Battaglia et al. (2008), "Y-chromosomal evidence of the cultural diffusion of agriculture in southeast Europe", European Journal of Human Genetics.
he..he..
znaev jas deka SHQIP CUCI vo tebe......
i sto dokazuva toa?
eden del od SHQIPOT E STAROSEDELEC (vo koja drzava toa go nema?),t.e. toa se Albanizirani Makedonci,sto ne e tajna,edni Albanci licat na Evropejci,drugi na Cecenci i Kurdi,no ti zaboravas edna rabota:
SOBERI GI SITE POMALI PROCENTI NA SHQIPOT I SPOREDI GI SO KAVKAZCITE.
Pa napisi kakov rezultat si dobil.(~65% kavkaz)
Stajse i ti na tas(eto) SHIPSKI da im pomognes okolu genisuvanjeto....
p.s....
i ako se razbiras od mutaciite na genite,SHQIPOT ti dosol okolu 525 AD....
ili toa ne ti e jasno?
ti gi sakas Slavsite i Shqipot,pa eve,ova ti se poklopuva so brojkite....
tvojte Slavi,spored taa teorija,se vsusnost Shqiptari.....
em Shqip-em Slav....
em Kavkaz (65%)
kazi mu i na PIG Assot da razbere...
probajte da se prebroite genetski mutirani so Ken Nordtvedt's Generations2 program....ako znaete sto e toa....
p.s....
Haplogroup E1b1b (Y-DNA)
Haplogroup E1b1b (formerly E3b, see map) represents the last major migration out of Africa into Europe. It is believed to have first appeared in the Horn of Africa or southern Africa approximately 26,000 years ago and dispersed to the Middle East during the Upper Paleolithic and Mesolithic periods.
On the European continent it has the highest concentration in Albania and Kosovo, then fading around the Balkans, Greece and Western Turkey. Outside Europe, it is also found in most of the Middle East, northern and eastern Africa, especially in Morocco, Lybia, Egypt Yemen, Somalia, Ethiopia and South Africa.
The vast majority of the European members belong to the E1b1b1a (or E-M78, formerly E3b1a) subclade, for which the highest density is observed in the Peloponese, in Greece. It has 4 main subclades : E1b1b1a1 (E-V12), E1b1b1a2 (E-V13), E1b1b1a3 (E-V22) and E1b1b1a4 (E-V65). Each is further subdivided in "a" and "b" subclades. The the most common in Europe is
E-V13. It is thought to have originated in Greece around 6,000 years ago, and is associated with the ancient Greek expansion and colonisation. Outside Greece it is particularly common in Southern Italy, Cyprus and Southern France.
E1b1b1b (E-M81, formerly E3b1b) is characteristic of the Berbers of North-West Africa. In some parts of Morocco E1b1b1b can peak at 80% of the population. This sub-hapolgroup is also found in Iberia, Italy and southern France, with the highest concentrations in southern Portugal (12%) and decreasing as we move north....
neolitski gejci nemalo,ili sega i tie ke ispadnat,pa ostanuva glavni fukaci da bile Pelazgite (Makedoncite)....
Haplogroup J (Y-DNA)
J is mostly found in South-East Europe, especially in central and southern Italy, Greece and Romania. It is also common in France, Turkey and in the Middle East. It is related to the Ancient Romans, Greeks and Phoenicians (J2),
as well as the Arabs and Jews (J1). Persians and Mesopotamians are divided between J1 and J2.
Subclades J2a, J2a1b1 and J2b are found mostly in Greece, Anatolia and southern Italy, and are associated with the Ancient Greeks.
Haplogroup G (Y-DNA)
G is Central Asian in origins, and found mostly between the
Near East and India. The only ethnic group that has a majority of G Y-DNA are the Ossetians in the Caucasus. G1 is most common in Iran. Most Europeans belong to the G2a subclade. G2c’s are Ashkenazi Jews.
G makes up 8 to 10% of the population of Mediterranean Europe, but is fairly rare in Northern Europe. Europeans belonging to this group are thought to be descending of the Neolithic farmers from the Caucasus region. The Romans have probably contributed in spreading this haplogroup northward.
Some G members in Germany, Belgium and France might possibly descend from the Alans (themselves descending from the Scythians-Sarmatians), a central Asian tribe that traversed all continental Europe during the barbarian invasions in the 5th century.
The Kingdom of Alania was located north of the Caucasus, in present-day Georgia (encroaching a bit on modern Russia). Central and Eastern European members of haplogroup G may very well be descended from the Huns. Indeed, a strong association was found between Hungarian haplogroup G and the Madjar people from Kazakhstan. The Huns and the Alans both invaded Europe at the same period, and both originated in the same region (North Caspian), so it may be difficult to distinguish one from the other.
The Armenian diaspora is also responsible for the spread of G across Europe - notably in France, Ukraine and Greece. One of the most famous member of haplogroup G in history was Joseph Stalin, who was of Georgian origin.
gledaj kade e G....