(Ziggy wrote)
Ziggy Stardust wrote:
So is it fair to say that this sentence characterizes your main point?
Yes it basically does, but this is in the biological sense alone. You left out the cultural
and archaeological affinities, that forms the greatest part of the summary, of what later
became Egyptian culture(Naqada) is from the general south-this is very important not only
cos it stands on its own and clearly shows the Africanity of Ancient Egypt but also cos it
can be very helpful in drawing biological affinities and origin models of the Nile Valley.
(Ziggy wrote)What exactly do you mean by "late Holocene"? The present? You realize the Holocene geological epoch includes modern times, right?
Yea you are right in a sense. But in this case I am talking about the general period c.5300
-3000BC.
(Ziggy wrote)What about the eastern migrations of people into the Nile Valley around 5,000 years ago, with the drying to the Sahara?
Eastern migrations? Do you mean from the Eastern Desert(which is part of the Eastern Sahara)?
Cos the range of cultures in this region as far as archaeological records shows is from the
Khartoum Variant and/or Early Khartoum in the Early and middle Holocene(c.10000-5500BC),
and then 'Nubian Neolithic culture Group' or related cultures in the Late Holocene
http://www.academia.edu/attachments/273 ... nload_file . Also the small, ephemeral
cultures at Sodmein cave near the red sea coast is related to the southern Upper Egyptian
Elkabian,both of which are younger and related to El Ghorab unit of Early Holocene Nabta
playa(Shirai 2010 Chapter2 pg22-23
http://www.google.com.ng/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=origins+of
+fayum+neolithic&source=web&cd=49&ved=0CFMQFjAIOCg&url=https%3A%2F
%2Fopenaccess.leidenuniv.nl%2Fbitstream%2Fhandle%2F1887%2F15339%2FShirai%2520Chapter
%25202.pdf%3Fsequence%3D11&ei=6zJlT9SMF4iJ0AXNiJGMCA&usg=AFQjCNH13yk-
N3EocGnP4z_cn1KBnui2fQ&cad=rja). There were also later Badarian, Tasian and Early A-group
settlements around the region. Descendants of such groups include Pan Grave, Medjay, Blemmeyes and
perhaps the modern Beja. All these cultures and subsequently peoples are Africans.
(Ziggy wrote)Hell, what about the evidence of Aterian tool-making circa 40,000 years ago, which almost certainly came from the west, not the south?
1st of all, Aterian is not 40000 yrs old. It is now known to be very old, up to 100,000 yrs
old i.e well before humans left Africa. It or its antecedent may have originated from the
south(East Africa)
http://www.antiquityofman.com/LatePleis ... plexes.pdf and
http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi ... ne.0029029 . It was also later
concentrated in central Sahara and Northwest Africa.
(Ziggy wrote)What about the various Mesolithic pastorialist peoples of Lower Egypt
Mesolithic Pastoralist groups of the Lower Egypt? dont think there was any. There were only
neolithic farmers/pastoralists/fishers/hunters of the Fayum, Merimde and el-Omari. While
there certainly was contact and perhaps small migrations to and fro the Near East at this
time, the archaeological records shows the main movements was from the Egyptian Saharan oases
to these sites. See
http://bbs.stardestroyer.net/viewtopic. ... 5#p3654005
(Ziggy wrote)and the Sahaba Daru Nile phase, when dessication in the Sahara caused movement into Egypt and Nubia from the Libyan oases? My point being why the focus on this north-south paradigm, when east-west is arguably just as important/significant?
The Libyan or Western or Nubian oases(like Nabta, Bir Kiseiba, Kurkur,Dunqul,Dakhla,
Farafra, Djara etc) had Early Holocene cultures that came from the south(Khartoum variant
and Saharan Oases group)-whether from the far southeast or from southern Nile Valley at the
start of the wet Sahara, before when they were very dry and did not substain human populations. They later became either part of the 'Nubian Neolithic culture
group'(older and relate to the Badrains, Tasians, Early Naqada, Early A-Group etc
http://yale.academia.edu/MariaCGatto/Pa ... _territori
es_the_Nubian_Group_in_prehistory ) or the Saharan Oases 'neolithic' group(partly related
and older than Fayum and merimde see Shirai 2010 chapter 2 above; also see
http://www.panafprehistory.org/images/p ... _EGYPT_SET
TLEMENT_PATTERNS_AND_IMPLICATIONS_FOR_FOOD_PRODUCTION_IN_THE_EL_BAHR-
_EL_OBEIYID_REGION_Barbara_E_Barich.pdf ). No culture-group is predicted to have moved south
for any of these cultures. Let me also clarify that when I say south-north movements, it
does not only mean from directly southern part of the Nile valley. If the cultures seen to
the west/southwest(Western Desert) and east/southeast(Eastern Desert) are part of the
general 'Nubian' sequence(Khartoum variant, Karmakol, Nubian neolithic group) and if these
cultures ultimately came from the south, the movement is generally south-north
(Ziggy wrote)Also, are you completely denying that there was back-migration into Lower Egypt from the Levant, or just downplaying its significance?
That is not true since in the clicked post above I even was talking about more evidences of
contact with near east an the likely gene flow to and fro. I think everyone agrees on this,
and I have maintained this throughout. What am not sure is their significant. I think they
were most likely a minority that were absorbed by the Lower Egyptians though.
(Ziggy wrote)Heck, weren't the Gerzean Naqada from the delta region, and migrated south, just prior to the first unification?
Woo! Ziggy. Where do I start from...but I thought you read my references an the links of the summary you are critiquing? Anyway also see this
http://www.farkha.org/pliki/cialowicz4.pdf ,on the transistion of lower Egypt to Naqada during the the Gerzean. This position is very incorrect! Naqada culture
developed in upper Egypt and only later replaced the different but mainly indigenous Maadian culture(s) of Lower Egypt. THERE IS ABSOLUTELY NO QUESTION ABOUT THIS:
The geographical locations of the Naqada I sites all lie within Upper Egypt, from Matmar in
the north to Kubaniya and Khor Bahan in the south...In broad terms, the Amratian[Naqada I]
is not differnt from the earlier Badarian culture. The burial rituals and the types of
funerary offerings are so similar that one wonder if the later does not constitute an older,
regional version of the former.
(Prehistory: From the Paleolithic to the Badarian Culture(c.700,000-4,000) by Stan Hendrickx
and Pierce Vermeersh 2003pg 37{in Oxford History of Ancient Egypt(ed) Ian Shaw }) pg.44-45
And As I have already shown both Badarian and Naqada I are variants of same widespread
Nubian Neolithic Culture Group. Furthermore, from same reference:
During the second phase of the Naqada culture, fundamental changes took place. These
developments, however, took place not at the margins of the culture but in its Amratian
heartland, in essense they can be regarded as an evolution rather than a sudden break. The
Naqada II phase[Gerzean] was characterized primarily by expansion, as the Gerzean culture
extended from its source at Naqada northwards towards the Delta and(Minshat Abu Omar) and
southwards as far as Nubia.
Hendrincx and Vermeersh pg 49-50
This was what I was talking about in my last post.These were/are still the kinds of 'myths'
that make people to hold certain views about Ancient Egypt
(Ziggy wrote)In any case, the most simplistic explanation of my stance is simply that the ancient Egyptian population was heterogeneous, representing a biological and cultural admixture of various ancestral sources, including "black" African, North African/Berber, Arab, Semitic, etc. etc. I earlier used the phrase "Mediterranean continuum" in a broad (perhaps inaccurate) sense: it is a well established fact that the various populations that inhabit the Mediterranean coastal regions (or, indeed, other bodies of water similarly contained by land) are more genetically mixed, and linked with one another, than inland populations. I simply believe that ancient Egypt fits better into this paradigm than a purely "black" African one; that it more properly belongs in a greater Mediterranean community. That is not to say that Egypt is NOT African, just as I am not calling the Berbers, Tuaregs, or other North Africans NOT African.
North African/Berber? I already treated this in this post and another link within it
http://bbs.stardestroyer.net/viewtopic. ... 7#p3654777. There is this tendency to
imagine that cos Egypt is in the north, then it must necessarily share deep relationship with other North
Africans. However, there is actually more biological(Nazlet,Wadi Kunabiya,Esna, FAyumian,
jebel sahaba, Tushka, Early and middle Nabta etc said to have some sub-saharan affinities
Vermeersh 2002) and culturally links common to the northeast. Infact Siwa 'berbers' are even distinct from Northwest African 'berbers'. Also, see the caution of Pihasi in Vermeersh 2002:
Paleoanthropologists tend to regard North Africa as one large geographical zone, thus
assuming populations affinities between the Maghreb and the Upper Nile Valley, are more
likely than between the later and sub-saharan Africa. However, a quick glance at the map of
Africa indicates that the distance between the Maghreb and the Nile Valley is larger than
between the Nile Valley and Ethiopia or Kenya. Moreover, North-South population movements
along the East Africa and the Nile Valley is more likely than an eastbound migrtaions along
the winding southern Mediterranean coast. Plentiful sources of water, availability of game,
and favorable climatic conditions(that is, no hot or fry ecological zone) probably spurred
population movements along this route. However, the size of the Mediterranean coastal belt
varied along the Middle and Late Pleistocene. Thus, during periods of extremely arid
conditions, the availability of water and game along the coast was more likely than limited.
Vermeersh 2002 pg 324
This continued to the Early to Late Holocene in the Nile Valley(eg Khartoum Variant to
Nubian Neolithic and Saharan Oasis group) while the Maghreb was from Iberomaurasian/Oranian
etc to Capsian-different cultural relationships.
Arab? Dont think there was an Arab identity during Early Egypt. Semitic? maybe.
You are now leaving your 'Mediterranean continuum' theory yet you are still saying that
Ancient Egypt 'properly belongs to a greater Mediterranean community'. This is so wrong.
Ziggy refer to this post
http://bbs.stardestroyer.net/viewtopic.php?
p=3654315&sid=e1c6a3127b41bbfde40df5498ee16be8#p3654315 notice not only that these scholars
are demonstrating 'southern' influences in the Nile Valley(Khartoum variant,Early Khartoum,
Karmakol, Saharan oases) during the Early and middle holocene, and then at least for upper
Egypt ,the 'Nubian Neolithic culture group'. 2nd, that these cultures was shared across the
communities in the Nile valley and some others in the Eastern Sahara.3rd, that the Egyptian
side was the northernmost part of these cultural continuum. Even for Lower Egypt(Fayumain,
Fayum neolithic, Maadi-Buto etc) it was mainly an indigenous culture that interacted and
perhaps had gene flow to and fro with the Near East(and not really with the Mediterranean).
It was NOT part of the cultural sequence of the Mediterranean(which is what a continuum or
being 'properly part of the Mediterranean community' suggest). In fact these lower Egyptian cultures had relatively little contacts with the Mediterranean, and the delta remained relatively sparsely populated until late period of the civilization(from the 26th dynasty to especially Ptolemaic and Roman periods and subsequently till today-the Delta is now the most populated and important part of Egypt and so regarded now as being at least part of the Mediterranean world but this was certainly not the case with Ancient Egypt). The claim that Ancient Egypt is a Mediterranean civilization is a 'myth' with nothing to support it, and one of those unfortunate concepts(like Hamitic theorem,Dynastic race theory etc)that has burgled the correct understanding of the civilization.
(Ziggy wrote)Similarly, northeast-Africans of the Horn region arguably share greater links with Arab and Asian populations than they do with, say, Senegal (and, indeed, historic precedent shows that this is the case ... for the same reason the Malagasy are properly Polynesian).
Demonstrating this is pretty
elementary
Woo! Ziggy huge claim. Since you are a biologist I will await your exposition on this before I comment. Others may also like to make their views clear on this particular issue. When you want to properly treat it please say clearly if you believe in the Biological concept of race. I noticed that the Wikipedia link you provided was on E1b1b(E-M215/E-M35)-you do know that the closest clade to it is V100/33(E-M2) that is prevalent in West Africa,and that both are the two descendants of PN2(Trombetta 2011)
.
(Ziggy wrote)As your yourself admitted,
here, "nobody denies links with modern Egyptians, especially in the delta." The position accepted by many modern scholars is that, by and large, modern Egyptians are genetically much the same as ancient Egyptians. That is, the present heterogeneity is not an artifact of post-dynastic migration and invasion, but an integral component of Egyptian genetic identity. See
this,
this, and
this (at least two of these papers have already been posted in this thread, but I figure I would repost them to save you the trouble of digging them up again).
Totally disagree. Granted there is general continuity in Egypt and the moderns are 'partly' the descendants of the ancients, but especially in the Delta there have been thorough 'mixing' with other groups('Libyans',Greeks,Romans, Jews,Byzantines, Arabs, Turks, Hyksos etc). Even the late period Dynastic Egyptians are said not to be typical of ancient Egyptian biology:
The data consist of 55 cranio-facial variables
from 418 adult Egyptian individuals,
from six periods, ranging in date from
c. 5000 to 1200 BC. These were compared
with the 111 Late Period crania (c. 600-
350 BC) from the Howells sample. Principal
Component and Canonical Discriminant
Function Analyses were undertaken,
on both pooled and single sex samples.
The results suggest a level of local population
continuity exists within the earlier
Egyptian populations, but that this was in
association with some change in population
structure, reflecting small-scale immigration
and admixture with new
groups. Most dramatically, the results
also indicate that the Egyptian series
from Howells global data set are morphologically
distinct from the Predynastic and Early Dynastic Nile Valley samples (especially
in cranial vault shape and height),
and thus show that this sample cannot be
considered to be a typical Egyptian series.
Intra-population and temporal variation
in ancient Egyptian crania(: abstact AAPA 2004)
by S.R. Zakrzewski. Department of Archaeology,
University of Southampton, UK.