It’s a Max Planck affiliated study and Rohrlach is one of the authors. Looking at his Google scholar profile, he has authored or coauthored many excellent studies over the last couple years. This Romania paper should be excellent, too. Really looking forward to this one. I noticed many of...
The Southern Arc series of papers were interesting because I seem to remember the final publication (Science) coming out before any sort of presentation. Then Professor Reich went to the University of Leiden for the first presentation. So maybe we’ll luck out and get the Romania paper prior to...
So what’s the best guess on the publication date of this Romania/Transylvania paper? August of this year? Or is sooner an option with some sort of preprint?
My family is from Arizona here in the United States and this last summer was, by a wide margin, the worst we’ve ever seen through the generations. Typically the severity of a summer here is measured by the number of days at 110 degrees F or above per year. We typically average around 20. This...
Here is that model of the J2b L283 (I18746) and R1b Z2118 (I18752) samples from the Cetina Valley in Croatia (2000-1600 BCE) by user “Vladimir” over at Eurogenes. I think this one is a screenshot I took from Anthrogenica before it closed up shop.
I think these 2 slides from the same study might hint at an additional J2b L283 Maros sample, perhaps western Yamnaya derived based on what Huban mentioned about the autosomal composition:
Far right column above = Bronze Age samples with one J2b L283 (Approx 2100 BCE, assuming Maros). White...
I remember user “Asburg” (spelling?), or “Huban” mentioning these samples as well. He had indicated there was another J2b L283 dated to about 2000 BCE from this paper. I believe the sample, based on what he claimed, came from Szeged, Hungary. This is not too far from Mokrin, Serbia…a little...
It looks like both NEO281 and KK1 can be modeled as approximately 80% Progress CHG. Exhibit A:
At the same time, I’ve seen some people produce models that show anywhere from 15% to 30% Meshoko ancestry contained within Progress. Even Davidski acknowledges now that this is the case over at...
Fair post.
What I would add is that this thread started way back in 2017. This was before we had any ancient L283 samples. The I4331 Croatia sample wasn’t published until the following year, I believe. So it has been eye opening to see the evolution of ancient J2b L283 finds along the...
Well, between you and the last guy a few posts ago, I think we’ve seen 2 of the dumbest posts in Eupedia history, which is quite remarkable. Nice job. Efficient, too.
The J2b L283 ILLYRIAN and MYCENAEAN samples up and down the eastern Adriatic coast from Slovenia to Greece do all the talking...
Congratulations on a really, really dumb post. 2000+ posts in this thread and nearly 500,000 views, I think yours might just be the apex of moronia. Fortunately ancient DNA is not your friend and summarily refutes virtually all of your claims. I don’t have the time to address all of them...
Here’s a preprint that does a pretty good job of covering some of these questions about who were the Illyrians and the contact zone to their north. All of this was in the context of trying to pin down the origins of the Albanian language. J2b L283 is a bit of a mysterious lineage just like the...
That all sounds correct to me. Corded Ware / Bell Beaker groups being derived ultimately from somewhere in the forest steppe and Catacomb/Yamnaya associated groups moving through the dry steppe closer to the Black Sea coast and working their way into the Balkans via the Danube or straight...
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