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  1. Mrarsg13

    Southern Ancestry in "Steppe"

    these simulated steppe CHGs of yours are complete nonsense, do you know why? they have absolutely no ANE admixture associated with the North Caucasus, plus you have a bit of an Anatolian shift, which was practically absent in the Neolithic and Chalcolithic steppes!
  2. Mrarsg13

    Southern Ancestry in "Steppe"

    I don't understand you
  3. Mrarsg13

    Southern Ancestry in "Steppe"

    the admixture associated with ANE -TTK was well preserved either in the far north or among the isolated mountainous peoples of Central Asia (Tajikistan) or the Caucasus (mainly its peak in Dagestan)
  4. Mrarsg13

    Southern Ancestry in "Steppe"

    maybe because they were hunter gatherers? They didn’t sit in one place, they moved forward and settled, for example, Dagestan, why not? the Chokh Mesolithic was quite populous for its time there are freely available maps that show that the maximum ANE impurity in all of Europe is Dagestan...
  5. Mrarsg13

    Southern Ancestry in "Steppe"

    Note that samples of the South Caucasus such as Aknashen Mesis Blur or Azerbaijani Mentesh Tepe or Leyla Tepe do not have a mixture associated with TTK, it is found mainly in the North Caucasus. And in proportion to the Caucasian Kotias components, it is not in proportion to the Samara...
  6. Mrarsg13

    Southern Ancestry in "Steppe"

    no, the admixture associated with Tutkaul came to the North Caucasus a long time ago, bypassing the Caspian Sea from the south, perhaps it was in the Mesolithic, perhaps a little later, and the amount of this TTK admixture is proportional to the Caucasian admixture, that is, it was clearly...
  7. Mrarsg13

    Southern Ancestry in "Steppe"

    This is clearly visible from the screenshots of the last article by Lazaridis, you can see where these two wedges that go towards the Caucasus converge, that the Khvalynsk cline (Volga) that the cline associated with Golubaya Krinitsa (Dnepro) converge at one point, which is exactly in the...
  8. Mrarsg13

    Southern Ancestry in "Steppe"

    for example, I’m talking about such samples of the Don Neolithic as Golubaya Krinitsa, the same CHG_IRAN_ANE admixture, samples of Khvalynsk as well, and any sample associated with the steppe, and Azerbaijan has nothing to do with it, this is the profile of hunter-gatherers of the North...
  9. Mrarsg13

    Southern Ancestry in "Steppe"

    I’m more than sure that this is the same CHG-IRAN mixture as any mixture associated with the Caucasus in the Neolithic or Chalcolithic steppe, but why did you decide that its homeland is Azerbaijan? okay, let it be Azerbaijan, but modern Azerbaijanis have absolutely nothing to do with this...
  10. Mrarsg13

    G25 Neolithic non overfit / non eating up components G25 model by me

    I meant, how did you get the artificial coordinates For Arabian_HG_Simulated? Could you also get the coordinates for the hunter-gatherers of the Caucasus who took part in yamnaya and other similar cultures, since the sample "Kotias satsurblia" is not very suitable for modeling.
  11. Mrarsg13

    G25 Neolithic non overfit / non eating up components G25 model by me

    Greetings, could you model the CHG that took part in such samples as progress, middle don, Khvalynsk yamnaya?It's just that Georgian chgs are not quite suitable for this
  12. Mrarsg13

    Question Hello

    Hello, can anyone tell me how to get simulated coordinates in g25 from various other coordinates by adding, subtracting, multiplying, dividing and other mathematical operations? Is there a special calculator for this or is everything done manually?
  13. Mrarsg13

    Question J1 Anatolian Greek

    я I just i just don't I'm just noI'm just sure that your haplogroup has something to do with Semitic j1e or the Middle East. Most likely, this haplogroup existed in the North Caucasus, and took part in the ethnogenesis of the Yamnaya culture
  14. Mrarsg13

    Question J1 Anatolian Greek

    most likely, this haplogroup belongs to the North Caucasus, and its spread is associated with the spread of steppe European pastoralists, such as yamnaya culture, because wsh got to the Balkans and Greece in particular directly and not through such cultures as cwc
  15. Mrarsg13

    Tomenable 10 Thousand Years Ago K42 - G25 calc

    To be honest, this sample is generally unreliable, since it completely lacks components associated not only with eastern hunter-gatherers, but also with ANE-like ones, and it turns out that samples south of the Caucasus Mountains have higher EHG components than those in the north, which is...
  16. Mrarsg13

    Tomenable 10 Thousand Years Ago K42 - G25 calc

    Author, I want to say that this is a wonderful calculator, for the Dagestanis the distances turned out to be excellent for the Stone Age, an excellent result, but it would be necessary to combine Western Iran and Zagross into one group, because even from the results it is clear that they are...
  17. Mrarsg13

    Southern Ancestry in "Steppe"

    It’s interesting that the CHG you modeled, which is north of the Caucasus Mountains and where in fact there should have been more influence of ANE of such people, it turns out that it has less of this ANE than those who lived from the south?
  18. Mrarsg13

    What happened to CHG Ydna in Yamna

    Here the Dagestan peoples are represented. Please note that the Yamnaya component dominates in all of them and the distances turned out to be extremely good despite the fact that this is the Stone Age (and Early Bronze Age), but at the same time, all of the represented peoples are dominated by...
  19. Mrarsg13

    CHG-Like Ancestry on Steppe since Mesolithic

    most likely in the steppes of the Caucasus and in the mountains (Chokh Mesolithic) Caucasian hunter-gatherers lived in small groups, similar to those who lived in Georgia, but differing from them in that they were more “Iranian”, I think 2 groups of Caucasian people settled from Western Asia or...
  20. Mrarsg13

    What happened to CHG Ydna in Yamna

    There is an opinion that there was an exchange of women between Caucasian hunter-gatherers and Eastern European hunters, this was clearly ritual exchanges, since both Eastern European hunters and Caucasian hunters were extremely patriarchal populations, in support of my words, in Dagestan, where...
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