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Post by Deleted on Aug 23, 2018 14:25:15 GMT
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SungirSungir (sometimes spelled Sunghir) is an Upper Paleolithic archaeological site in Russia and one of the earliest records of modern Homo sapiens in Eurasia. It is situated about two hundred kilometres east of Moscow, on the outskirts of Vladimir, near the Klyazma River. It is dated by calibrated carbon analysis to between 32,050 and 28,550 BC and by 2017 DNA analysis at ~34,000.[1] Additional pollen finds suggest the relative warm spell of the "Greenland interstadial (GI) 5" [2] between the 305th and 301st centennia BCE as most probable dates. The settlement area was found to have four burials: the remains of an older man and two adolescent children are particularly well-preserved, and the nature of the rich and extensive burial goods suggests they belonged to the same class. In addition, a skull and two fragments of human femur were also found at the settlement area, and two human skeletons outside the settlement area without cultural remains.[3] The site was discovered in 1955, in the course of local digging from clay pits. Some 4500 square miles were excavated in sixteen field seasons between 1957 and 1977 (Bader 1965; 1967; 1978; 1998). Archeology teams from the Geological Institute of the Russian Academy of Science (R.A.S.), University of Groningen, Oxford University, and the University of Arizona in the United States have all worked on the excavations and related studies to review the findings from the site. They determined that the cultural layer was located in what is called Bryansk soil, related to the period (thirty-two to twenty-four millennia ago) of the corresponding interstadial of the Valdai Ice age of the Late Pleistocene. Evidence of only surface dwellings on the site led the team to conclude it was likely used seasonally.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 23, 2018 14:26:13 GMT
Sungir people phenotype
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Post by Deleted on Aug 23, 2018 14:27:05 GMT
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Post by Διαμονδ on Aug 23, 2018 14:29:58 GMT
This is very interesting population in Europa.
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Post by Elizabeth on Aug 23, 2018 17:53:04 GMT
I'm confused. They don't look Russian to me on the statue Shrug (Or maybe I need to keep sleeping some more )
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Post by Διαμονδ on Aug 24, 2018 5:37:06 GMT
Elizabeth this is just old group haplo C Y-dna Shrug
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