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Post by missouriboy on Mar 26, 2023 13:16:15 GMT
Diluting rapidly tho I fear..... After 1400 years of "relative" resistance (don't have intermediate data sets) what do you think is changing it?
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Post by acidohm on Mar 26, 2023 14:25:50 GMT
Diluting rapidly tho I fear..... After 1400 years of "relative" resistance (don't have intermediate data sets) what do you think is changing it? Boats from France,
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Post by walnut on Mar 26, 2023 15:33:26 GMT
Diluting rapidly tho I fear..... After 1400 years of "relative" resistance (don't have intermediate data sets) what do you think is changing it? Just how diluted are you? I have a few cursed Gaulish corpuscles.
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Post by missouriboy on Mar 26, 2023 18:29:57 GMT
After 1400 years of "relative" resistance (don't have intermediate data sets) what do you think is changing it? Just how diluted are you? I have a few cursed Gaulish corpuscles. Which Gaulish corpuscles do you have?
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Post by ratty on Mar 27, 2023 0:49:35 GMT
After 1400 years of "relative" resistance (don't have intermediate data sets) what do you think is changing it? Just how diluted are you? I have a few cursed Gaulish corpuscles. Momentarily, I misread that as Goolish .....
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Post by walnut on Mar 27, 2023 2:24:30 GMT
Just how diluted are you? I have a few cursed Gaulish corpuscles. Which Gaulish corpuscles do you have? Don't worry, they're not contagious.
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Post by missouriboy on Mar 27, 2023 8:40:40 GMT
After 1400 years of "relative" resistance (don't have intermediate data sets) what do you think is changing it? Boats from France, I'm assuming you mean African migrants. Many SW Britain Celts supposedly made the crossing to Brittany during the Saxon invasion(s) - ca. 600 AD onward. Don't know the recent genetic lines of the Cornwall and SW England area, but based on the map below I'm guessing the Y has lots of R1b>L21. My son knows a Breton whose family are first generation migrants to the States. His whole family line is still in the Brest area. Bretons are just barely French apparently. And our line R1b-U152 supposed Iron Age distribution. Not much U152 in the Isles. A major reason we think our distribution in NW England might be associated with the Romans. But still possible it could have been later with the Normans. Saxon conquest times were probably not prime move-in dates.
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Post by missouriboy on Apr 1, 2023 3:58:55 GMT
The Basques - Still a Mystery
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Post by ratty on Apr 1, 2023 4:54:13 GMT
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Post by missouriboy on Apr 13, 2023 1:51:48 GMT
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Post by missouriboy on Apr 18, 2023 16:28:30 GMT
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Post by missouriboy on May 3, 2023 3:20:56 GMT
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Post by missouriboy on May 3, 2023 20:21:58 GMT
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Post by missouriboy on Jun 14, 2023 0:29:43 GMT
More Celtic History in Mainland Europe
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Post by missouriboy on Jun 18, 2023 1:01:32 GMT
was also the ice age so the region would have had a bit of rain and cloud and trees. Yes! The golden age of early Celtic expansion off the Pontic Steppe. There were at least two major waves into central Europe ... L2 subclade across the N. European plain and finally into Britain ... U152 down the alpine slopes on the Alps north flank. These flowed over into Italy. Some went on to Spain Z56. Many Celts in Brittany are L2 ... include backwash from the Angle-Saxon invasions of 600-700 AD. But they were hellacious seamen. Built shallow draft high prow ocean-coastal vessels that Caesar had a hard time taking out. In the end, they joined the Romans. But there were people on this coast as much as 8000 years ago they say. The neolithic builders of the huge dolmens. And later, stellae people who brought their human-shaped funeral stellae to the area. Many were copper miners. There is a line of funeral stellae clusters from the Pontic Steppe to the Alps (both sides) and onward to Spain and beyond. They also traded for tin out of Cornwall. Ran the early Med they say. It is said that they are still an independent sort.
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