This Girl, guess her ethnicity

Alan

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Ethnic group
Kurdish
Y-DNA haplogroup
R1a1a1
mtDNA haplogroup
HV2a1 +G13708A
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Give it a try.
 
I would think something Iranic related, certainly not Saudi, but probably not even Levantine. So, northern Near East?
 
She does give me a familiar vibe I have to agree, that was the point of posting her. But keep guessing

:grin:
 
I find her really really unattractive. Those droopy old eyes...yuck.
 
She is looking down, her eyes are not droopy believe me.

Could you also guess her ethnicty. Give it a try :)
 
Oh no, did I fall for a trick? You know, like when someone puts a yarmulke on someone's head and all of a sudden people start seeing "Jewish" traits?:grin:

I was fooled by this woman too.
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So, perhaps I should be thinking somewhere in Europe?
 
:) I will not say more for now. Try another guess.
 
tunisian or libyan
 
Is there a prize for who ever get it right?
 
I think Angela came closest, it might not even be a Muslim headscarf hmm.....unless she is of kurd ethinicity of course
 
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More of the same group.
 

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She's Sardinian? If so, no wonder Druze is an interesting choice. Also, if true, the resemblance of some "Iranic" women to her would have nothing to do with steppe migrations, since Sardinians are probably the only European group not very much affected by them. So, the resemblance would come from shared ENF with perhaps a bit of WHG.
 
She's Sardinian? If so, no wonder Druze is an interesting choice. Also, if true, the resemblance of some "Iranic" women to her would have nothing to do with steppe migrations, since Sardinians are probably the only European group not very much affected by them. So, the resemblance would come from shared ENF with perhaps a bit of WHG.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AA-DQDPjefo

Yep thats why I wrote interesting about the Druze guess.

Kurd, Druze and even Tunisian and Libyan. The Neolithic connection seems significant.

Also take in mind a large portion of Druze ancestry is Kurdish/Persian. Druze seem to be pred. neolithic Levantines + Iranic ancestry.

The interesting thing about that is, the Neolithic population which contributed into Sardinians seems to have been lookwise more akine to pre IE Northwest Iranic tribes such as in "Southeastern Anatolia" (North Mesopotamia) and North Iran.
It's interesting and makes me wonder why no one used to guess Lebanese or other Levantine types.
 
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Yep thats why I wrote interesting about the Druze guess.

Kurd, Druze and even Tunisian and Libyan. The Neolithic connection seems significant.

Also take in mind a large portion of Druze ancestry is Kurdish/Persian. Druze seem to be pred. neolithic Levantines + Iranic ancestry.

The interesting thing about that is, the Neolithic population which contributed into Sardinians seems to have been lookwise more akine to pre IE Northwest Iranic tribes such as in "Southeastern Anatolia" (North Mesopotamia) and North Iran.
It's interesting and wondering that no one used to guess Lebanese or other Levantine types.

Sardinians are the closest population we have to EEF. They have barely any ANE, so any resemblance would be based on "farmer" types before the arrival of the Indo-Europeans or any other Bronze Age expansions, but farmer types with some WHG in the case of the Sardinians. Or perhaps we'll find that when we have a sample of the early farmers who took off for Europe they won't be much different from EEF after all.

Sardinians don't have the 'hawk like" profile of some people in the Levant. (There are also other differences.) As for the also hawk like "Dinaric" look of popular parlance on anthroboards, based on the reconstructions of the Yamnaya people you posted on another thread, it seems as likely that this look arrived in some parts of Europe directly from the steppe as through Anatolia. Perhaps it would have its source in the Anatolian highlands, but from ANE, perhaps, not from the earliest farmer component?

I wonder if I could put "Master of Guessing" here with my avatar?
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I'm not sure how familiar you are with Sardinian women, but in Italy they feel Sardinia has more than its fair share of beautiful women.

These do not have their lovely hair covered:
Giorgia Palmas
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Melissa Satta:
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Valentina Melis:
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There is also Caterina Murino, of Casino Royale fame, whom Dienekes chose as his avatar for the Neolithic advance into Europe. In her case, though, I think there's a hint of later migrations, particularly in terms of her profile. She's closer, for me, to the women in Cretan art.

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I'm not sure how familiar you are with Sardinian women, but in Italy they feel Sardinia has more than its fair share of beautiful women.

Then why don't Sardinians ever mix with mainland Italians? I know it's true but strange that they rarely ever mix.
 

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