Go to my prior post #299 and hit R1b-Z2108 hotlinked to yfull tree. You can see three lumped together Armenia, Russia Dagestan,Gujarat India. Under those is R1b-Kms-67 found in Yamnay- and modern Italy-France-Greece.
Right, I see them.
My thread about statue menhirs in Archaeology forum was deleted! I don't know what the purpose of Eupedia is but you can't hide all historical evidences forever.
That thread was deleted because you were warned by one of the moderators to stop posting tin-foil hat pseudo-history stuff. There is no conspiracy to hide any historical evidences of anything, what you were using as evidence was not (and is not) evidence, you are coming across as a t-roll.
Proto-Germanic is a Centum language but Corded Ware culture is the source of Satem language, in fact in the first step proto-IE in the north of Eurasia was changed to Satem, the proto-Finnic word for "hundred" is sata which is from the same word satem "hundred". It is impossible that proto-Germanic was derived from Satem.
First, that is bold claim to assert that Corded Ware is the source of only Satem. Second no one ever said that proto-Germanic was Satem. You are again ignoring links provided that show pre-proto-Germanic contacts with Finnish as well as proto-Germanic contacts. You do this countless times in this thread because it is evidence that your theory is nonsense. You are also making an extremely bold (and inaccurate) statement that Corded Ware contained Satem languages only, when we know that is extremely unlikely as Indo-Iranian precursors were spoken further east (Sintashta), Centum and Satem dialects were likely in a broad spread.
You can read some interesting things pertaining to Uralic here:
https://www.sgr.fi/sust/sust266/sust266_parpola.pdf search for "Northwest Indo-European", and "Germanic branch". Interesting quotes from this author:
“Presumably the language of the Corded Ware people (who were mobile pastoralists) was Proto-Northwest-Indo-European, the common ancestor of the later Celtic, Italic, Germanic and Balto-Slavic branches, which was still quite close to Late PIE (cf. Oettinger 1997; 1999; 2003; in press).”
"The Nordic Bronze Age culture (c. 1750–600 BCE) in the Jutland peninsula up to Schleswig-Holstein and southern Scandinavia goes back to the local Corded Ware culture, which from about 2800 BCE replaced the cairns of the TRB culture in these parts. This is the generally assumed homeland of the Germanic branch of Indo-European (cf. Ramat 1998). In the Early Iron Age, the Nordic Bronze Age culture expanded southwards, to form the Jastorf culture (c. 600–0 BCE) of northern Germany between the Rhine and the Oder. This is close to the location of the Germanic tribes described by Tacitus in his Germania in 98 CE(cf. Mallory 1989: 84–87; Wikipedia s. v. Jastorf culture). The Nordic Bronze Age culture exerted a strong influence on coasts of Finland and on Estonia, especially the western island of Saaremaa c. 1500–500 BCE (cf. Salo 1997: 14–17;Kriiska & Tvauri 2007: 96–116); these areas may have been bilingual at this time, with a Proto-Germanic speaking elite. The East Germanic Goths originally came from Sweden and moved from the East Baltic to the Black Sea in the late second century CE. The Germanic loanwords have had a very important role in the study of the historical development of the Uralic languages of the Baltic region and Fennoscandia (cf. Posti 1953; Hofstra 1985; Koivulehto 1999a;1999b; Aikio 2006; Kallio in this book)."
"The Nordic Bronze Age culture, correlated above with early Proto-Germanic, exerted a strong influence upon coastal Finland and Estonia 1600–700 BCE. Due to this, the Kiukais culture was transformed into the culture of Paimio ceramics (c. 1600–700 BCE), later continued by Morby ceramics (c. 700 BCE – 200 CE). The assumption is that clear cultural continuity was accompanied by linguistic continuity. Having assimilated the language of the Germanic traders and relatively few settlers of the Bronze Age, the language of coastal Finland is assumed to have reached the stage of Proto-Finnish at the beginning of the Christian era. In Estonia, the Paimio ceramics have a close counterpart in the contemporaneous Asva ceramics"
I provided links showing both influences of Finnic/Samic on early Germanic and proto-Germanic (even pre-proto-Germanic) influence on Finnic/Samic languages, yet you've ignored it and instead cite the use of
sata in Finnish. We already know that Uralic languages acquired Indo-Iranian influence due to the likely proximity of early proto-Uralic populations to the predecessors of Indo-Iranian cultures prior to migrations of Uralic people further to places such as Finland or the Baltic coast of Northeastern Europe. You ignore chronology and ignore information people share in this thread, your pseudohistorical nonsense is tired.
You ignore this fact that proto-Germanic (and pre-proto) had an influence on Finnic/Samic languages because it shows that proto-Germanic most likely formed in Northern Europe and that is something your theory has not accounted for.
We know the Finns and Sami people lived in the north of Europe from at least 2,000 BC, there are many words from Satem languages (Balto-Slavic, Indo-Iranian and especially proto-Armenian) in both proto-Finnic and proto-Samic languages, of course we see proto-Germanic words in these languages but after 500 BC, is there any word from a Centum language in them too? Please mention some of them, if you know.
You've not seen the recent papers on Uralic and associated Y-haplogroups have you?
Any word from a centum language in Finnic/Samic?
Germanic loanwords in Finnic that arrived PRIOR to long a raising:
Finnish
hake- from PGmc
*sākija-
Finnish
raha from PGmc
*skrahā
Finnish
kavio from Pre-PGmc
*kāpa-
Finnish
lieka from Pre-PGmc
*lēgā-
(PRE-proto-Germanic loans right there)
Early Finnic & Samic Germanic loanwords demonstrating earlier *e prior to i-mutation
Finnish
teljo from PGmc
*þeljō
Finnish
menninkäinen from PGmc
*menþingō
Northern Sami
deahkki from early PGmc
*þekkwiz
Northern Sami
jievja from early PGmc
*heują
Finnish
rengas from early PGmc
*hrengaz
Or what about Finnish
ruhtinas from PGmc
*druhtinaz? Will you ignore these?
Or Finnic
*kuningas from Proto-Germanic
*kuningaz, or this same word
*kuningaz being the influence for Northern Sami:
gonagas and other variants in various Sami languages. What about Proto-Germanic
*lambaz found in Proto-Finnic
*lambas (descendants are found in Estonian to Votic) which is also shared with Samic languages and this isn't even a full list of the Germanic loanwords in Finnic/Samic languages.