The most commonly found haplogroups [among Lithuanians] are R1a and N, hence it can be argued that Lithuanians originate from Pakistan/Northwest India and East China/Taiwan.Jankauskiene et al., Population data and forensic genetic evaluation with the YfilerTM Plus PCR Amplification kit in the Lithuanian population, Forensic Science International, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.fsigss.2017.10.009 For a reality check see here... R1a: The beast among Y-haplogroups
Saturday, October 21, 2017
Hilariously wrong
From a recent paper at Forensic Science International:
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Unironically citing the out of India theory as plausible.
ReplyDeleteWell... technically... they are correct in saying that "it can be argued".
ReplyDeleteIs there free access to the full text because the abstract doesn't mention the origin part ? Being a forensic paper, the conclusion about origin is a bit wierd. Maybe by checking the references they have used,it can be known where their argument is coming from. Surely, they aren't experts in genetic anthropology.
ReplyDelete@Ritesh
ReplyDeleteNothing in the reference section about R1a or even Y-chromosome phylogeography. It seems like the authors just skimmed through literature, saw a couple of old papers claiming that R1a was from South Asia, and based their conclusions on those without referencing.
Thanks for the clarification.
DeleteFrom the hilarious paper "The analysis of Y-STR markers is used" - ahahah.
ReplyDeleteThis paper has no significance.
I can't delineate what's what and what rings true but I can tell you 'traits' of the groups I'm associated have definitely contributed to our 'ethnic' look over the centuries. We were told we were either African or Native several generations back. What showed up was indicating more N. Africa, India and the like.
ReplyDeleteInteresting stuff for sure!!
Dee