Message from @Dutch
Discord ID: 639021575634419741
the paper said there was indian geneflow to australia after the initial migration
they could be some remnants of the very first outward migration
with indian admixture
These genes could not have arrived during the initial migration to Australia 40,000 years ago because they are absent from the New Guinean and Mamanwa genomes. Also, they are too uniformly spread across northern Aboriginal genomes to have come from European colonists.
the vedic admixture in abos came afterwards
so imagine what they were like before that
jesus
i wonder why indians are so insanely hairy
living in a hot climate
i saw this indian guy take off his shirt, and he was like basically a gorilla
One of God's sick jokes.
ok if the vedic mixture came later
what were they before?
african migration + denisovan
Which is also funny because you have some Sino-Tibetan populations with basically no body hair.
They wuz Aryan before.
but they're not related to africans closely
that's confirmed
But unironically.
i am back
the hairiness is the thickness and color of the hair
and the skin color
and i don't even know why my account was removed from this server in the first place
DNA analysis of a 90-year-old hair sample reveals that Aboriginal Australians left Africa much earlier than Europeans and East Asians
theyre a completely different migration out of africa
not part of our group
"does this mean we're more black than them"
shit
wtf
@Nerthulas What site are you using for those pics?
humanphenotypes
.net
lol
you haven't seen it?
its like our favorite site
because of BasedChris
The first genome analysis of an Aborigine reveals that these early Australians took part in the first human migration out of Africa. They were the first to arrive in Asia some 70,000 years ago, roaming the area at least 24,000 years before the ancestors of present-day Europeans and Asians. They were also the first to live in Australia, according to DNA results of a 90-year-old hair sample of a young man that link Aborigines to the first inhabitants of this part of the world about 50,000 years ago.
This study, however, is not the first to contradict the popular theory that modern humans came from a single out-of-Africa migration wave into Europe, Asia, and Australia. But it does deal it a huge blow by confirming that Aboriginal Australians took part in the first of two rounds of human relocation.
I've seen Chris use it extensively, but I never knew the actual site.