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Originally Posted by Zrinski
No they didn't. You are confusing things.
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Nope. You're confusing things.
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There are no levels. R and I are distinct European haplogroups, J, G, N and E are not....these evolved outside of Europe and are introduced in European through migration.
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Nope. R haplogroups evolved in Central Asia. The haplogroup R1b is still very much common in pockets all around Eurasia and Central Asia.
Haplogroup I evolved in the Middle East, just like J, G and E.
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You are talking about totally different classification. Yes all haplgroups originate from the same place and from the same proto-haplogroup which can be associated with distinct proto-cultures but thats generally understood and is not a matter of debate here.
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You mentioned which of the hg's are distinctly European, and none of them really are.
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I think you misunderstood the context in which I used the term "autochtonous".
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You're just saying "autochtonous" because you like the sound of it.
The fact is that over 99% of European Y chromosomes are there since prehistoric times.