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  1. A. Tamar Chabadi

    Ancient Greek Phonology...If anyone is familiar your help would be great.

    Thank you, Aberdeen...I was already well-aware of the linguistic sites. I had been to many and none told me what I wanted to know directly which is why I asked here. I pieced together what I wanted to know. It took some deep Google searching, but I managed to piece it together. I am well aware...
  2. A. Tamar Chabadi

    Ancient Greek Phonology...If anyone is familiar your help would be great.

    Clearly no one is willing or can help so if someone can , please delete this question. It would be much appreciated. I cannot find a delete the post link anywhere. No use in having a question here that no one can answer or help me with. I think I have pieced together the correct answer anyway...
  3. A. Tamar Chabadi

    Ancient Greek Phonology...If anyone is familiar your help would be great.

    PIE: *T + T, *"TT" (two dental stops) has an "s" between them "TsT" giving "st" in Greek. If the ancient Greeks encountered a language and a word within that language where a set of coronal stops like "tt" was present and the Greeks interpreted the sound of this set of coronal stops as dental...
  4. A. Tamar Chabadi

    More precise R1b subclade estimates using Nordtvedt's methodology

    To make Dienekes' stance clearer...I am forced to somewhat defend him here...hahaha Dienekes in his own words: "...my opinion of Y-STRs as a tool for inferring past population movements is, to put it mildly, low. When Bahamian Y-STR variance is higher than African one, and E-V13, one of the...
  5. A. Tamar Chabadi

    Neolithic patrilineal signals, repopulation, and the Armenian Plateau

    Well, Y-Hap R1b(xL11/P310)...is Anatolian by most considerations...the parent group to those in Ht15 by the old, and now defunct, RFLP method. I agree that it must have assuredly belonged to the Neolithic array...perhaps much more than you think...ht35 is the dominant R1b group in the...
  6. A. Tamar Chabadi

    Who overlaps with the Iberians?

    Hi, Knovas! The K=12 analysis was uninformative...the K=11 ADMIXTURE results were the most informative. At K=12 uninformative groups start to form.
  7. A. Tamar Chabadi

    Who overlaps with the Iberians?

    I voted...Irish, British, French, and Italian...I voted for Italian because it really should be the North Italians. The reason is found in the following image showing ADMIXTURE results at K=11
  8. A. Tamar Chabadi

    More Early Neolithic mtDNA from Spain

    Hi, Maciamo! Does this help? I have been trying to figure out how to upload images...duh (face palm)...the image thingy is in the format and toolbar thingy above the comment box...hahahaha
  9. A. Tamar Chabadi

    More Early Neolithic mtDNA from Spain

    Hi, Carlos! What more do you want? I have the paper if you would like it.
  10. A. Tamar Chabadi

    More Early Neolithic mtDNA from Spain

    Ancient DNA from an Early Neolithic Iberian population_MtDNA Ancient DNA from an Early Neolithic Iberian population supports a pioneer colonization by first farmers C. GAMBA,* E. FERNA´ NDEZ,*† M. TIRADO,* M. F. DEGUILLOUX,‡ M. H. PEMONGE,‡ P. UTRILLA,§ M. EDO, – M . MOLIST , * * R . RASTEIRO...
  11. A. Tamar Chabadi

    More precise R1b subclade estimates using Nordtvedt's methodology

    I can direct you to this very lively discussion from about 2 months ago on Dienekes page...it is between him and Anatole Klyosov and a Mr. Lohizun (an academcian)...among a few other knowledgeable peoples on the Y-Hap R1b issue. Hopefully this will bring more clarity to why I take this position...
  12. A. Tamar Chabadi

    Two relatively recent papers on the Caucasus (I haven't seen them posted here)

    Mol Biol Evol (2011) doi: 10.1093/molbev/msr126 Parallel Evolution of Genes and Languages in the Caucasus Region Oleg Balanovsky1,2,*, Khadizhat Dibirova1,*, Anna Dybo3, Oleg Mudrak4, Svetlana Frolova1, Elvira Pocheshkhova5, Marc Haber6, Daniel Platt7, Theodore Schurr8, Wolfgang Haak9...
  13. A. Tamar Chabadi

    More precise R1b subclade estimates using Nordtvedt's methodology

    I am not so sure that it is all so recent... Increased Resolution Within Y-Chromosome Haplogroup R1b M269 Sheds Light On The Neolithic Transition In Europe George Busby et al. Early studies on classical polymorphisms have largely been vindicated by the growing tome of information on the...
  14. A. Tamar Chabadi

    Neolithic patrilineal signals, repopulation, and the Armenian Plateau

    Well, as for R1b-L11+, I think many subclades of R1b underwent rapid expansion...I don't know if R1b is entirely neolithic in Europe...maybe some subclades are and maybe some are older. I am a strong believer in the Kurgan theory or some version of it. I am not entirely sure that Y-Hap R1a...
  15. A. Tamar Chabadi

    Age of mtDNA haplogroup L3: about 70 thousand years

    Age of mtDNA haplogroup L3: about 70 thousand years
  16. A. Tamar Chabadi

    Age of mtDNA haplogroup L3: about 70 thousand years

    Mol Biol Evol (2011) doi: 10.1093/molbev/msr245 The expansion of mtDNA haplogroup L3 within and out of Africa Pedro Soares et al. Although fossil remains show that anatomically modern humans dispersed out of Africa into the Near East ∼100–130 ka, genetic evidence from extant populations...
  17. A. Tamar Chabadi

    Neolithic patrilineal signals, repopulation, and the Armenian Plateau

    First of all, I would like to say I am sorry for complaining, I won't anymore...just have to get accustomed to the non-Facebook rules...hahahaha...I am accustomed to posting links and attachments at will. I apologize to you, Maciamo, and the many other participants in the Eupedia Forum. Also, I...
  18. A. Tamar Chabadi

    Bahamian Y-chromosome Signatures

    The Haplogroups typically associated with Sub-Saharan Africa are much in evidence... A1b-V164 (associated with the Bakola Pygmies), B-M60* B1-M236* B1a-M146 B2a1-M218* B2a1a-M109 (mostly associated with Pygmies, Nilo-Saharans, and Khoisan), DE-YAP* (a very rare, but known to exist, deep-clade...
  19. A. Tamar Chabadi

    Neolithic patrilineal signals, repopulation, and the Armenian Plateau

    I just lost everything I typed...wow...this timed log out thing is annoying. I will come back and type it later.
  20. A. Tamar Chabadi

    Bahamian Y-chromosome Signatures

    AJPA DOI: 10.1002/ajpa.21616 Paternal lineages signal distinct genetic contributions from British Loyalists and continental Africans among different Bahamian islands Tanya M. Simms et al. Over the past 500 years, the Bahamas has been influenced by a wide array of settlers, some of whom...
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