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  1. berun

    El Aramo mine (Chalcolithic - EBA Asturias) mtDNA and Bell Beakers

    results appear in a work by Montserrat Hervella and Concepcion de-la-Rua "Paleogenetics of Northern Iberian from Neolithic to Chalcolithic Time", from a mine used for burials interesting, to know which percent "steppe" came with women such link of Iberian BBC with U5b might be checked as to...
  2. berun

    Western vs Eastern Andalusia Y-DNA

    Recently published: "Paternal lineages in southern Iberia provide time frames for gene flow from mainland Europe and the Mediterranean world" some quotations: The notably high frequency of R1b-M529 in the Huelva province (14%), nearly two times higher than those observed in other mainland...
  3. berun

    Found R1b in Neolithic France (?)

    I red the thesis Du fonctionnement des sites funéraires aux processus de néolithisation sur le territoire français (néolithique ancien et moyen) : premiers apports de l’approche paléogénétique by Maïte Rivollat, in page 212 there is a table with SNP results for a person buried 7 millenia ago in...
  4. berun

    Where did the Anatolian branch of Indo-European originate?

    Moderation note: This thread was split from 137 ancient human genomes from across the Eurasian steppes. --------------------------------------------------------------- They disprove any involvement of Yamnaya in major IE migrations but they stick with it. Realy I'm considering if steppitis is...
  5. berun

    I was mistaken: the steppe warriors rode sirens

    It seems the case after finding some steppe DNA in El Argar culture (southeastern Spain): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/El_Argar the culture has some "Aegean" cultural relations, and by such epoch it's not known any continental migration towards the penninsula; and as we know now Portuguese...
  6. berun

    Genetic history of the Indian subcontinent

    From the paper "A genetic chronology for the Indian Subcontinent points to heavily sex-biased dispersals": yet Yamnaya, no matter if that was a Copper Age culture.
  7. berun

    The Y-DNA of the megalithic people

    With the recent papers about BB, Balkans and Portugal, a more clear picture about the people that spread the Megalithic culture in the Late Neolithic / Chalcolithic could be displayed. Portugal_LN/Chalco I2a1b x2, G2a2, I2a1a1a1b SE_Iberia_Chalco I...
  8. berun

    The kurgan was empty

    In an scientific level, the steppe theory proposed by Gimbutas and thereafter reloaded by David Anthony is dead (the kurgan theory 2.0 was about Yamnayans delivering the Germainc languages to the CW culture through the Usatovo culture by a kind of cultural fashion). The many red and orange...
  9. berun

    Society Europe is racist

    Europeans use to think that their countries are democratic, tolerant, advanced, humanist and so on. The reality is that the big ones in Europe keep their neocolonialism through corrupting governments in underdeveloped countries, and common Europeans don't care much about the semi-slavist...
  10. berun

    Y-DNA turnover in Chalcolithic Iberia?

    The Neolithic dispersal in Europe was headed by G2a people with "local" partners (above all I2a1 which is found in Treilles, Els Trocs, Funnel, Starcevo...). The G2a reached Languedoc and Catalonia being yet a majority (Avellaner, Treilles). With the new Y-DNA samples from the Chalcolithic it's...
  11. berun

    Yamnayans in North Russia

    Just i red the paper "Mapping Post-Glacial expansions: The Peopling of Southwest Asia" (here), and the interesting point is: they include var and freq maps to sure their claims. The article fails to comment that there are ancient J's that confirm their claims: Satsurbila and Kotias in...
  12. berun

    Corded Ware Culture admixture against Yamnayans

    I have taken the results from Genetiker blog; the Pit Grave culture / Yamna is at around 80% EHG + 20% Caucasian; the Middle Neolithic Funnelbeaker culture (4300-2800 BC) provide some 20% WHG + 5% EHG + 75% EEF. The supposed blend of Neolithics and Yamnayans in the Corded Ware provide some 15%...
  13. berun

    Guanche DNA

    From Secher's blog commenting the paper Genetic studies on the prehispanic population buried in Punta Azul cave (El Hierro, Canary Islands), the testing of mtDNA of 56 individuals buried in the site gave 56 H1; the Y DNA of 15 males from there was 7 R1b-M269 and 7 E-M81 (plus an E-M33). From an...
  14. berun

    Bronze Age mtDNA from South Bavaria

    Results of the paper Female exogamy and patrilocality at the transition from Final Neolithic to the Early Bronze Age in Southern Germany might be available after the Scales of Movement in Early Village Societies workshop (24/11/2016): One of the authors is Prof. Krause. The abstract seems to...
  15. berun

    Ancient DNA reveals Europeans in Pre-Columbine Peru

    Sorry for the TheSun-like tittle but it was too tempting... Maybe it's the first archaeogenetic fake? someone knows another even? In whichever case what a sofistication in presenting it (books, travels, videos, photos, photoshop). Quite funny... you can know more about the discovery in a DVD...
  16. berun

    Pluviometers as Y-DNA predictors

    Sorry for this TheSun-like tittle... but looking at those maps it's possible to guess that it's somewhat true... annual rainfall in UK: its land use: of course crops (barley, wheat) need rainfall (for wheat the minimum is around 400 mm), but also too much is not good (from +900 mm), and...
  17. berun

    Three papers about ancient Iberian DNA

    If not posted before or if they are barely known: Díaz N., Solórzano E., Montiel, R., García, C., Yañez C., Malgosa, A., 2004, Determination genétique de l’individu Néolithique de Segudet (Ordino), les restes humains les plus anciens d’Andorre. Antropo, 7, 39-44. www.didac.ehu.es/antropo Woman...
  18. berun

    Cloning a Neanderthal, for or against?

    If it will not be possible to clone now as was done some years ago with the Dolly sheep, surely it will be possible in the coming years, at least at the scientific level, so let's see if it would be moral, which pros and cons we find in that, or if we are for or against this possibility. There...
  19. berun

    The big bubble: Indoeuropean Yamnayans

    I received a suggestion to read Anthony's book "The horse, the wheel and language" as to understand the spread of IE languages from an archaeological point of view. I would like to share my astonishment as how such "theory" could have the general acceptance that receives as it doesn't stand much...
  20. berun

    Mapping ancient R1b

    As this hg is "problematic" it's ever good to expose data in a geographic pattern as to get results or ideas. The map is taken from Eupedia R1b (realy awesome maps from Maciamo, I recognize... as I recognize that I would like to know which program runs for isofrequencies). From the map it...
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