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Originally Posted by
Maciamo
This was already posted and extensively discussed
here.
hello!
Neolithic Agriculture has been introduced by different ways and in different modalities -
the advance along the Danube appears very quick and supported by a demic diffusion - here as everywhere annex sciences can help - the so moked metrics tell us that the LBK and associated neolithic cultures in Western and Central Europe (from Normandy to Bavaria/Bayern) presented a lot of pedomorphic 'danubian' phénotypes, gracile (but global gracility can be supported by way of life, nurture etc...) and with original details features - a study comparing the danubian or Central and South-East Europe metrics with those of previous neolithic sites in Turkey and in the Fertile Crescent, should have shown a big enough similarity between these European Peasants and those of Catal Hüyük in South-Est Turkey (internal and external similarities). Not too close to other Near East or Anatolian neolithic populations. This relative homogeneity seams to confirm a rapid and demic diffusion along the Danube from a modeste population: in other neolithic sites, it is not proved it has been alike. Demic diffusion take place too, I think, for the first 'cardial' sites (by sea and coasts) but here the origin human stocks could be more variated.