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DNA Question (29 replies)

I noticed two recent items that suggest, finally, some "legit" science support of antedeluvian civs.

1. "Instead, he belonged to a population of native South Americans that had never been identified. Salas and his team dubbed this genetic group C1bi, which they say likely arose in the Andes about 14,000 years ago," writes Lizzie Wade for Science. (http://www.nature.com/articles/srep16462)

and

2. Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History in Germany made an unexpected discovery. The Institute's Johannes Krause said: "We uncovered a completely unknown chapter of human history: a major population turnover at the end of the last Ice Age." the researchers' biggest surprise came when they found evidence that there was a major population turnover in Europe around 14,500 years ago, as the last Ice Age ended and the world began to warm.

As Adam Powell, another Max Planck Institute author explained: "Our model suggests that during this period of climatic upheaval, the descendants of the hunter-gatherers who survived through the last glacial maximum [Ice Age] were largely replaced by a population from another source." [www.shh.mpg.de]

In my mind, this suggests some initial theoretical support for ante-deluvian (not going to the aliens!) civ of some sort.

FYI: I am an engineer, love to cogitate on the 'odd' but I follow the Sagan Principle, regarding Claims & Evidence. :)

Looking forward to others' thoughts.

Winn

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