This is purely interest-based.
Illustrative DNA uses broad-based models that do not discriminate the needed tailored source input to accurately assess the specific ancestry profiles and does not give the right interpretive feedback when things out of line present themselves.
You lack the...
...a peculiar material culture that is shown in the Western coast shown by @Cartan Boos thread which I was too busy responding to. There are haplogroup associations as well, which might be more complex and could have entered during the Bronze Age during the Semitic expansion. Then there is the...
I think the chance that they were Sabaean elites is high or related people. But as uniparentals shows, they probably came as a unit of dynasty that had historic population-history coherence given the TMCRA on mtDNA and Y-DNA.
I have no beef, only referring to the @oogabooga guy who was arguing what I stated, until all the comments were deleted in the J haplogroup Mahreean thread. You were not in that discussion so I would like you not to assume, who did not argue what because I did not say you claimed such or that it...
Thank you.
Reviewing the initial topic entry and my claims, it seems that the chance for you to descend from a Cushitc female line is close to 100%. You have a sub-structure that is related to a broader structure that is very pastoral and Sahara-related. Sometimes it might go toward some...
You are definitely of two things. Either Your haplogroup came with T folks (I don't think so, but it is not completely unlikely), or it was the same population in ancient Yemen as it has similar TMCRA with those mentioned lineages, then respectively coming to the Somali coast during the Islamic...
Strictly from that haplogroup, it would not be in the Horn of Africa 4000 years ago.
There were at least two migrations ~1000 years apart, with the latter being that haplogroup.
...approximation rather than direct linguistic association.
Can you people contact the guy?
There is also the issue of contamination through trade, where some haplogroup from the Eastern Desert could have ended up in Sinai through the ancient Arab/Saracen contact because trade went through there.
...my history of engagement here, and usually, I come to this forum just for specific things. In real life, for example, I never talk about haplogroups or any of that; it's an obscure topic really. It's like when you use the forum for specific reasons.
By the way, it was the whole set of lies...
Is the feature still there on Genomelink?
If I understood you correctly with whether bottlenecks and founder effects ever occurred in Africa, the answer is yes, everywhere at different times. We see it in the uniparental diversity, inbreeding levels, effective population size, etc.
This is a...
At least I can call the other Oromos my brothers since they're Muslims and can be here if they like as long as they behave. You're a murtad. What are you doing here? We have no connections.:dead:
Don't come to a Somali space among Muslims and start lying about the deen. You will get checked upright from the bendt gargoyle Oromo ways that you come here with. People like you have little shelf life here. You're not the first, second or 5th. Oromo, you will not find comfort with a deceptive...
...mean much to be honest, as one observes with those Hadza and Sandawe since they were small groups that can drive up frequencies quickly. A haplogroup could have origins in a place where it has 0% frequency today while having 90% in a place it was introduced 1000 years ago. All that makes...
...serves as a good reminder of how that was a genetic migration of Somalis, merely earlier people that migrated.
We should expect more haplogroup diversity in the southern region given that the northern peninsula is just the result of founder effects and perhaps some bottlenecks -- rationally...
...Africans. Hadza seems to have it gotten from Cushitic expansion:
We observe very little HVRI/HVRII nucleotide diversity within the L4g haplogroup in the Hadza sample, consistent with previous studies of this population (fig. 5d; Vigilant et al. 1991; Knight et al. 2003). The “star-like”...
...Though this is not the case, Afar could hypothetically be 100% J1 without remarkable Arabian admixture showing as an admixture. The T haplogroup carrying Somalis are not highly Arabian relative to E-V32 holders. It's the same principles.
That is why it is hard to gauge if even the sample set...
That haplogroup was present in the Shara and North Africa for a very long time. That's where you got yours from. It shares a common ancestor with the rest of the L1b up to 35 thousand years or so. Your connection with those West Africans on the maternal side is very old, not new. Basically, it...
...of the Nile Valley, toward the Sahara which we see had formation at the L2a1-a2a1 TMRCA, 8500 ybp, forming the L2a1-a2a1a. That haplogroup existed in the region we talked about, so these would be the Saharan pastoralists.
This coincides with the archeology that said early Pastoralist in the...
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