Miqui Rumba
Regular Member
- Messages
- 11
- Reaction score
- 1
- Points
- 3
- Location
- Elx/Elche
- Ethnic group
- catalan
- Y-DNA haplogroup
- R1b1b2a1a2f*
- mtDNA haplogroup
- U3a1
Hi, eupedists, I was reading genetics forum in last year. In my opinon, the most of members are too much worried about our royal lineages or blue blood lines than in health, genetic history, real science prevention, etc. However you have maden a great work for european people: Now we can understand origins and main population movements.
I have got a very rare blood group combination (cis-AB allele, rh D- C-, Kell+ 1) and some unknown antibodies in serum that makes me no compatible donnor. I reject every blood type as people with Bombay phenotype. Though, I recently discover more people like and mostly europeans! University of Lund (Sweden) have published in last decade many revelator thesis about new A weak types and rare subgroups; university of Ulm (Germany) is publishing a sort of RH mutations alleles (thousands of combinations among more than 60 antigenes!) and University of Graz have maden an important study about para-bombay people in Styrian region. All this blood types were totally unknown 30 years ago and now they could real genetc markers like dna test to follow evolution in new european hybrids.
I have got a very rare blood group combination (cis-AB allele, rh D- C-, Kell+ 1) and some unknown antibodies in serum that makes me no compatible donnor. I reject every blood type as people with Bombay phenotype. Though, I recently discover more people like and mostly europeans! University of Lund (Sweden) have published in last decade many revelator thesis about new A weak types and rare subgroups; university of Ulm (Germany) is publishing a sort of RH mutations alleles (thousands of combinations among more than 60 antigenes!) and University of Graz have maden an important study about para-bombay people in Styrian region. All this blood types were totally unknown 30 years ago and now they could real genetc markers like dna test to follow evolution in new european hybrids.