Does she look northeast European to anyone?
We should focus on genetics instead of physical anthropology because each generation of North-East Europeans looks different than other generations of North-East Europeans. For example
between years 1978 and 2004 mean Cephalic Index in Rzeszów (South-Eastern Poland) declined from 85.1 to 81.9 among 18 year old boys and from 86.0 to 82.9 among 18 year old girls, as data below shows. So during just a quarter of a century you have
a decline of mean C.I. by 3 points:
http://www.pmurz.nazwa.pl/PDF/2008/2/05_z2_2008.pdf
The same trend can be observed also in Czech Republic and in Germany today:
http://www.josephy.cz/how-czech-people-grow/
"For the Czech population round shape of head was typical for a long time. At the beginning of the twentieth century Appollinaire described the inhabitants of Prague as „round-headed folk drinking beer in their city.“
Yet it comes out that, especially from the 80’s of the twentieth century heads of the Czech people are constantly becoming more narrow and elongated while retaining the same circumference (the so-called tendency to dolichocephalization). This trend is evident in other countries as well, for instance in Poland and Germany. (...)"
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During the previous centuries, between ca. 1300 and 1900 AD, there was the opposite trend - mean C.I. was increasing. But changes were not as rapid as today. Instead of a few points per generations, it was ca. 0.3 point per generation:
As Carleton S. Coon wrote:
https://books.google.pl/books?id=Bq...ther Indo-Europeans originally Nordic&f=false
"Most of the Slavs retained their original dolichocephalic cranial form until at the earliest the thirteenth, and at the latest the fifteenth, century. At that time, those who inhabited Russia and Central Europe grew progressively brachycephalic, at a rapid but consistent rate.
Well-documented series from Bohemia and from the Moscow government show how this change progressed from century to century, so that normal means of 73 to 75 rose as high as 83 by the nineteenth. Few Slavs were spared this change, which was parallel to that which affected the southern Germans and other peoples of Central and Eastern Europe. Although it took place in the full light of late mediaeval and modern history, no one fully satisfactory explanation has yet been offered. (...)
In Poland, between the Carpathians and the Baltic, in a region of great ethnic stability and continuity, the mean cranial index has increased from about 74 to 84 since A.D. 1300, in about thirty generations. (...)"
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Here some
Polish 10th century AD skulls from the region of Greater Poland:
http://i63.tinypic.com/161yk55.jpg
http://i64.tinypic.com/2gv5xn5.jpg
http://i68.tinypic.com/33c5g8n.jpg
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Anthropological studies of Early Slavs:
Ilse Schwidetzky, "Rassenkunde der Altslawen" -
https://ariets.files.wordpress.com/2009/02/ilse-schwidetzky-rassenkunde-der-altslawen.pdf
Rösing, Schwidetzky, "Vergleichend-statstische Untersuchungen zur Anthropologie des fruhen Mittelalters":
http://www.mgh.de/bibliothek/opac/?...+500-1000+n+d+z&recnums=59363&index=1&db=opac
PDF:
http://www.mgh-bibliothek.de//cgi-b...mg=0&tit=R%94sing%20Vergleichend-statistische
Adelheid Bach, "Germanen-Slawen-Deutsche" -
https://www.db-thueringen.de/servle..._derivate_00027577/TLDA_WMUF_13027304X_19.pdf
J. Piontek, "Antropologia o pochodzeniu Słowian" -
http://www.geoinfo.amu.edu.pl/sas/06/01/ANTROPOLOGIA/PIONTEK 2008.pdf
Ł. M. Stanaszek, "The Phenotype of Slavs (6th-10th century AD)" (in Polish + English summary):
http://www.archeo.uw.edu.pl/swarch/Swiatowit-r2001-t3_%2844%29-nB-s205-212.pdf
There is also one study by Alexeeva from 2003.
The list of primary written sources which describe how Early Slavs looked like:
6th century AD:
- Procopius of Caesarea
- Theophylact Simocatta
- Theophanes the Confessor
- Emperor Maurice ("Strategikon")
- Pseudo-Caesarius of Nazianzus
7th century AD:
- Al-Ahtal
- Ibn Qutaybah
8th century AD:
- Ibn Al-Kalbi
9th century AD:
- Al-Baladhuri
- Al-Ğāhiz
10th century AD:
- Abraham ben Jacob
- Constantine Porphyrogennetos
- Al-Masudi
- Ibn al-Faqih
- Yaqut al-Hamawi*
*He lived in the 13th century but was quoting 10th century sources.