thats not what Nat Geo saysHow it arises in the Americas is unknown
https://www3.nationalgeographic.com/gen ... atlas.html
Moderators: MichelleH, Minimalist, JPeters
thats not what Nat Geo saysHow it arises in the Americas is unknown
No, it doesn't say it's unknown, but then it doesn't say it's known either.marduk wrote:thats not what Nat Geo saysHow it arises in the Americas is unknown
https://www3.nationalgeographic.com/gen ... atlas.html
DougWeller wrote:No, it doesn't say it's unknown, but then it doesn't say it's known either.marduk wrote:thats not what Nat Geo saysHow it arises in the Americas is unknown
https://www3.nationalgeographic.com/gen ... atlas.html
Unless I missed something. Nonetheless, X in the Americas resembles most closely X in Western Asia, not in Europe.
Doug
And the Clovis issue is almost breaking out into a shooting war among archaeologists.
Beagle wrote:John - you'll find plenty of support here for ancient seafaring - on the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. There has been plenty of discussion here about that very thing.
Contemporary science is in complete disarray on the subject. Earlier thought was that humans crossing the Straits of Gibralter from Africa 500Kya floated on a log. Now an Australian anthropologist has shown evidence of Homo Erectus crossing parts of the Pacific 800,000 yrs ago.
To add a little grist to the mill:
http://www.science-frontiers.com/sf090/sf090a01.htm
I agree that the genetic analyses and also the blood type trail (posted before) are powerful indications of very ancient contact, concentrated around the Great Lakes region. And the Clovis issue is almost breaking out into a shooting war among archaeologists.
I didn't know where you were going at first. So I lend support and you should expect some criticism. No big deal.
the origins of X are known to be Africa about 30,000 years agoIf the % of X is higher in American populations would'nt that suggest it came out of America into Asia?
Well, for a start, what is a race? I'd argue that it is basically a sociological concept, not a physical one.Minimalist wrote:I still have problems with the racial diversification issue. If Out of Africa started 65,000 YBP it would have taken a while to spread to the rest of the planet. Just for the sake of argument let's say that HSS spread to final contact with HNS in southern Spain 24,000 years ago. It just does not seem like enough time to develop separate races.
What am I missing?