Northener
Elite member
- Messages
- 2,008
- Reaction score
- 522
- Points
- 113
- Location
- Groningen
- Ethnic group
- NW Euro
- Y-DNA haplogroup
- E1b1b/ E-V22
In my mothers K12 Ancient (Geneplaza) there is a remarkable component, the "Jarawan component" in her genes is 1,5% besides that there is a very small East African component 0,2%.
See:
At first hand I took no notion, I thought something like "statistic noise".
But at second hand I became curios.
Especially when I saw an article in the Guardian, quote:
"Stone Age tribes living on the Andaman islands at the eastern edge of the Bay of Bengal migrated from Africa far earlier than previously thought, according to a study which says they may have been living in isolation from the rest of the world for more than 60,000 years."
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2001/may/12/highereducation.humanities
Than I began to see a potential Stone Age/ Paleolithic link, because the autosomal region of my mother called Drenthe is thé part of the Northern Netherlands with absolutely the oldest population. Since Stone Age/Paleolithic times there were people in that region!
Some archeological articles about that:
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1040618215006345
https://pia-journal.co.uk/articles/10.5334/pia.304/
My hypothesis is: the "Jarawa component" in a NW European is a paleolithic marker.
But on the other hand I stay sceptical. Isn't it after all "statistical noise"? And is such a paleolithic residu possible in a modern European?
And so fort.....
Like to know your view about this: fact or fiction, too far fetched or a real possibility ?
See:
At first hand I took no notion, I thought something like "statistic noise".
But at second hand I became curios.
Especially when I saw an article in the Guardian, quote:
"Stone Age tribes living on the Andaman islands at the eastern edge of the Bay of Bengal migrated from Africa far earlier than previously thought, according to a study which says they may have been living in isolation from the rest of the world for more than 60,000 years."
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2001/may/12/highereducation.humanities
Than I began to see a potential Stone Age/ Paleolithic link, because the autosomal region of my mother called Drenthe is thé part of the Northern Netherlands with absolutely the oldest population. Since Stone Age/Paleolithic times there were people in that region!
Some archeological articles about that:
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1040618215006345
https://pia-journal.co.uk/articles/10.5334/pia.304/
My hypothesis is: the "Jarawa component" in a NW European is a paleolithic marker.
But on the other hand I stay sceptical. Isn't it after all "statistical noise"? And is such a paleolithic residu possible in a modern European?
And so fort.....
Like to know your view about this: fact or fiction, too far fetched or a real possibility ?