Skeptic Ginger
Nasty Woman
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2005
- Messages
- 96,955
Mitochondrial and Y chromosome haplogroups only very roughly match up. So which of these do you claim match up with race?Haplogroups is a manner of tracing racial ancestry, as such it would be expected to be more precise because it is defined by specific markers and... low and behold, for the eleventh time the primary racial classifications of old and haplogroups of today more or less match up and this is no coincidence. Medicinally the term "race", as has been explained earlier, seems particulary die-hard, as it is within forensic science of identifying human bodies. These match up with the given haplogroups as well. Hell, it's as if "race" in the scientific context actually corresponds to the T with haplogroups within the sub-groups of the given species. And... what do you know, it does. This doesn't make the terms interchangable, however we can either way accept that both of the given terms are fundamentally genetic/biological and not social. End of story.
Click on "5" and you can toggle back and forth between each tree.
On the Atlas of Human History tab you can zoom in on migration pathways and see that racial groups are so mixed they don't make up distinct groups.
And here scroll down to the third migration map to see significant population mixing by the early Bronze Age.