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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Knowledgeiskey718: [QB] [QUOTE]Originally posted by Clyde Winters: [qb] [QUOTE]Originally posted by Knowledgeiskey718: [qb] ^^^^Wrong Clyde, these were OOA populations, who became non African, just like Australians etc... Where is the actual anthropological evidence? Quotes don't cut it, simply because anthropological evidence confirms these African resembling populations to be Oceanics. Btw, upper paleolithic populations in Europe, also resembled Oceanics and not the San as you think. [/qb][/QUOTE]The skeleton can be a representative of the African type Negro. [QUOTE] Several specialists have reconstructed Luzia's face based on the detailed data supplied by Prof. Neves. When the results became available, even to a layperson it it had become obvious that Luzia was not an Amerind. Instead she had[b] had features strongly suggesting an African or Australoid ancestry[/b] (also see the craniometric graphic below).Luzia was not an Amerind! No trace of Luzia's hair has survived so the reconstructions all had to leave the top of her head bald or cover it discreetly with a towel. Nor, of course, is there any indication of what her skin colour might have been as such a superficial trait does not survive 12,500 years. http://www.andaman.org/BOOK/chapter54/text-LagoaSanta/text-LagoaSanta.htm [/QUOTE]. [/qb][/QUOTE]Aha Clyde, more of that could be would be nonsense, while I have the anthropological evidence, which confirms what I am saying Read.......... Titre du document / Document title Human skeletal remains from sabana de bogotá, colombia : A case of paleoamerican morphology late survival in South America? Auteur(s) / Author(s) NEVES Walter A. (1) ; HUBBE Mark (2) ; CORREAL Gonzalo (3) ; http://cat.inist.fr/?aModele=afficheN&cpsidt=18920356 Résumé / Abstract Human skeletal remains of the first Americans are scarce, especially in North America. In South America the situation is less dramatic. Two important archaeological regions have generated important collections that allow the analysis of the cranial morphological variation of the Early Americans: Lagoa Santa, Brazil, and Sabana de Bogotá, Colombia. Human crania from the former region have been studied by one of us (WAN) and collaborators, showing that the cranial morphology of the first South Americans was very different from that prevailing today in East Asia and among Native Americans. These results have allowed for proposing that the New World may have been colonized by two different biological populations in the final Pleistocene/early Holocene. [b]In this study, 74 human skulls dated between 11.0 and 3.0 kyr, recovered in seven different sites of Sabana de Bogotá, Colombia, were compared with the world cranial variation by different multivariate techniques: Principal Components Analysis, Multidimensional Scaling, and Cluster of Mahalanobis distance matrices. The Colombian skeletal remains were divided in two chronological subgroups: Paleocolombians (11.0-6.0 kyr) and Archaic Colombians (5.0-3.0 kyr). Both quantitative techniques generated convergent results: the **Paleocolombians** show remarkable similarities with **Lagoa Santa** and with modern **Australo-Melanesians**.[/b] [b]Archaic Colombians exhibited the same morphological patterns and associations. These findings support our long-held proposition that the early American settlement may have involved two very distinct biological populations coming from Asia.[/b] On the other hand, they suggest the possibility of late survivals of the Paleoamerican pattern not restricted to isolated or marginal areas, as previously thought. [/QB][/QUOTE]
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