black indians
DNA Report From The Smithsonian On The First Americans Links Amazon Groups to Indigenous Australians
7:57 PM
A report from the Smithsonian Institute basically says the 1st Americans
looked more like Australian Aborigines which challenges conventional
thinking that the original Native Americans crossed the Bering Strait
land bridge. This shouldn't be anything new I mean look through this site and read the descriptions of the dark-skinned, curly haired natives that the European explorers encountered when coming here.
The Smithsonian has even more damaging evidence of the Moors who lived in America pre-Columbus hidden in its vaults. They would rather say that the giant heads left by the Olmecs which obviously had African features were depictions of jaguar men than admit that there were African-looking people living in the Americas. They might even be able to get away with this if the Olmec figures didn't also have African-styled cornroll braids on their heads.
Here's the article below:
Brazil's Surui people, like the man pictured above, share ancestry with indigenous Australians, new evidence suggests.
(PAULO WHITAKER/Reuters/Corbis)
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The Smithsonian has even more damaging evidence of the Moors who lived in America pre-Columbus hidden in its vaults. They would rather say that the giant heads left by the Olmecs which obviously had African features were depictions of jaguar men than admit that there were African-looking people living in the Americas. They might even be able to get away with this if the Olmec figures didn't also have African-styled cornroll braids on their heads.
Here's the article below:
A DNA Search for the First Americans Links Amazon Groups to Indigenous Australians
The new genetic analysis takes aim at the theory that just one founding group settled the Americas
smithsonian.com
More than 15,000 years ago, humans
began crossing a land bridge called Beringia that connected their native
home in Eurasia to modern-day Alaska. Who knows what the journey
entailed or what motivated them to leave, but once they arrived, they
spread southward across the Americas.
The prevailing theory is that the first Americans arrived in a
single wave, and all Native American populations today descend from this
one group of adventurous founders. But now there’s a kink in that
theory. The latest genetic analyses back up skeletal studies suggesting
that some groups in the Amazon share a common ancestor with indigenous
Australians and New Guineans. The find hints at the possibility that not
one but two groups migrated across these continents to give rise to the
first Americans.
“Our results suggest this working model that we had is not correct. There’s another early population that founded modern Native American populations,” says study coauthor David Reich, a geneticist at Harvard University.
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“Our results suggest this working model that we had is not correct. There’s another early population that founded modern Native American populations,” says study coauthor David Reich, a geneticist at Harvard University.