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Re: More 2 see(C)
- To: http://www.myself.com/~Bhavani (Bhavani), http://www.juno.com/~bhavaniowl (Bhavani), http://www.gmail.com/~bhavaniowl (Bhavani)
- Subject: Re: More 2 see(C)
- From: http://dummy.us.eu.org/robert (Robert)
- Date: Mon, 09 Jul 2012 06:20:39 -0700
- Cc: http://dummy.us.eu.org/noelleg
- Keywords: spambayes, spamprobe
This doesn't make me mad. Nomad.
> From: http://www.juno.com/~bhavaniowl
> Date: Mon, 9 Jul 2012 08:55:48 -0400
>
> Haplogroup C
> Haplogroup C is extremely rare in Britain. It is thought to have
> originated in Central Asia -
> like P, Q, R and other rare haplogroups - and to have dispersed both East
> and West.
> Haplogroup C is the haplogroup to which the many "descendants" of Genghis
> Khan
> reputedly belong, and is also found in India and Southwest Asia.
> C Haplotype #1
> The top Old World frequencies for the partial haplotype below include the
> Uigurs (or Uyghurs) of China, an area
> settled by the Goths in Sweden, Iran, Northern Italy, expatriate
> Lithuanians in Poland and Kurds in Iraq. Since these
> matches are not filtered by DYS385a,b values, there is a strong chance of
> convergence with other haplogroups,
> but the samples cited above could reflect an origin among steppe nomads
> such as the Indo-Iranians (e.g.,
> Scythians and Sarmatians) and the Huns. This haplotype could have come to
> Britain with Sarmatians or
> Alans or other Roman troops of Asiatic descent.