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Post by Διαμονδ on Nov 29, 2017 13:25:32 GMT
Genetic history of the Middle East explores rekonstruiruet history of the Ancient East based on the study of population genetics. Genetic studies demonstrate a high degree of homogeneity of the population in the Middle East, most of which is a carrier of haplogroup J, which is sometimes called "Abraham's haplogroup" - named after the legendary ancestor of the Arabs and the Jews. The Yemeni Arabs and the marsh Arabs this haplogroup reaches its highest concentration (72% and 81%, respectively). However, researchers believe that this haplogroup is of Semitic originally, as in the first it is widely represented in the Caucasian non-Semitic peoples, and secondly, historically, Semites migrated from the steppes of Northern Africa, where indigenous haplogroup E. the gene pool of Moroccans the percentage reaches 83% of Tunisians 72%, and the Algerians 59%. This haplogroup is fixed representatives rendererotica naturisme culture, and also detected in the population of Canaan. In West Asia, these genes are present in the substratum of the population of Jordan (26%), Lebanon (17%) and Palestine (19%) Archaic haplogroup T, which can be traced back to the Neolithic age represented the Palestinians (7%), Egyptians (6%), Lebanese (5%) and Syrians (5%). There is a hypothesis that the Sumerians had this haplogroup. The presence of R1b haplogroup is usually associated with the Turkic people (as well as haplogroup R1A, which in Egypt can be the Mamluk-Kipchak origin). Higher (but not dominating) the concentration of "Turkic" genes reach from Iranian Kurds (17% of Iraqi Kurdistan (where there was a Turkic state Kara-Koyunlu). High concentration reaches the Kurds paleosurface haplogroup I (20% of Turkish Kurds and 17% from Iraq). However, there is a version of the ancient presence of haplogroup R1b in the middle East, as it is widely represented in the pre-Arabic population (Assyrians). In addition, this haplogroup is selected from the Pharaoh Tutankhamun In the ancient middle East 50 thousand years ago settled in carriers of haplogroup C, which are then dispersed widely from Australia to Mongolia. Direct descendants of the first wave of human migration presented by the Papuans and Australian aborigines Exploring the genetic data, we found out that the modern Lebanese are partly descendants of the medieval European knights. Also found out that 6% of the population of the shores of the Mediterranean (including Malta and Cyprus) are descendants of the Phoenicians. Haplogroup J (Y-DNA).
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