nordic for 31 per cent, the Mediterranean for 13 per cent, and the Alpineoldschool anthropology


| Thumbs Up/Down |
| Received: 4,083/175 Given: 1,712/89 |
The Guanche skulls as a whole are unlike those of modern European Mediterraneans, and resemble northern European series most closely, especially those in which a brachycephalic element is present, as in Burgundian and Alemanni series.divided them into clearly differentiated types, which include a Mediterranean, a Nordic, a "Guanche," and an Alpine. The "Guanche" accounts for 50 per cent of the whole on the four islands of Teneriffe, Gomera, Gran Canaria, and Hierro; the Nordic for 31 per cent, the Mediterranean for 13 per cent, and the Alpineoldschool anthropology


| Thumbs Up/Down |
| Received: 4,083/175 Given: 1,712/89 |
You forget that my original post you first responded to was simply telling an Albanian who claimed "Balkanites have 100% autosomal continuity from the Bronze Age" he was wrong.
"Farmer shifted Tuscans" 3 of them are, yes, the other 5 red squares are closer to N. Italians than Tuscans, but "farmer shifted Tuscans" is just nitpicking here and you're basically agreeing with my point. The copper age ones are all N. Italian.
There are literally no samples from southern Bulgaria, not sure why you said that. They're all on the Romanian border, and there's not much difference between Bulgarian samples and far northern Croatian ones.
I didn't claim modern Balkanites are BA Balkanites+Turks, those are Faklon's words. I didn't even suggest a source. All I said was they were N. Italian, or not modern Balkanites. You basically agreed you can't get modern Bulgarians from BA Bulgarians+modern Balto-Slavs, so we're on the same page. Lots of potential other populations. Yamnaya(although seems unlikely as the initial Yamnaya push had already happened and Yamnaya didn't exist in the late bronze age anymore), the Iron Age Scythian from Hungary who was pretty south-eastern compared to Europeans, copper age Anatolians, etc. Doesn't have to be Turks, doesn't make them anyless southern shifted though.
The Guanche skulls as a whole are unlike those of modern European Mediterraneans, and resemble northern European series most closely, especially those in which a brachycephalic element is present, as in Burgundian and Alemanni series.divided them into clearly differentiated types, which include a Mediterranean, a Nordic, a "Guanche," and an Alpine. The "Guanche" accounts for 50 per cent of the whole on the four islands of Teneriffe, Gomera, Gran Canaria, and Hierro; the Nordic for 31 per cent, the Mediterranean for 13 per cent, and the Alpineoldschool anthropology


| Thumbs Up/Down |
| Received: 4,083/175 Given: 1,712/89 |
The Guanche skulls as a whole are unlike those of modern European Mediterraneans, and resemble northern European series most closely, especially those in which a brachycephalic element is present, as in Burgundian and Alemanni series.divided them into clearly differentiated types, which include a Mediterranean, a Nordic, a "Guanche," and an Alpine. The "Guanche" accounts for 50 per cent of the whole on the four islands of Teneriffe, Gomera, Gran Canaria, and Hierro; the Nordic for 31 per cent, the Mediterranean for 13 per cent, and the Alpineoldschool anthropology


| Thumbs Up/Down |
| Received: 2,701/149 Given: 1,185/31 |
Again, I'm not sure what you are looking at. Balkan Chalcolithic is close to Anatolian and other farmers. The only samples that plot right with N.Italians there are Vatya.
Also I wasn't talking about the ancient Bulgarian samples but the modern ones when I said they are all from the south.


| Thumbs Up/Down |
| Received: 8,479/720 Given: 10,728/0 |








| Thumbs Up/Down |
| Received: 5,481/56 Given: 3,829/37 |
Where I2a1b most likely expanded from:
![]()
23andme: 100% Balkan https://www.theapricity.com/forum/sh...3andme-results
MyOrigins 2.0: 100% Southeast Europe
Geneplaza K25: 100% Greek-Albanian
Eurogenes K36 oracle: 50.64% Albania_North+ 49.36% Kosovo. Population distance: 1) 1.27 Northern Albania&Kosovo
Ydna: J1-ZS241
Maternal Ydna: E-V13>CTS5856*
The Albanians, these tigers of mountain wars ... have as their religion rebellion. Even their worst warrior is one of the strongest and bravest on the battle-field, just as if he was a knight on the legendary horse. But he has no horse, nor proper weapons for battle. Instead of the horse, he has a lance which strikes as lightning, he has spears who's points are full of posion as the sting of hornets, he has also a wooden bow with some arrows. Furthermore, he is stronger than iron ...
- Ibn Kemal, Historian of the Turkish court during Skanderbeg's war against the Turks.
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)
Bookmarks