Found an intelligent comment in Yahoo News here from a person called "Score". This is about the recent skeleton found in a cenote in Mexico.
To quote from this article, "The girl's nearly complete skeleton was
discovered by chance in 2007 by expert divers who were mapping
water-filled caves north of the city of Tulum, in the eastern part of
the Yucatan Peninsula." With prior research or current searches on the
Internet, someone would find that these underground water formations are
"cenotes". "Cenotes" are almost everywhere in the Yucatan with most
being totally underground. It has been well documented that some
"cenotes" were used to deposit bones for reasons one can only speculate
many thousands of years later in the 21st Century. There are only three
major types of DNA with 20 or more subgroup classifications of DNA.
Each human gene has some 3 billion individual genomes. To give you an
idea of DNA testing as of 2012, the Philidephia Children's Hospital
tests for 64 million genomes in their DNA research and Ancestry tests
for 600 thousand genomes to classify one's genetic ancestry. It is
interesting to note that while eastern Russian DNA is part of the major
Mongoloid (Asian) DNA grouping, the far eastern Russian DNA subgrouping
is associated with only the native people of most of Alaska, extreme
northern Canada, and Greenland to reflect the close ancestry of this
Eskimo (Beringia grouping which this article discusses) subgroup by DNA
from northernmost North America and Greenland with far eastern Russia.
Native Americans south of Alaska and the northern most portions of
Canada are also part of the major Mongoloid (Asian) DNA grouping but are
a related but totally different DNA subgroup from the eastern Russian,
Alaska, Canadian, and Greenland eskimos. This separate Native American
DNA subgroup stretches continuously from the southern tip of South
America and through North America continuously without interruption
stopping only at the northern extremes of North America where the Eskimo
DNA subgroup starts. One might ask why this common Native American DNA
subgroup for all of the native populated South America and for almost
all of North America until the Eskimo DNA subgroup is reached in the
farthest north portions of North America comes from the popular lore of
the Russia-Alaska land bridge when evidence seems to point otherwise.
In 15,000 plus years, there would be many opportunities for many
multiple migrations of peoples to the Americas. The South Pacific
Islands across the southern portion of the Pacific Ocean and lead
directly toward southern Chile. The oldest human remains in the
Americas are found in Chile with newer human remains found in slightly
ever increasing newness of DNA remains travelling north along the
Pacific coast when looking at a map of the location of these remains.
The newest human remains in the Americas are along the Pacific coast and
are found in Alaska. Based on carbon dating of remains, the logical
conclusion is that the settlement of Native Americans started from South
America to the North contrary to all popular explanations. Keeping an
open mind on what happened more than 15,000 years ago, there are many
possibiities and many chances for multiple migrations to the Americas.
As the Eskimos of far Eastern Russia, Alaska, far northern Canada, and
Greenland are in one of the three major DNA groupings called Mongoloid,
so are all of the other Native Americans of North and South America.
These two groups, the Eskimos and the Native Americans of most of the
Americas, are different subgroups as far as DNA subgrouping of Asian
related populations. As each individual human being and each individual
gene has 3 billion genomes, I am sure that there is much commonality in
many of these genomes between the Eskimo and Native American DNA
subgroups of the major Mongoloid (Asian) DNA grouping. This would be
completely expected, but it does not link the two different DNA
subgroups of the Eskimos and the Native Americans of the Americas. As
Professor Jantz questions this article's findings at the conclusion of
the article by stating at the conclusion of this article hat the new
paper "leaves a lot of unanswered questions."
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