Big Triece wrote:
Lord Zentei wrote:
LMAO!!! Now you're stuck talking about the Paleolithic to the Early Holocene? What the hell has this to do with the Kingdom of Egypt?
So have the years of persistent meth abuse induced you into a persistent state of amnesia, or are you just a dumb ass? The discussion of Brace's 2006 study came up as a result of some ass backwards retard (not you this time) referring to the dubious conclusions of Brace's 1993 study. He was unaware of the later finding that the early Europeans used in Brace's 93 study )which along with Somalis were the sole reason that the ancient Egyptians were lumped into the European, North African, West Asian and Indian cluster) resembled tropical Africans. Brace's latter study confirmed the biological distinction of modern Europeans from those earlier ones, which is just one major blow that nullifies the implications of his 1993 study.
Right, because it's not as if ancient Egyptians cluster with neolothic
and modern Europeans in the 1993 study, and that 33000 year old skeletons have absolutely nothing to do with it.
Big Triece wrote:
Lord Zentei wrote:
Show... similarities with some of the sub-Saharan... specimens... Well? What the fuck do these 33000 year old skeletons have to do with Egypt,
You see, if you're going to intrude into a fucking discussion then you should first at least attempt the understand the dialogue. The reason why it is important to note that these pre-historic Egyptian remains resemble some Sub Saharan African populations, is because those Egyptians (the Mushabi) migrated eastward into the Levant and were the primary population source of the Natufanians (first farmers) who migrated northward into Europe and subsequently brought agriculture into that continent.
Now what is perhaps most ironic about your statement asking why is this relevant, is because you and many others are persistently referring to some sort of Pre-historic back migration from the Levant into African via the Sinai as the basis to say that Egypt has always been mixed. The fact that these studies are attributing the migrating Sub Saharan/Northeast African affinities of early Levantine and European populations to Pre-historic Egypt (Mushabi), directly slaps the shit out that theory!
You goddamned illiterate buffoon. I have said before that you're not arguing with me at all, but with some imaginary poster that you want to have a debate with. But honestly? At this stage, I'm sick and tired of having to repeat my fucking self. While I have consistently said that Egypt is African, and that clusterings with Near East populations is due to the Near East populations having come from North East Africa in the first place, that wasn't good enough for you, was it. You went ballistic that the indigenous populations could have been anything other than your beloved Pure Black Race (TM). Jackass.
Big Triece wrote:
Lord Zentei wrote:
seeing as your own sources then go on to speak of demic diffusion into Egypt?

Please post the passage in either study stating that Demic Diffusion from the Middle East into Africa occurred, or admit that your reading comprehension skills are piss poor!
Sure:
BRACE wrote:
The assessment of prehistoric and recent human craniofacial dimensions supports the picture documented by genetics that the extension of Neolithic agriculture from the Near East westward to Europe and across North Africa was accomplished by a process of demic diffusion (11–15). If the Late Pleistocene Natufian sample from Israel is the source from which that Neolithic spread was derived, then there was clearly a Sub-Saharan African element present of almost equal importance as the Late Prehistoric Eurasian element.
Any questions?
Big Triece wrote:
Lord Zentei wrote:
is that ancient Egypt was heterogenous. Don't you understand that you don't refute a claim of there being a heterogenous population merely by showing that such and such a sample clusters with sub-Saharans using such-and-such a criteria, when there are numerous samples which cluster with groups in North Africa and the Near East too?
Our opinions on the matter differ in how we are using the term "heterogeneous". The evidence presented thus far indicates that Egypt was indeed a "heterogeneous" civilization since Pre-Dynastic times. It was (according to Keita, Ehret, Bard, Zakrzewski, Davidson ect, ect ect) a mixture of early Afro-Asiatic speaking populations from the regions stretching between Nubia and Somalia and a later wave of Nilotic populations of the ancient Sahara. I am of course using this term from a scientific perspective. These indigenous populations of Africa are genetically and physically distinct from one another, regardless of if both populations would collectively be referred to as black Africans.
You on the other hand are using the term "heterogeneous" from a social perspective meaning a mixture of races. You believe that at some unspecified time in pre-history, a back migration of a non African population
exhibiting an disclosed phenotype,
having no influence language or culture settled on the Nile, subsequently leading to an inexplicable cultural and biological fusion with black populations from further south that has characterized Egypt ever since. I call it fantasy or bullshit!
And I call you an idiot and a liar. I have lost count of the number of times that I have made my position clear in this thread, but yet you yammer on like a purblind fool, fighting your windmills.
Big Triece wrote:
Lord Zentei wrote:
The point was that the source you provide directly refutes your claim of no back migration into Africa from the Near East at any point prior to the Early Dynastic period.
That passage is in no way shape or form indicating a back migration into Africa. No where is such indicated anywhere else in the study, by wording, plots, or dendrograms. The Demic Diffusion was from the Natufanians of Isreal who the descendants of the Mushabi (of Africa) into Europe...The Middle East-Europe.
Now , if you really want me to prove to everyone what an ass clown you truly are, then please persist with your argument of Demic Diffusion into Africa through misinterpretations of Brace or the usage of any other study.
How about that you read it one more time?
Big Triece wrote:
Lord Zentei wrote:
You know, the hilarious thing is that these sources of yours support the position that you have accused me of holding: namely, that agricultural societies in early Egypt were at least in part due to immigration from the Near East
You are correct. Egypt did incorporate Near Eastern products into their indigenous agricultural practices, but this fact alone does not prove a migration into Egypt from the Middle East. The strongest non biological evidence against this idea, is that the words for these Middle Eastern products,
WERE NOT SEMITIC but native Egyptian. Compare that to the products used in Egypt from the ancient Sahara, which are Nilotic loan words. In fact many many words in ancient Egyptian language were Nilotic despite, ancient Egyptian being an Afro-Asiatic language. This linguistic evidence along with cultural and consistent biological findings have all pointed to a Nilotic colonization of the Pre-Dynastic Egypt. Furthermore the agriculture of ancient Egypt was a result of the Saharan Neolithic which is reflected by the fact that Egyptians used a Nilotic foraging system.
Honestly, whether the words used for the Middle Eastern products were Semitic or not makes not a lick of difference. But that's neither here nor there, since I don't hold the view that the ancient Egyptians were Semitic in any case.
Big Triece wrote:
Lord Zentei wrote:
rather than a wholly indigenous development.
This was already discussed earlier. I've never denied the influences of certain Middle Eastern cultures in Pre-Dynastic Egypt. What was debated extensively, was the significance of those influences. Some scholars like Keita state that Egypt had a "primarily African" origin, while scholars like Ehret state that Egypt was "fundamentally African".<SNIP>
Now see, had you posted something like this from the get go, instead of backpedaling now, then perhaps this thread would have been something like 10 pages shorter. Might have been, but probably not.
Big Triece wrote:
The persistent answer is that Egypt's origins were above all African (from the south), which in that does not negate influence from the Middle East. No one is saying that it is impossible that some small groups or individuals from the Levant crossed the Sinai into Lower Egypt during Pre-Dynastic times, and in fact I think that it most likely happened. What is baseless to assert however , is that such a presence could characterized early Lower Egyptians as a "mixed" populations. Biological evidence such as limb proportions make findings that early Lower Egyptians and populations in Palestine of the same period "were significantly different" from one another and the former grouped with tropical Africans in that respect.
They cluster with different populations depending on sample and criteria, as has been shown by multiple sources. The fact that they cluster with sub-Saharans by limb proportion and other things does not mean that they were flat out Black African as you have consistently claimed.
Big Triece wrote:
Lord Zentei wrote:
Hilariously, you post an image directly from Mathilda's blog,
No actually the image came from Brace's 2006 study. During a google image search Mathilda's page had the best size format for the image, compared to other results which would have stretched the thread page ridiculously wide.
Yeah, the problem with that is that it is hypocritical. You jumped on a bunch of people for their supposed use of material from that site, and yet, now you're using it yourself. BTW, it's trivial to obtain a free image processing software from the internet (Paint.NET, for example) and then re-size your own images.
Big Triece wrote:
Lord Zentei wrote:
Incidentally, do you understand that your source just said that the sub-Saharan element is almost as important as the Eurasian element in the population you're talking about here?
Contrary to Brace's words, the biological pull of the Natufanians does not at all suggest a strong "Eurasian" component. In every dendrograms and plot in that study those early Israelis form an affinity placing them squarely within the context of recent/Pre-historic Northeast Africans. Brace even stated that they formed into that twig. What has yet to be proven is the pull towards Eurasian populations, by any of the visuals. Notice that Ricaut's study, never even mentions a Eurasian component in the Natufanians and characterizes them as the descendants of Pre-historic Egyptians (Mushabi) who exhibited a Sub Saharan African phenotype.
So now, you're disagreeing with Brace's conclusion... when you had previously cited him as a source. Well, how about that.
Big Triece wrote:
Lord Zentei wrote:
And this population spread across North Africa, Egypt included, bringing agriculture with them? Just wow.

I'm not going to label you as a liar, because it's apparent that you are just a self righteous retard with reading comprehension skills that vary according to what you want to believe. If I asked you to provide a quote from the study stating that Demic Diffusion into Africa occurred, you'd scratch the roots off of your pea head searching for the contents for months.
Again, I have already posted it: it's Brace's conclusion:
BRACE wrote:
The assessment of prehistoric and recent human craniofacial dimensions supports the picture documented by genetics that the extension of Neolithic agriculture from the Near East westward to Europe and across North Africa was accomplished by a process of demic diffusion (11–15). If the Late Pleistocene Natufian sample from Israel is the source from which that Neolithic spread was derived, then there was clearly a Sub-Saharan African element present of almost equal importance as the Late Prehistoric Eurasian element.