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If anything I'd argue a 5% recent influence is a better explanation, because if it's older there can be selection or just bottleneck effects or a plethora of things changing phenotype.
Despite being polygenic a 5% influence can very well translate into the East Asian appearance of some people, not sure why that's unlikely for you. In any case 15-20% is ridiculously high, it reaches level of genetic replacement necessary from Central Asian Turks that would make hard to explain a lot of things going on in Turkey or Azerbaijan IMO.


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Just stop trying to 'Kurdify' every Mongoloid DNA in Kurdistan. If you have some doesn't mean that other Kurds must have also some, since you found out that you had some Turkmen ancestors in the past. Just accept you have some and move on. And do not make the same mistakes as your ancestors did and stop mixing with the Turks/Turkmen or Semites/Arabs.
I have got maybe 1-2% Mongoloid real Turkic DNA in me. But as an Ezdi Kurd I belong to a Kurdish minority. I think that on average (of 50 million) Kurds have maybe for about 3-4% Mongoloid real Turkic DNA and it is not Kurdish because it is not native to Kurdistan and it is from the Altai/Central Asia.
But I do agree with you that some is very ancient and is related to the ancient Saka/Scythian people who came to the Median Empire 2500 years ago. Nevertheless, not very much.
Last edited by MS85; 08-01-2019 at 08:34 PM.





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I seriously don’t think 5% is enough to give such marked mongoloid phenotype. Here’s why. First, we have all seen 50% E Asian/ 50% European kids and many of those kids even though 1 parent is E Asian, they barely look E Asian and certainly less E Asian than some of the Kurds Iranians and some Caucasians. So I’ll never be convinced 5% is enough case closed.
Second, remember the many Indian looking S Iraqis like the ones I posted on the previous page we can both agree there wasn’t alot of admixture between them and Indians recently otherwise admixture calculators would pick it up. I think that’s old shared some sore of Mesopotamian or some Neolithic farmer between the 2.
With regards to population replacement who said all the E Asian in W Asians was a 1 time event. It’s actually due to multiple waves from the east starting around the Iron Age with Saka and then various Turkic .
I think you gave me an incentive to learn admixture software to build a k3 SSA, ENF, E Asian calculator. Let the chips fall where they may
Remember that a 20 ft ladder isn’t needed to climb a 20ft wall. 3 six ft ladders can also do the trick ( 3 vs 1 admixture waves) haha
Muzh ba staso la tyaro tsakha ra wubaasu
[IMG][/IMG]


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In Eastern Europe there is plenty of mongoloid-ish looking people and they're barely 10% East Asian/Siberian - hell, in some cases barely 5%. Have you not seen the two Tatar females and their DNA results that I posted? They are less than 20% mongoloid on GEDmatch (Siberian, East Asian, all that stuff) but nevertheless look very Asiatic.
Pheotypic expressions of genes are often very random.
Also it depends on where you grew up. To someone who has lived their entire life somewhere in deep France or Spain certain Eastern European faces may look "mongoloid" even though they would be far from Chinese racially and genetically and wouldn't be perceived as such in Asia. The same goes for black people by the way. Barack Obama may look black in America but in Kenya he would look clearly foreign.





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These TV show stars look extremely mongoloid and the kids are only 25% Korean! (75% white European)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kate_Plus_8
She is a white American, presumably 100% European
He is biracial, 50% Korean, 50% white AmericanKatie Irene Kreider, who is of German, Scottish, and English descent, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania to Charlene (née Kolak) and Kenton Kreider, a pastor.
Jonathan Keith Gosselin was born and raised in Wyomissing, Pennsylvania as the middle child in a family of three children. He has two brothers, Thomas and Mark.[2] Gosselin's mother, Pamela Castello (née Lyum),[3] was born and raised in Hawaii as a second-generation Korean American and his father, Thomas Gosselin (a pediatric dentist), was of French, Irish, and Welsh descent. Gosselin's father died on January 13, 2005.[4][5][6] Jon graduated from Wyomissing High School in 1995.[7]





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That’s exactly my point those damn calculators don’t measure total E Asian because There is a lot of East Asia hidden in other components
For example if a calculator showed me as 90% Turk and 1 % E Asian. Do you seriously think I would be only 1 % E Asian. Wouldn’t the Smart thing would be to ask yourself well how many percent east Asian the Turkish references are ??
The only way you’re going to get a reliable total east Asian percentage is with a K3 calculator with SSA ENF and E Asian components. That’s it
Muzh ba staso la tyaro tsakha ra wubaasu
[IMG][/IMG]





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