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Three New DNA Studies Are Shaking Up the History of Humans in the Americas
gizmodo ^
| George Dvorsky
Posted on 11/08/2018 1:53:38 PM PST by BenLurkin
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1
posted on
11/08/2018 1:53:38 PM PST
by
BenLurkin
To: SunkenCiv
2
posted on
11/08/2018 1:54:01 PM PST
by
BenLurkin
(The above is not a statement of fact. It is either satire or opinion. Or both.)
To: BenLurkin
1/1024 = native american minority status affirmative action jobs and political power victim status
That’s all you really need to know.
3
posted on
11/08/2018 1:56:05 PM PST
by
2banana
(My common ground with terrorists - they want to die for islam and we want to kill them)
To: BenLurkin
Elizabeth Warren claims 1/1024 relationship.
4
posted on
11/08/2018 1:56:51 PM PST
by
Drango
(A liberal's compassion is limited only by the size of someone else's wallet.)
To: BenLurkin
Since Lizzy Warren’s miniscule “Indian” DNA was based on sample by proxy of South Americans and Mexicans, does this mean she’s part aborigine?
5
posted on
11/08/2018 1:57:09 PM PST
by
Pearls Before Swine
("It's always a party when you're eating the seed corn.")
To: BenLurkin
Of course they sailed direct. Scientists can be more PC than anyone.
6
posted on
11/08/2018 1:57:50 PM PST
by
Hoosier-Daddy
("Washington, DC. You will never find a more wretched hive of scum and villainy. We must be cautious")
To: BenLurkin
Race agendas aside, DNA studies really are ‘shaking up’ law enforcement. Google “dna arrested”.
7
posted on
11/08/2018 1:58:28 PM PST
by
SpaceBar
To: BenLurkin
One sample out of fifteen.
Sounds like a great case for contamination or error.
Fifteen samples is not much to build a continent wide case on.
8
posted on
11/08/2018 2:02:45 PM PST
by
marktwain
(President Trump and his supporters are the Resistance. His opponents are the Reactionaries.)
To: Pearls Before Swine
does this mean shes part aborigine?Did they test her for part Cannibal?
9
posted on
11/08/2018 2:06:00 PM PST
by
ImJustAnotherOkie
(All I know is what I read in the papers.)
To: BenLurkin
sometimes interbreeding with local populations,
who came from where? Makes the whole of this ‘study’ a p[lea from more grant money. Everyone knows that American Indians were created here - a claim which forms the basis for their legal claims for superior rights and special master status in various venues.
10
posted on
11/08/2018 2:06:31 PM PST
by
PIF
(They came for me and mine ... now it is your turn ...)
To: BenLurkin
migrating away from Mesoamerica (what is today Mexico and Central America) toward both North and South America.
11
posted on
11/08/2018 2:06:35 PM PST
by
Red Badger
(FNo-platform us all you want. Ban us all you want. Smear us all you want. You canÂ’t stop an idea...)
To: BenLurkin
To: BenLurkin
“chronicles the movement of the first humans as they spread across the Americas, venturing both southward and northward and sometimes mixing in with the local populations.”
This phrase is incoherent. If they were the first humans, how did the local population get there first?
To: ImJustAnotherOkie
Did they test her for part Cannibal? She does not look Scottish to me.
14
posted on
11/08/2018 2:10:58 PM PST
by
Harmless Teddy Bear
(Somewhere there's danger, somewhere there's injustice, and somewhere else the tea is getting cold.)
To: Hoosier-Daddy
The overly simple, politically correct, hypothesis that all Native Americans came over the Beringian land bridge circa 12,000 BC is slowly being destroyed but its proponents aren’t giving up. The genetics and linguistics are showing that the populations are much more complex and older in this hemisphere. People were traveling over the seas much earlier than once thought and coming from every direction from Australia, Melanesia, Micronesia, Indonesia, Polynesia, Formosa, Japan, Siberia, Western Europe and West Africa.
15
posted on
11/08/2018 2:11:17 PM PST
by
Oklahoma
To: BenLurkin
Fascinating. Whoever thought back then that Watson’s and
Crick’s discovery would lead to all it has? Letting man
read pages of history we never thought we’d have access to.
Mind boggling. I love it!
To: Red Badger
Hmmmm. History repeats itself.\
17
posted on
11/08/2018 2:13:32 PM PST
by
taterjay
To: BenLurkin
Just sent off my Ancestry DNA kit. No guesses as to how it will turn out.
18
posted on
11/08/2018 2:14:19 PM PST
by
umgud
To: PIF
Except that they really don't have it because they are a miniscule voting block and don't really vote as a block, particularly in the two states where they are most numerous (Oklahoma and North Carolina) and spread out amoung the population.
Do you hear much about the Osage (Oklahoma) or Lumbee (North Carolina)? Probably not, because they are wealthier than the local population from oil and banking/real estate, respectively.
19
posted on
11/08/2018 2:14:29 PM PST
by
Vigilanteman
(ObaMao: Fake America, Fake Messiah, Fake Black man. How many fakes can you fit into one Zer0?)
To: BenLurkin
This population likely didnt spend too much time in North America, eventually finding their way into South America
Reverse caravan?
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