Posted on 07/23/2011 7:26:30 PM PDT by Palter
As is Euskara, I believe.
Basque cannot belong on that tree. It’s non-IE.
I don’t think that anyone knows exactly WHAT it is (non-IE or otherwise), unless there have been some new research findings that I haven’t heard about, yet :) Since it doesn’t really “belong” anywhere (again, last I heard), and it’s a language of Europe, it came to mind. Just wanted to throw it out there for those interested :)
Another missing language is Afrikaans, which has now evolved far enough from Dutch that it is considered a separate language, rather than just a dialect of Dutch.
Could you please add me to your list?
Refreshed = E1b1b1
Good point!
The answer is easy: Tin.
Tin, to make bronze, was hard to obtain. Wales and Corwall are sources of tin from ancient times. Traders from the Med came to Wales (and Cornwall) to obtain tin and left their genetic legacy there.
There are a few interesting theories being thrown about:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Out_of_India_theory
We have a winner!!! Sorry I was tardy, I was out of town. But Tin is the answer. Tin was very rare in the ancient world and highly sought after. Archaeologist are still searching for the early sources of tin used in the Early and Middle Bronze age because they think that Cornwall and Wales are just to far away. Actually tin is not really used purposely (so we think) until about 2000 BC. Bronze made before that is alloyed with arsenic or the tin is a bi-product of the copper.
Think of this, the article says that the genetics go back to 2000 BC, the start of the pre-palatial Minoan period, and tin is mined at the same time. Interesting that the Minoans or some other people may have went as far as Wales for tin.
Interesting, but nuts.
The entire history of Eurasia (up to the last 500 years or so, when firearms finally gave civilized peoples the ability to effectively defend themselves) has consisted of invasions of the fertile and civilized south, west and east periphery by nomads from the dry and inhospitable center. (The northern periphery was the most inhospitable area of all.)
The Out of India theory envisions people intentionally leaving fertile and comfortable lands to invade dry and inhospitable ones.
Not gonna happen.
Australia, Iceland, Siberia...
;^)
If this genetic marker is 4,000 years old, then it would have been pre Roman. Was this an area of Wales that could have supplied tin to be alloyed with copper to create the Bronze Age. Perhaps ancient eastern Mediterranean peoples were traveling here by boat to either mine tin, or to trade for tin. An while there, enjoying the local female companionship. They could have had a settlement with extensive mining and commercial activity centered around the importance of the tin trade.
"Roman soldiers in BritainSignificant frequencies of E-V13 have also been observed in towns in Wales, England and Scotland. The old trading town of Abergele on the northern coast of Wales in particular showed 7 out of 18 local people tested were in this lineage (approximately 40%), as reported in Weale et al. (2002). Bird (2007) attributes the overall presence of E-V13 in Great Britain, especially in areas of high frequency, to settlement during the 1st through 4th centuries CE by Roman soldiers from the Balkan peninsula. Bird proposes a connection to the modern region encompassing Kosovo, eastern Serbia, northern Republic of Macedonia and northwestern Bulgaria (a region corresponding to the Roman province of Moesia Superior), which was identified by Peričic et al. (2005) as harboring the highest frequency worldwide of this sub-clade.[Note 11]"
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