quote:- See David Nicholle's Richard the Lionheart, Saladin and the Struggle for Jeruselam- David Nicolle
Fatimid infantry included "sudani or 'black' African and even Masmuda Berbers from the western Sahara ..."
quote:- Terrence Wise, The Wars of the Crusades, 1096-1291, 1974, pp 52
Fatimid infantry consisted of "20,000 Moroccans (Masmudi Berbers), 30,000 Sudanese, 10,000 'easterners..."
quote:(from International Journal of Middle East Studies, 19(3), 337-365).
Coat of Arms of Sardinia. As with the heraldry of families named with variants of Mori or Moor, several countries in Europe have flags and coat of arms with the heads of Moors on them. Military historian, Yaacov Lev in the article , “Army Regime and Society in Fatimid Egypt” (1987) wrote of Nasir Khusroes of the 11th century who speaks of the "20,000" Masmuda men that made up part of the Fatimid troops in Egypt in his time saying, “Masamida were Berbers from the Western Maghreb. Nasir-i Khusrau, however, says that they were blacks and characterized them as infantry who used lances and swords”
quote:See UNESCO's Africa from the Seventh to the Eleventh Century, Ivan Hrbek et al., 1992, p. 164.
The Masmuda or Masamida Berbers controlled the entirety of the western part of Maghreb or North West Africa between western Algeria and Morocco until the coming of another black population known as the Zanata Berbers of Botr, or El Abter stock. They also maintained power in many towns of Spain.
"Kel Owey girl of the Imakitan Tuareg"
A Kel Owey girl, member of the Imakitan Tuaregs (formerly called Ikitamen) now located in Niger and are known in Arab texts as the KITAMA or KUTAMA Berbers and anciently as the "Mauri" or "Ethiopian" colored people called Uacutameni, Micatateni or Mactunia manus. Centuries ago, the "Kutama branch of the Berbers inhabited the region of Little Kabylia" in Northern Algeria.
quote:Gender and Sexuality in the Middle Ages by Martha A. Brozyna, 2005 p. 303.
“The Berber women are from the Island of Barbara, which is between the west and the south. Their color is mostly black though some pale ones can be found among them. If you can find one whose mother is of Kutama, whose father is of Sanhaja, and whose origin is Masmuda, then you will find her naturally inclined to obedience and loyalty in all matters, active in service, suited both to motherhood and to pleasure, for they are the most solicitous in caring for their children.”
quote:-written by Isidore of Seville in The Etymologies of Isidore of Seville, translation by Steven A. Barney, published 2007. p. 386. St. Isidore
“The Moors have bodies black as night, while the skin of the Gauls is white..."
quote:DANG!!!! I definitely have to watch this video later. Thanks!
Originally posted by Ish Gebor:
Yes, of course.
A Thousand Years Ago In Mauritania - Kamal El Mekki
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vhtYZPSdJRg
quote:Yeah, I've seen this doc(good btw) and this is where my theory kinda started. Because in it they exactly say Saharan Berbers migrated North and conquered the Maghrebi Berbers who lived in the mountains.
Originally posted by Ish Gebor:
The Lost Kingdoms of Africa. The Berber Kingdom. BBC.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sXm70FDMZ58
quote:http://www.egyptsearch.com/forums/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic;f=8;t=009547;p=1#000000
Originally posted by Swenet:
Amazing how northwest Africa seems to have undergone all these epic losses of diversity right under our noses. These seem to be demographic events that took place when people in the Mediterranean basin were literate. But we have no written records of this. Only thing we have is evidence that people all over the Maghreb are much closer linguistically and genetically than they should be.
quote:J. M. Dugoujon et al., in "The Berber and the Berbers: Genetic and linguistic diversities" (in F. D'Errico and J. M. Hombert, eds.,_Becoming eloquent: Advances in the emergence of language, human cognition, and modern cultures_, Philadelphia: John Benjamins, 2009, 125-6.)
Berber languages constitute a fairly homogenous language group (many
scholars, e.g. Chaker 1995: 9, even prefer to speak of a single Berber
language). As linguistic diversity in a language group tends to
increase with time, one may assume that the earliest ancestor of the
Berber languages is not that far away in time. Several scholars have
suggested that the level of diversity inside Berber is similar to that
inside the Germanic or the Romance language groups. If diversification
and time depth were to correlate in the same way in these European
language groups as in Berber, this would imply a time depth of about
2000–2500 years only (Louali and Philippson 2004).
quote:
Originally posted by BlessedbyHorus:
The Sanhaja who were the ones who founded Morocco.
quote:How could I forget about the Carthage remains that showed "Negroid" characteristics...
Originally posted by Swenet:
[QB] In the recent Carthage thread we talked about how the Iron Age Algerian and Carthaginian sample included crania that resemble West African groups AND crania that resemble Nile Valley groups.
quote:Oh so you mostly meant living Berbers. The reason why I brought the topic of Dark skin Berbers vs Pure Berbers is because I remember you posting this about the Zenata Berbers:
Originally posted by Swenet:
Remnants of the original Berber nation might still have been there in medieval times. Perhaps as mixed populations. My comments on the strong correlation between dark skin and West African ancestry in the Maghreb mainly applies to living Berbers. We don't know what happened in the Maghreb in between the Iron Age and today.
Also see my comments throughout the thread below. For instance:
quote:http://www.egyptsearch.com/forums/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic;f=8;t=009547;p=1#000000
Originally posted by Swenet:
Amazing how northwest Africa seems to have undergone all these epic losses of diversity right under our noses. These seem to be demographic events that took place when people in the Mediterranean basin were literate. But we have no written records of this. Only thing we have is evidence that people all over the Maghreb are much closer linguistically and genetically than they should be.
Something, or many things, happened. But what?
quote:http://www.egyptsearch.com/forums/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic;f=8;t=009525;p=6
1) E-M81 carried at high frequencies in very dark skinned modern day Berbers is generally a vestige of past ancestry in the region that doesn't peak in their overall genome like it peaks in the overall genome of most northern Maghrebis (e.g. Henn et al's Tunisian sample is almost exclusively made up of this component whereas it only seems to be of secondary importance in Berbers who are very dark skinned, like some of the E-M81 carrying Zenata individuals).
2) West/Central African—NOT northeast African or old, local Maghrebi—dark skin alleles primarily explain the dark skin of very dark skinned modern day Berbers because their dark skin seems to covary to a large degree with West/Central African ancestry. Again, this only applies to living Berbers, not necessarily the ancient ones.
3) We have yet to find a Maghrebi sample with very dark skin that hasn't been influenced recently by West/Central Africans. In other words, I've yet to see genomes from dark skinned Berber populations that look like they're filled with dark skin alleles that have mostly an early/mid holocene East African (e.g. first Berber speakers) and old Maghrebi (e.g. first Iberomaurusians and Aterians) source. In my view, they no longer exist. But I'm open to being proven wrong.
4) Due to point 1, 2, 3 above, modern day dark skinned Berbers aren't what we thought they were. Among other changes they've undergone, their recent northeast African ancestry (which included dark skin alleles from northeast Africa) has been dwarfed by ongoing West/Central African and old pre-existing Maghrebi contributions.
quote:The author seems to assume medieval Berbers were the same as modern Berbers in appearance. Hence his assumptions about light skin Berbers mixing with black West Africans.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:Yeah you showed informed me about the Shluh Berbers in my other thread and how Coon tried to still label them Mediterranean. Sadly the Hamitic myth still goes on today with certain Africans online.
Originally posted by Djehuti:
BlessedbyHorus, let's not forget even the openly racist Carleton Coon considered the Shluh Berber man of Morocco below to be an indigenous "small brown Mediterranean type".
![]()
quote:Look at this 13th century manuscript illustration
Originally posted by BlessedbyHorus:
The author seems to assume medieval Berbers were the same as modern Berbers in appearance. Hence his assumptions about light skin Berbers mixing with black West Africans.
quote:What is "original Berber" ? is that relation to Aterian or Iberomaurusian or Capsian cultures?
Originally posted by Swenet:
If you want to look for the original Berbers in the Maghreb or Sahara, you would look for an Nubian/Upper Egyptian modal phenotype, because the original Berber speakers and these Nile Valley groups belonged to the same metapopulation. Iron Age Algerians and Carthaginians seem to have included individuals who had that ancestry. Of course, these individuals' affinity with Nile Valley remains could simply be an artifact of the discriminant function analysis used by Keita (e.g. individuals mixed with West African and coastal Maghrebi ancestry may wrongly register as Upper Egyptian), but it seems unlikely that they can all be explained this way. [/QB]
quote:I always held that the "original" Berbers would have resembled Northeast Africans like say the Siwa Berbers or even Beja people. Those two groups are also very "black" like how medieval Berbers were described. Looks like everything has been answered. Appreciate the the contribution/help.
Originally posted by Swenet:
@BBH
Just to be a 100% certain we're on the same page: I mentioned the Iron Age Maghrebi sample mainly to point out that remnants of the original Berbers may still have existed as a population (i.e. not assimilated and extinct as they are today) during the Iron Age. Evidence for this may be that some Iron Age Maghrebi skeletal remains resembled Upper Egyptians. If you want to look for the original Berbers in the Maghreb or Sahara, you would look for an Nubian/Upper Egyptian modal phenotype, because the original Berber speakers and these Nile Valley groups belonged to the same metapopulation. Iron Age Algerians and Carthaginians seem to have included individuals who had that ancestry. Of course, these individuals' affinity with Nile Valley remains could simply be an artifact of the discriminant function analysis used by Keita (e.g. individuals mixed with West African and coastal Maghrebi ancestry may wrongly register as Upper Egyptian), but it seems unlikely that they can all be explained this way.
quote:No, read the link he just posted
Originally posted by BlessedbyHorus:
quote:I always held that the "original" Berbers would have resembled Northeast Africans like say the Siwa Berbers or even Beja people. Those two groups are also very "black" like how medieval Berbers were described. Looks like everything has been answered. Appreciate the the contribution/help.
Originally posted by Swenet:
@BBH
Just to be a 100% certain we're on the same page: I mentioned the Iron Age Maghrebi sample mainly to point out that remnants of the original Berbers may still have existed as a population (i.e. not assimilated and extinct as they are today) during the Iron Age. Evidence for this may be that some Iron Age Maghrebi skeletal remains resembled Upper Egyptians. If you want to look for the original Berbers in the Maghreb or Sahara, you would look for an Nubian/Upper Egyptian modal phenotype, because the original Berber speakers and these Nile Valley groups belonged to the same metapopulation. Iron Age Algerians and Carthaginians seem to have included individuals who had that ancestry. Of course, these individuals' affinity with Nile Valley remains could simply be an artifact of the discriminant function analysis used by Keita (e.g. individuals mixed with West African and coastal Maghrebi ancestry may wrongly register as Upper Egyptian), but it seems unlikely that they can all be explained this way.
quote:The article is talking about a rare clade of L3 found in 5 people in an isolated region of Spain but makes no mention of berbers.
Originally posted by Swenet:
^These are presumably the original Berber speakers. Either that, or they are biologically very similar to the original Berber speakers.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25130626
quote:Figuig is a town in eastern Morocco near the Atlas Mountains, on the border with Algeria.
The main L3d sublineage is L3d3a1, whose haplotype network shows a largely Khoisan centrality (not Damara) although this node is shared also by some unspecified "other Bantu". The Southern Africa specificity of L3d3a was already noticed in the past (see here). So it is very possible that we are before an aboriginal Southern African lineage, maybe arrived with the first Khoisan Neolithic (or whatever other ancient flow) rather than a Bantu-specific founder effect.
http://forwhattheywereweare.blogspot.com/2014/02/sw-african-bantu-matrilineages.html
comment on
Chiara Barbieri et al., Migration and interaction in a contact zone: mtDNA variation among Bantu-speakers in southern Africa. bioRXiv 2014.
quote:They can count the mutations the Iberian L3 lineages have accumulated and by how different they are from the most closely related African haplotypes.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
The article is talking about a rare clade of L3 found in 5 people in an isolated region of Spain but makes no mention of berbers.
How do they know how recent it is in the ancestry of these 5 people?
quote:You didn't answer the question as to how far back this L3 clade goes back in that region in Spain.
Originally posted by Swenet:
quote:They can count the mutations the Iberian L3 lineages have accumulated and by how different they are from the most closely related African haplotypes.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
The article is talking about a rare clade of L3 found in 5 people in an isolated region of Spain but makes no mention of berbers.
How do they know how recent it is in the ancestry of these 5 people?
They don't mention Berbers and this is precisely the point. Berber speakers don't have much of this original Berber ancestry anymore (go over my posts in Typezeis' recent Berber thread for more explanation).
These academics don't always connect the dots. Sometimes they're not doing this because they're being 'prudent', sometimes they're not doing this because they don't know much about Africa.
quote:You asked "how do they know how recent it is in the ancestry of these 5 people". What answer are you looking for if not my explanation that they know it by counting the mutations?
Originally posted by the lioness,:
You didn't answer the question as to how far back this L3 clade goes back in that region in Spain.
quote:The lineage is not West African. West Africans don't have the necessary precursors to give birth to L3f1b6. The L3f they have is just as old as the L3f in Asturia:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
If this L3 clade is 8,000 years old and West African
quote:—Soares et al 2011
Haplogroup L3f3 is thought to have expanded from Eastern Africa into Chad ∼8 ka (Cerný, Fernandes, et al. 2009). The present analysis shows that not only L3f3 but several L3f clades (mainly L3f1) probably also expanded around this time into Central Africa, leading to L3f ’s widespread distribution in Central Africa and to its later contribution to the maternal gene pool of Bantu-speaking agriculturists.
quote:I think what you're referring to above is the European descriptions of "blackamoor" and "tawny moor". These terms don't appear until around the 1500/1600s (?) or so which is quite late in the existence of the term moor. Before that time it was just "moor" and they were described as black. To me it makes most sense that the color distinction arrived at this late time after the moors had mixed a lot with Europeans and west asians producing many lighter "tawny" colored people. The color distinction had nothing to do with Sahelian or maghrebi origins as far as I know. Europeans were preoccupied with color and made the color distinction a primary defining characteristic but even in euro writings of the time you can see that the moors weren't allied along color lines.
But thats not the biggest question I have. The bigger one is that were there two types of Berber groups back then? For example you had your Sahel/Saharan Berber nomadic Berbers who lived near West Africans and then you had your Maghrebi Berbers who were isolated in the mountains. The Saharan ones were the ones described by the Arabs/Europeans as very dark while the Maghrebi ones were a "yellowish" or Khoisan like complexion that resembled something like this.
quote:So theoretically sometime under 8kya L3f thought to have originated in East Africa made it's way to the extreme North of Spain
Originally posted by Swenet:
quote:You asked "how do they know how recent it is in the ancestry of these 5 people". What answer are you looking for if not my explanation that they know it by counting the mutations?
Originally posted by the lioness,:
You didn't answer the question as to how far back this L3 clade goes back in that region in Spain.
quote:The lineage is not West African. West Africans don't have the necessary precursors to give birth to L3f1b6. The L3f they have is just as old as the L3f in Asturia:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
If this L3 clade is 8,000 years old and West African
quote:—Soares et al 2011
Haplogroup L3f3 is thought to have expanded from Eastern Africa into Chad ∼8 ka (Cerný, Fernandes, et al. 2009). The present analysis shows that not only L3f3 but several L3f clades (mainly L3f1) probably also expanded around this time into Central Africa, leading to L3f ’s widespread distribution in Central Africa and to its later contribution to the maternal gene pool of Bantu-speaking agriculturists.
Now, mind you, the Asturian lineage (L3f1b6) we're discussing derives from L3f1. Read what Soares et al say about where L3f1 comes from in the quote above. Clearly, West Africa was a destination of this L3f migration, just like Iberia and the Maghreb. It wasn't a source.
quote:It may not have immediately made its way to the north. At no point in time do we know the precise location of this lineage. It could have recently migrated from central or western Iberia to Asturia for all we know. All we can say is that L3f1b6 is Europe-specific and that it went its separate ways (from closely related L3f1b counterparts) some time after 8000 years ago. And the more it's absent in North Africa, the more certain we can be that it reached Iberia early.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
So theoretically sometime under 8kya L3f thought to have originated in East Africa made it's way to the extreme North of Spain
quote:Yes, and this has been my whole point in Typezeis' thread all along. The DNA of the original Berber speakers has a relatively small representation in the Maghreb today and so there is hardly any L3f, let alone L3f1b6, in the Maghreb. The DNA of the Afalou and Taforalt populations and West/Central Africans has a larger representation in living Berber speakers. However, Berbers speak a language that comes from a region where people were L3f and so there must have been L3f in the Maghreb at some point:
Yet Hg H in Taforalt, Morocco is estimated to be 12kya old in NA and it is the predominant MtDNA haplogroup of berbers
quote:—Hirbo 2011
Haplotype L3f is widely distributed among East and Central African Afroasiatic
and Nilo-Saharan speaking populations, and is at low frequency in neighboring Niger-
Kordofanian populations. The highest frequency was observed in the Afroasiatic
speaking Beja (27%) from Northeast Sudan (Figure 3.4.1, Appendix 6b, Appendix 9).
Most of the east African individuals analyzed in the current study belong to the L3f1
clade, however, most of the Chadic speaking individuals from central Africa in the study
belong to the L3f3 clade (Appendix 8). The L3f2b sub-haplotype defined by a
combination of control region mutations at nucleotide positions 16311 (HVI) and 152
(HVII), are observed exclusively in Cushitic speaking populations from East Africa
(Appendix 8).
quote:It is completely your conjecture to say L3f is The DNA of the original Berber speakers as if it's a fact. No researchers are saying this, only you on planet earth presently
Originally posted by Swenet:
[QB]quote:It may not have immediately made its way to the north. At no point in time do we know the precise location of this lineage. It could have recently migrated from central or western Iberia to Asturia for all we know. All we can say is that L3f1b6 is Europe-specific and that it went its separate ways (from closely related L3f1b counterparts) some time after 8000 years ago. And the more it's absent in North Africa, the more certain we can be that it reached Iberia early.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
So theoretically sometime under 8kya L3f thought to have originated in East Africa made it's way to the extreme North of Spain
quote:Yes, and this has been my whole point in Typezeis' thread all along. The DNA of the original Berber speakers has a relatively small representation in the Maghreb today and so there is hardly any L3f, let alone L3f1b6, in the Maghreb.
Yet Hg H in Taforalt, Morocco is estimated to be 12kya old in NA and it is the predominant MtDNA haplogroup of berbers
quote:You said it by implication
Originally posted by Swenet:
I never said it was the DNA of the original Berber speakers. I said it EITHER belongs to the original Berber speakers or the L3f1b6 population resembled the original Berber speakers.
You're free to prove me wrong.
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
^These are presumably the original Berber speakers. Either that, or they are biologically very similar to the original Berber speakers.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25130626
quote:I have never said it's 100% certain that L3f1b6 represent Berber speakers.
Originally posted by Swenet:
The original Amazigh either ARE, or were related to, these people.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25130626
quote:You're not even making sense right now. There is no such thing as a Berber or a Berber speaker 12ky ago. Therefore, you cannot pin Maghrebi versions of mtDNA H on the original Berber speakers.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:You said it by implication
Originally posted by Swenet:
I never said it was the DNA of the original Berber speakers. I said it EITHER belongs to the original Berber speakers or the L3f1b6 population resembled the original Berber speakers.
You're free to prove me wrong.
You said the DNA of the original Berber speakers has a relatively small representation in the Maghreb today.
Yet Hg H is the predominant maternal lineage of modern day berbers and it goes back 12kya in human remains in Morocco
quote:This is very clear.
Originally posted by Swenet:
The DNA of the original Berber speakers has a relatively small representation in the Maghreb today and so there is hardly any L3f, let alone L3f1b6, in the Maghreb.
quote:^ I think you should retract this statement
Originally posted by Swenet:
The DNA of the original Berber speakers has a relatively small representation in the Maghreb today
quote:I make mistakes sometimes and retract, you might do the same sometimes
Originally posted by Swenet:
The DNA of the original Berber speakers has a relatively small representation in the Maghreb today
quote:—Boattini et al 2013
East Africa (EA) has witnessed pivotal steps in the history of human evolution. Due to its high environmental and cultural variability, and to the long-term human presence there, the genetic structure of modern EA populations is one of the most complicated puzzles in human diversity worldwide. Similarly, the widespread Afro-Asiatic (AA) linguistic phylum reaches its highest levels of internal differentiation in EA. To disentangle this complex ethno-linguistic pattern, we studied mtDNA variability in 1,671 individuals (452 of which were newly typed) from 30 EA populations and compared our data with those from 40 populations (2970 individuals) from Central and Northern Africa and the Levant, affiliated to the AA phylum. The genetic structure of the studied populations—explored using spatial Principal Component Analysis and Model-based clustering—turned out to be composed of four clusters, each with different geographic distribution and/or linguistic affiliation, and signaling different population events in the history of the region. One cluster is widespread in Ethiopia, where it is associated with different AA-speaking populations, and shows shared ancestry with Semitic-speaking groups from Yemen and Egypt and AA-Chadic-speaking groups from Central Africa. Two clusters included populations from Southern Ethiopia, Kenya and Tanzania. Despite high and recent gene-flow (Bantu, Nilo-Saharan pastoralists), one of them is associated with a more ancient AA-Cushitic stratum. Most North-African and Levantine populations (AA-Berber, AA-Semitic) were grouped in a fourth and more differentiated cluster. We therefore conclude that EA genetic variability, although heavily influenced by migration processes, conserves traces of more ancient strata.
quote:And I fail to see what Maghrebi mtDNA H has to do with the fact that the original Berber speakers or a group akin to them brought L3f1b6 to Iberia. You keep bringing Maghrebi mtDNA H up in relation to the original Berber speakers. What does it have to do with the original Berber speakers when you yourself stress that they were already there when the original Berber speakers arrived?
Originally posted by Swenet:
L3f — Hirbo: "The highest frequency was observed in the Afroasiatic speaking Beja (27%)"
L3f1 — Hirbo: "Most of the east African individuals analyzed in the current study belong to the L3f1 clade"
L3f3 — Hirbo: "most of the Chadic speaking individuals from central Africa in the study belong to the L3f3 clade"
L3f2b — Hirbo: "The L3f2b sub-haplotype [is] observed exclusively in Cushitic speaking populations from East Africa"
L3f1b6 — tends to track the movements of the original Berber speakers (or some other unknown branch of Afroasiatic) today.
quote:Yes. And sometimes they seem to deliberately pick European-looking samples for DNA testing. For instance, not so long they submitted a European-looking individual (Young Man of Byrsa) from Carthage to a DNA test. The result confirmed this individual was likely European (close match in Portugal). Conveniently missing from their study and the surrounding hype is a justification for why they specifically picked a European-looking individual out of all the available skeletal remains. Although in the end their nitpicking may still backfire as this individual's autosomal DNA has yet to be published. Would be amusing if he had ancestry that complicates their narrative of "European Phoenicians" and the hype suddenly died down. Remember the silence in the blogs and media when Ramses was predicted to be V38? Oh, and Dienekes and others 'forgot' to post the Natufian results from 2016. Lol.
Originally posted by Djehuti:
I have repeatedly stated that mtDNA hg H found in Taforalt and others only come from a select samples which display early European traits
quote:At what time did proto-berber come into existence?
Originally posted by Djehuti:
She keeps bringing up the fact that hg H was found in 12kyo Iberomarusian remains despite that proto-Berber didn't even exist at that time
quote:1) Which prehistoric human settlement corresponds to who you think were the first berber speakers?
Originally posted by Swenet:
Maybe. But Maghrebi H would have introgressed in that population in your scenario. L3f is the common denominator between all the above groups, not Maghrebi versions of mtDNA H:
quote:And I fail to see what Maghrebi mtDNA H has to do with the fact that the original Berber speakers or a group akin to them brought L3f1b6 to Iberia. You keep bringing Maghrebi mtDNA H up in relation to the original Berber speakers. What does it have to do with the original Berber speakers when you yourself stress that they were already there when the original Berber speakers arrived?
Originally posted by Swenet:
L3f — Hirbo: "The highest frequency was observed in the Afroasiatic speaking Beja (27%)"
L3f1 — Hirbo: "Most of the east African individuals analyzed in the current study belong to the L3f1 clade"
L3f3 — Hirbo: "most of the Chadic speaking individuals from central Africa in the study belong to the L3f3 clade"
L3f2b — Hirbo: "The L3f2b sub-haplotype [is] observed exclusively in Cushitic speaking populations from East Africa"
L3f1b6 — tends to track the movements of the original Berber speakers (or some other unknown branch of Afroasiatic) today.
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
1) Which prehistoric human settlement corresponds to who you think were the first berber speakers?
2) What is the corresponding male DNA to the L3 ?
quote:If one is talking about where the first berber speakers came from
Originally posted by Swenet:
1) The missing cultural link between the Badarian/predynastic and related Iberian Neolithic cultures hasn't been found yet in the Sahara, so I can't point to specific sites.
quote:What about Capsian?
Originally posted by Swenet:
1) The missing cultural link between the Badarian/predynastic and related Iberian Neolithic cultures hasn't been found yet in the Sahara, so I can't point to specific sites.
quote:The Complex and Diversified Mitochondrial Gene Pool of Berber Populations
Originally posted by Swenet:
2) The corresponding male YDNA to L3 is CT or something close in age. But what you presumably meant to ask is what, in my view, the male counterpart of the original Berbers and/or L3fb16 is. In my view it's E-V65, as I explained recently in Typezeis' thread. But E-V65 is simply what survived. It wasn't the only YDNA involved in the migration of the original Berbers. [/QB]
quote:It has everything to do with it. During the Neolithic the Sahara was filled with populations and cultures that never made it to our era. These populations may not have a direct relevancy to the origins of the original Berbers, but culturally many of them are candidates for being the original Berber speakers. Do you have any idea what implications this has for our topic? It means that there are so many distinct regional cultures in the Sahara that searching for the original Berbers is like searching for a needle in a haystack. When that's the case, you can only hone in on the original Berber speakers by using certain data points intelligently. And using certain incontrovertible facts (like the fact that there must have been Nile Valley cultures in between the Badarian region and Iberia that so far have not been found, but which made a contribution to the Iberian neolithic and left behind L3f1b8) is an example of using data points intelligently. Especially since this is the path we know the original Berber speakers traveled on their way to the Maghreb. So, yes, you can definitely use the destination of a population to infer that the archaeological sites you asked me for haven't been found yet.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
If it starts in East Africa and later wound up in Asturias what does that have to do with the original location?
quote:Good question. According to all the glottochronology studies done by experts like Ehret, Blench, and others, Proto-Berber is only 3,000 years old! Yet the same glottochronological analyses show that Proto-Afrasian began to diverge into its daughter languages 12,000-10,000 years ago. This is a huge discrepancy which can only be explained by the presence of an intermediate Pre-Proto-Berber stage which diverged from Proto-Afrasian first before itself diverging into Proto-Berber and other language groups. This is similar to the findings of Proto-Semitic which developed 6,000 years ago probably in the eastern Levant, diverging from a Pre-Proto-Semitic stage that was introduced by African immigrants. The only difference is that Proto-Semitic is twice as old as Proto-Berber.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:At what time did proto-berber come into existence?
Originally posted by Djehuti:
She keeps bringing up the fact that hg H was found in 12kyo Iberomarusian remains despite that proto-Berber didn't even exist at that time
quote:No offense but you're literally arguing stuff I never argued and stuff I already know about. I am very aware that the term "Moor" predates Islam i.e with the Greeks/Romans. But the point is the majority of the "Moors" during the medieval era were Berbers.
Originally posted by africurious:
@blessedbyhorus
I think to answer your questions you should separate the terms Berber and moor. Berber as an ethnic group in N Af is only a few hundred years old. Moor, coming from "maur", was used by Europeans for western N Afs starting well over 1,000 years ago. I'm curious why you only chose descriptions of the moors from the medieval era. Since the inception of the term in Greek docs the moors have been described as black. All the N Af in Greco-roman sources were described as black/very dark (someone can correct me if I'm wrong). The only exception perhaps being the "luecoaethiops" i.e. "White Ethiopians" whom we have no descriptions of other than their name.
quote:I think what you're referring to above is the European descriptions of "blackamoor" and "tawny moor". These terms don't appear until around the 1500/1600s (?) or so which is quite late in the existence of the term moor. Before that time it was just "moor" and they were described as black. To me it makes most sense that the color distinction arrived at this late time after the moors had mixed a lot with Europeans and west asians producing many lighter "tawny" colored people. The color distinction had nothing to do with Sahelian or maghrebi origins as far as I know. Europeans were preoccupied with color and made the color distinction a primary defining characteristic but even in euro writings of the time you can see that the moors weren't allied along color lines.
But thats not the biggest question I have. The bigger one is that were there two types of Berber groups back then? For example you had your Sahel/Saharan Berber nomadic Berbers who lived near West Africans and then you had your Maghrebi Berbers who were isolated in the mountains. The Saharan ones were the ones described by the Arabs/Europeans as very dark while the Maghrebi ones were a "yellowish" or Khoisan like complexion that resembled something like this.
quote:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21082907
Our objective is to highlight the age of sub-Saharan gene flows in North Africa and particularly in Tunisia. Therefore we analyzed in a broad phylogeographic context sub-Saharan mtDNA haplogroups of Tunisian Berber populations considered representative of ancient settlement. More than 2,000 sequences were collected from the literature, and networks were constructed. The results show that the most ancient haplogroup is L3*, which would have been introduced to North Africa from eastern sub-Saharan populations around 20,000 years ago. Our results also point to a less ancient western sub-Saharan gene flow to Tunisia, including haplogroups L2a and L3b. This conclusion points to an ancient African gene flow to Tunisia before 20,000 BP. These findings parallel the more recent findings of both archaeology and linguistics on the prehistory of Africa. The present work suggests that sub-Saharan contributions to North Africa have experienced several complex population processes after the occupation of the region by anatomically modern humans. Our results reveal that Berber speakers have a foundational biogeographic root in Africa and that deep African lineages have continued to evolve in supra-Saharan Africa.
quote:IT'S SAD I HAVE TO REPOST THIS TIME AND TIME AGAIN.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:https://i.imgbox.com/fN4MnsEu.png
Originally posted by BlessedbyHorus:
The Sanhaja who were the ones who founded Morocco.
quote:http://www.embassyofmorocco.us/kingdom.htm
"Sanhaja, Masmoda, and Zenata are the three tribes constituting the Berbers ..."
quote:--Marq de Villiers and Sheila Hirtle ( 2009). Timbuktu: The Sahara's Fabled city of Gold, p. 271.
" ...in the old sources the terms Berber, Sanhaja, Massufa, Lamtuna and Tuareg are often used interchangeably"
quote:http://research.omicsgroup.org/index.php/Zenata
”Zenata (Berber: Ijenaden) are a major old Berber ethnic group of North Africa. They were an umbrella-group encompassing probably hundreds of large linguistically or genealogically related Berber tribes in the north, center and east of Berber North Africa (excluding the Nile valley of Egypt). Zenata Berbers were the founders of several Berber empires, kingdoms and princedoms in North Africa.”
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:You said it by implication
Originally posted by Swenet:
I never said it was the DNA of the original Berber speakers. I said it EITHER belongs to the original Berber speakers or the L3f1b6 population resembled the original Berber speakers.
You're free to prove me wrong.
You said the DNA of the original Berber speakers has a relatively small representation in the Maghreb today.
Yet Hg H is the predominant maternal lineage of modern day berbers and it goes back 12kya in human remains in Morocco
code:--Pedro SoaresGeography Founder Analysis
Migration Time (ka) % of L3 Lineages (SE)
East Africa 58.8 74.0 (0.5)
1.8 20.1 (2.6)
0.1 5.9 (2.5)
Central Africa 42.4 75.0 (2.7)
9.2 24.1 (2.8)
0.1 0.9 (0.2)
North Africa 35.0 7.4 (2.7)
6.6 67.0 (4.0)
0.6 25.7 (3.1)
South Africa 3.2 86.7 (4.3)
0.1 13.3 (4.3)
South Africa (southern)1.8 83.4 (3.7)
0.1 16.6 (3.7)
quote:--Frigi et al.
Our results also point to a less ancient western sub-Saharan gene flow to Tunisia, including haplogroups L2a and L3b. This conclusion points to an ancient African gene flow to Tunisia before 20,000 BP. These findings parallel the more recent findings of both archaeology and linguistics on the prehistory of Africa. The present work suggests that sub-Saharan contributions to North Africa have experienced several complex population processes after the occupation of the region by anatomically modern humans. Our results reveal that Berber speakers have a foundational biogeographic root in Africa and that deep African lineages have continued to evolve in supra-Saharan Africa.
[...]
Indeed, taking into account the Tunisian sequences belonging to haplogroup L2a from Sejnane, Zriba, Kesra, Matmata, Sned, and Chenini-Douiret, we obtain a divergence age of about 28,000 ± 8,900 years, which is the same age calculated for this haplogroup including all the described sequences. However, we noticed two pairs of related haplotypes in the Kesra population, where we detected a local evolution of the L2a cluster, suggesting that this haplogroup could have been introduced earlier in Kesra.
quote:—Mohamed, Hisham Yousif Hassan. "Genetic Patterns of Y-chromosome and Mitochondrial DNA Variation, with Implications to the Peopling of the Sudan". University of Khartoum. Retrieved 14 June 2016
"L3f - Northeast Africa, Sahel, Arabian peninsula, Iberia. Gaalien,[12] Beja"
quote:Look at chart B, That's L3e going into Algeria 6-10 kya
Originally posted by BlessedbyHorus:
@Swenet @Djehuti @Lioness
Is it okay if we go back in time... Say 2010 with the Frigi S study?
quote:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21082907
Our objective is to highlight the age of sub-Saharan gene flows in North Africa and particularly in Tunisia. Therefore we analyzed in a broad phylogeographic context sub-Saharan mtDNA haplogroups of Tunisian Berber populations considered representative of ancient settlement. More than 2,000 sequences were collected from the literature, and networks were constructed. The results show that the most ancient haplogroup is L3*, which would have been introduced to North Africa from eastern sub-Saharan populations around 20,000 years ago. Our results also point to a less ancient western sub-Saharan gene flow to Tunisia, including haplogroups L2a and L3b. This conclusion points to an ancient African gene flow to Tunisia before 20,000 BP. These findings parallel the more recent findings of both archaeology and linguistics on the prehistory of Africa. The present work suggests that sub-Saharan contributions to North Africa have experienced several complex population processes after the occupation of the region by anatomically modern humans. Our results reveal that Berber speakers have a foundational biogeographic root in Africa and that deep African lineages have continued to evolve in supra-Saharan Africa.
Does that offer SOME clues about L3f and the original carriers? Also what about this map?
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quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:The article is talking about a rare clade of L3 found in 5 people in an isolated region of Spain but makes no mention of berbers.
Originally posted by Swenet:
^These are presumably the original Berber speakers. Either that, or they are biologically very similar to the original Berber speakers.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25130626
How do they know how recent it is in the ancestry of these 5 people?
![]()
^ Coudray et al. 2008
The high L3 frequencies are with the Figuig
quote:Figuig is a town in eastern Morocco near the Atlas Mountains, on the border with Algeria.
The main L3d sublineage is L3d3a1, whose haplotype network shows a largely Khoisan centrality (not Damara) although this node is shared also by some unspecified "other Bantu". The Southern Africa specificity of L3d3a was already noticed in the past (see here). So it is very possible that we are before an aboriginal Southern African lineage, maybe arrived with the first Khoisan Neolithic (or whatever other ancient flow) rather than a Bantu-specific founder effect.
http://forwhattheywereweare.blogspot.com/2014/02/sw-african-bantu-matrilineages.html
comment on
Chiara Barbieri et al., Migration and interaction in a contact zone: mtDNA variation among Bantu-speakers in southern Africa. bioRXiv 2014.
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quote:Swenet, you read my mind exactly. During the Holocene Wet Period there were a variety of populations and assorted cultures inhabiting the region. Most of those groups are long extinct and all we have are a few remnants. Even old time scholars like Loyyd Cabbot Briggs have noted this. The Haratin for example are a unique population who despite their 'sub-saharan' features possess distinct genetic feautures not found in sub-Sahara. There was a tremendous loss of both genetic and cultural diversity and as recent findings show, this loss continued as recently as the historical period.
Originally posted by Swenet:
quote:It has everything to do with it. During the Neolithic the Sahara was filled with populations and cultures that never made it to our era. These populations may not have a direct relevancy to the origins of the original Berbers, but culturally many of them are candidates for being the original Berber speakers. Do you have any idea what implications this has for our topic? It means that there are so many distinct regional cultures in the Sahara that searching for the original Berbers is like searching for a needle in a haystack. When that's the case, you can only hone in on the original Berber speakers by using certain data points intelligently. And using certain incontrovertible facts (like the fact that there must have been Nile Valley cultures in between the Badarian region and Iberia that so far have not been found, but which made a contribution to the Iberian neolithic and left behind L3f1b8) is an example of using data points intelligently. Especially since this is the path we know the original Berber speakers traveled on their way to the Maghreb. So, yes, you can definitely use the destination of a population to infer that the archaeological sites you asked me for haven't been found yet.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
If it starts in East Africa and later wound up in Asturias what does that have to do with the original location?
BTW, I'm wrapping up this discussion because you are not in a position to judge what I'm saying. You haven't even thought about what I've said and you don't know the full context to be able to form an opinion. You read what I said and immediately googled some charts to conjure up hollow objections. Your charts and hg statistics are just thinly veiled attempts to hide the fact that you already had your mind made up to antagonize whatever I would say.
quote:—Pedro Soares et al.
Within Africa, the Pleistocene migrations detected in the L3 pool were responsible for the introduction of L3bd and L3e into Central Africa in the period between 60 and 35 ka (fig. 5A), but none reached Southern Africa at that time.”
[…]
(3) From Central and Eastern Africa into North Africa: We excluded the Sahel from the analysis as this region has had continuous recurrent gene flow both from north and south, dissolving the definition of well-defined populations, and the populations in this area would be difficult to either classify as source or sink population.
[…]
L3eikx also most likely originated in Eastern Africa, with subclades L3i and L3x virtually exclusive to this region (fig. 3A) and the rare L3k mainly present in North Africa. The complete genome tree confirms that L3e (the most frequent African L3 clade: fig. 3C), however, seems to have an origin in Central/West Africa (Bandelt et al. 2001; Salas et al. 2002): the Eastern African samples are clearly derived within the tree, suggesting gene flow from Central Africa. The recent gene flow into Eastern Africa is represented by the peak at ∼1.8 ka (fig. 4A and table 2) in the HVS-I founder analysis, which includes some L3e lineages.
[…]
North Africa
The scan of founder lineage variation (fig. 4C) in North Africa indicates two peaks at 0.6 and at 6.6 ka. The data set for North Africa includes a high fraction of direct matches (nearly 20%) which contribute to the more recent peak, most likely reflecting movements into North Africa from Central/Eastern Africa within the last 1,000 years, perhaps including lineages carried with the trans-Saharan slave trade (Harich et al. 2010). We performed a founder analysis stipulating three migration times, including a third one of 35.0 ka, based on the ages of U6, L3k and the population increase in the BSP (supplementary fig. S7, Supplementary Material online) with results presented in table 1. The biggest slice corresponds to the peak at 6.6 ka, corresponding to one-third of the L3 lineages (table 2), mainly affiliated to haplogroup L3e5, which is largely restricted to Northwest Africa. It dates to 12.4–13.6 ka and so may have begun earlier than 6.6 ka. The other major lineages contributing to the 6.6 ka partition (Central African L3b, L3e1, and L3e2 lineages: founders F17, F28, and F41 in supplementary table S4, Supplementary Material online), suggest the postglacial period was characterized by gene flow across the Sahel belt (Cerný et al. 2007); these founder clades are mainly restricted to Northwest Africa and absent from Egypt.
The BSP for North Africa also indicates the major rate of increase in the effective population size centered at about 10 ka (supplementary fig. S7, Supplementary Material online; table 1), contemporaneous with Central and Eastern Africa. Since the majority of L3 lineages in the scan had an origin elsewhere, the timing of the growth signal observed in the North African BSP might in fact be describing the demography of the source, with many of the coalescences occurring prior to the dispersal into North Africa. However, an independent analysis of North African U6 (Pereira et al. 2010) indicated growth associated with this haplogroup ∼10 ka.
quote:Good question. According to all the glottochronology studies done by experts like Ehret, Blench, and others, Proto-Berber is only 3,000 years old! Yet the same glottochronological analyses show that Proto-Afrasian began to diverge into its daughter languages 12,000-10,000 years ago. This is a huge discrepancy which can only be explained by the presence of an intermediate Pre-Proto-Berber stage which diverged from Proto-Afrasian first before itself diverging into Proto-Berber and other language groups. This is similar to the findings of Proto-Semitic which developed 6,000 years ago probably in the eastern Levant, diverging from a Pre-Proto-Semitic stage that was introduced by African immigrants. The only difference is that Proto-Semitic is twice as old as Proto-Berber.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:At what time did proto-berber come into existence?
Originally posted by Djehuti:
She keeps bringing up the fact that hg H was found in 12kyo Iberomarusian remains despite that proto-Berber didn't even exist at that time
quote:
Originally posted by Swenet:
1) The missing cultural link between the Badarian/predynastic and related Iberian Neolithic cultures hasn't been found yet in the Sahara, so I can't point to specific sites.
2) The corresponding male YDNA to L3 is CT or something close in age. But what you presumably meant to ask is what, in my view, the male counterpart of the original Berbers and/or L3fb16 is. In my view it's E-V65, as I explained recently in Typezeis' thread. But E-V65 is simply what survived. It wasn't the only YDNA involved in the migration of the original Berbers. [/QB]
quote:E-V65 is E1b1b but if the Badarian were E1b1a maybe M191 as some Nilo Saharans are, then you couldn't connect them to Iberian Neolithic cultures or many berbers who are E1b1b
Originally posted by Swenet:
1) The missing cultural link between the Badarian/predynastic and related Iberian Neolithic cultures hasn't been found yet in the Sahara, so I can't point to specific sites.
quote:I never made a direct link between the Badarians and Neolithic Iberians. I made a link between the ancestors of the Badarians, wherever they were in the period your quote says they were absent from the Nile, and Neolithic Iberians. I also said we don't know where in the Sahara the sites are that correspond with these Badarian ancestors. This is not just me saying this. See your own quote.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:
virtually no evidence exists for human occupation in the Nile valley between 10,000 and 6,000 BC except for a group of very small sites around 9,400 BC at the second cataract.
quote:These are clearly mixed race people, because I've seen many admixed people in and around my community with these features.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:The article is talking about a rare clade of L3 found in 5 people in an isolated region of Spain but makes no mention of berbers.
Originally posted by Swenet:
^These are presumably the original Berber speakers. Either that, or they are biologically very similar to the original Berber speakers.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25130626
How do they know how recent it is in the ancestry of these 5 people?
![]()
^ Coudray et al. 2008
The high L3 frequencies are with the Figuig
quote:Figuig is a town in eastern Morocco near the Atlas Mountains, on the border with Algeria.
The main L3d sublineage is L3d3a1, whose haplotype network shows a largely Khoisan centrality (not Damara) although this node is shared also by some unspecified "other Bantu". The Southern Africa specificity of L3d3a was already noticed in the past (see here). So it is very possible that we are before an aboriginal Southern African lineage, maybe arrived with the first Khoisan Neolithic (or whatever other ancient flow) rather than a Bantu-specific founder effect.
http://forwhattheywereweare.blogspot.com/2014/02/sw-african-bantu-matrilineages.html
comment on
Chiara Barbieri et al., Migration and interaction in a contact zone: mtDNA variation among Bantu-speakers in southern Africa. bioRXiv 2014.
![]()
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quote:This remains funny,
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:You didn't answer the question as to how far back this L3 clade goes back in that region in Spain.
Originally posted by Swenet:
quote:They can count the mutations the Iberian L3 lineages have accumulated and by how different they are from the most closely related African haplotypes.
Originally posted by the lioness,:
The article is talking about a rare clade of L3 found in 5 people in an isolated region of Spain but makes no mention of berbers.
How do they know how recent it is in the ancestry of these 5 people?
They don't mention Berbers and this is precisely the point. Berber speakers don't have much of this original Berber ancestry anymore (go over my posts in Typezeis' recent Berber thread for more explanation).
These academics don't always connect the dots. Sometimes they're not doing this because they're being 'prudent', sometimes they're not doing this because they don't know much about Africa.
If this L3 clade is 8,000 years old and West African where is your logic in calling it related to berber speakers or "original berber" ?
quote:—Rando JC1, Pinto F, González AM, Hernández M, Larruga JM, Cabrera VM, Bandelt HJ.
The group L3c of Watson et al. (1997) is renamed here as U6 (Richards et al. 1998) since it proves to constitute a part of haplogroup U (Richards et al. 1998) since it proves to constitute a part of haplogroup U.
[…]
In contrast, subhaplogroups L3c and L3d have somewhat younger divergence times—28,300–37,300 YBP and 17,600–23,200 YBP, respectively (table 4)—suggesting that they emerged after the evolution of L3a and L3b.
[…]
This analysis confirmed the distinctive nature of haplogroups L1–L3, which we previously had described (Chen et al. 1995), and also revealed that haplogroup L3 has three distinct sublineages: L3a, L3b, and L3c (Watson et al. 1997).
[…]
Since two of the L3d haplotypes (i.e., AF01 and AF02) identified in our study possess the HinfI np-12308 site-gain marker for haplogroup U (Torroni et al. 1996), haplotype U could have arisen in Africa and migrated into Europe. Consistent with this hypothesis, the third haplotype in this subhaplogroup (i.e., AF03) lacks this haplogroup U marker but clusters with the haplogroup U mtDNAs. Hence, AF03 could be an African precursor to haplogroup U; alternatively, the haplogroup U mtDNAs in our sample may have been introduced into Africa by a back-migration/flow of European mtDNAs. Additional L3d mtDNAs, from other African populations, will need to be analyzed to further clarify the relationship of African haplogroup L3 and L3d mtDNAs to European mtDNA haplogroups.
quote:Not because they "look mixed", that makes it a fact. It would be ignorant to claim that only the "true negroid" has origin in Africa.
Originally posted by Autshumato:
These are clearly mixed race people, because I've seen many admixed people in and around my community with these features.
quote:Agree.
Originally posted by Ish Gebor:
quote:Not because they "look mixed", that makes it a fact. It would be ignorant to claim that only the "true negroid" has origin in Africa.
Originally posted by Autshumato:
These are clearly mixed race people, because I've seen many admixed people in and around my community with these features.
quote:So does this mean that "true whites" originated in Africa? That is the only mixture he seems to be referring to, as opposed to facial features. Because there have always been coal black Aboriginal folks with "Indian looking" Aquiline features in North Africa.
Originally posted by Ish Gebor:
quote:Not because they "look mixed", that makes it a fact. It would be ignorant to claim that only the "true negroid" has origin in Africa.
Originally posted by Autshumato:
These are clearly mixed race people, because I've seen many admixed people in and around my community with these features.
quote:I didn't say anything about "true whites" to have originated in Africa, but "light skin" did evolve in Africa. It is not for nothing many indigenous North Africans are intermediate. Do I think some have admixture? Yeah that too.
Originally posted by Doug M:
quote:So does this mean that "true whites" originated in Africa? That is the only mixture he seems to be referring to, as opposed to facial features. Because there have always been coal black Aboriginal folks with "Indian looking" Aquiline features in North Africa.
Originally posted by Ish Gebor:
quote:Not because they "look mixed", that makes it a fact. It would be ignorant to claim that only the "true negroid" has origin in Africa.
Originally posted by Autshumato:
These are clearly mixed race people, because I've seen many admixed people in and around my community with these features.