Bioarchaeological Perspectives on Late Antiquity in Dalmatia

see this link and it will explain a lot..............on Phasos, all samples from the paper are ancient greek migration samples from the aegean island of Paros ...........the greeks wiped out the Liburnian men when they arrived

Across a Narrow Sea: Ancient Greeks and Romans in the Eastern Adriatic​


This lecture was given by Dr. Sarah James (University of Colorado Boulder) to the AIA Boulder Society on Dec. 2, 2020. It was co-sponsored by the CU Boulder Department of Classics and the CU Museum of Natural History. Abstract: Often neglected by Classical scholars, the coastal region of Dalmatia in southern Croatia held significant appeal to the ancient Greeks and Romans for over a thousand years. Positioned on a major trade route from central Europe into the Mediterranean, the archaeology of Dalmatia from the 6th c. B.C. to the 3rd c. A.D. reveals how first the Greeks founded colonies and then the Romans dominated the region and its peoples. Join Dr. Sarah James as she discusses both the history of the region and a new CU Boulder archaeological project that will generate fresh insights into this fascinating part of the Adriatic Sea.
see her other stuff from Brac island , Issa island etc .......................

the I2a ydna in western balkans is pre slavic and has zero association with slavic


very annoying to have to post this stuff again , in a site which is extremely difficult to work with .......................
 
see this link and it will explain a lot..............on Phasos, all samples from the paper are ancient greek migration samples from the aegean island of Paros ...........the greeks wiped out the Liburnian men when they arrived

Across a Narrow Sea: Ancient Greeks and Romans in the Eastern Adriatic​


This lecture was given by Dr. Sarah James (University of Colorado Boulder) to the AIA Boulder Society on Dec. 2, 2020. It was co-sponsored by the CU Boulder Department of Classics and the CU Museum of Natural History. Abstract: Often neglected by Classical scholars, the coastal region of Dalmatia in southern Croatia held significant appeal to the ancient Greeks and Romans for over a thousand years. Positioned on a major trade route from central Europe into the Mediterranean, the archaeology of Dalmatia from the 6th c. B.C. to the 3rd c. A.D. reveals how first the Greeks founded colonies and then the Romans dominated the region and its peoples. Join Dr. Sarah James as she discusses both the history of the region and a new CU Boulder archaeological project that will generate fresh insights into this fascinating part of the Adriatic Sea.
see her other stuff from Brac island , Issa island etc .......................

the I2a ydna in western balkans is pre slavic and has zero association with slavic


very annoying to have to post this stuff again , in a site which is extremely difficult to work with .......................
Thanks for the interesting lecture
 
The cline of this ancestry towards the 4th century Greeks is necessarily towards the Imperial Roman/LBA Greece/modern Southern Italian cluster and not towards the area of the PCA we would find EBA Myceneans or the Himeran Greek average which was admixed with the Sicani.

This PCA confirms again what we already know in that ancient greece was plotting overtop of the Roman imperial average near Anatolia and not further shifted down an EEF cline with earlier greek populations from the EBA/MBA.

1727272502742.jpeg
 
We now have two axes of travel towards an area in the PCA from fairly well documented genetically separate populations (One IA Sicani and the other IA illyrian) to make a determination as to where 4th and 5th century Greeks plotted based off the known history of these Greek colonization events. The intersection of these two axes looks modern Dodecanese-like which is slightly more Anatolian shifted than the modern Southern Italian average as a comparison. This is also the same average that the imperial Romans had from central Italy.

1727273218651.png

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