lol, Google
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GOSTcwWbAAA4Mst?format=jpg&name=900x900
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GOTLFfjXEAApoa4?format=jpg&name=900x900...
Type: Posts; User: Creoda; Keyword(s):
lol, Google
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GOSTcwWbAAA4Mst?format=jpg&name=900x900
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GOTLFfjXEAApoa4?format=jpg&name=900x900...
I assume they're full blooded, they're from outback & remote Northern Australia. Anyway I'm not interested hair-splitting further, they're all as black as sin.
Wilcannia, outback NSW
...
Ha. Try not to post Papuans who've painted their skin red as examples. The difference is really not clear, regardless if they are lighter or not.
Many remote Northern Aborigines aren't exactly...
Are they really? The full blooded ones look equally black to me. Self-identified Aborigines in general are lighter because of European admixture.
Groups from Eastern and Central England. They don't look Irish/Insular Celtic, nor Dutch.
https://i.postimg.cc/Y9XQ4P7t/14211932-1168327236536283-2067503643569444648-n.jpg...
Some books I've enjoyed recently:
HMS Ulysses - Alistair MacLean
Prey - Michael Crichton
Civilization - Niall Ferguson
The Anarchy - William Dalrymple
A War of Empires - Robert Lyman
The...
Interesting, shark (called Flake) is the most popular fish served at fish and chips shops here. I must have had it 100+ times.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flake_(fish)
Was gonna say I've never...
Kinship is fairly clear cut, it is your family and extended family (tribe/nation/race). The question is whether cultural ties override that or not, which would be case by case. Many people don't even...
From gedmatch.com, randomly finding family trees through DNA matches. The database skews baby boomer because they are mainly the ones into genealogy. I had much more trouble finding English people...
All I can say is I had no problem finding hundreds of people with fully English gedcoms going back 4-6 generations, or as far as they documented. At a guess they were at least half of those I found...
Depends what you mean by pure. If having 16/16 English great great grandparents counts, not at all rare, especially in the older generations.
Exactly. Half the time people post 'classify English actor' etc on this forum it's someone with an Irish, Scottish, or Welsh surname. Celebrities and sportspeople who are most visible are even more...
The average Englishman may pass better among the Irish than the Dutch but personally (as someone who is half and half) I think the relative similarity between the English and Irish on the whole is...
I'm not implying anything. We don't yet know from where and in what form this 'French' or Gaulish element came to England. But evidently they were less Alpinid and more 'Keltic' than the modern...
I didn't say there wasn't phenotypical overlap, for individuals. I said groups from NW France rarely pass as English. The countless groups of Northern French that Oliver has posted, who look...
Celto-Germanic mixture is the defining aspect that connects England to French Flanders, Bell Beaker ancestry is what connects them to Welsh/Scots.
People from Western parts of England generally, yes.
Yes, but not as groups, which I said. The similarity of these French Flemish to Southern English gives credence to the theory that the majority of Saxons (but not Angles) who went to England came...
He looks very un-British, particularly the eyes. I've made that point before.
It's inaccurate because I collected hundreds of gedmatch kits from Southern England and the real average is more Eastern/Southeastern shifted, with 1-1.5% less North Atlantic. I'm not implying that...
The pictures are re-posted above you. They are outliers to other Northern French groups since they actually pass well as (Southern) English. Probably because they're essentially Flemish, as explained...
Because as I've told you before, the SE English average on gedmatch is inaccurate and actually closer to real SW English.
You clearly don't have it if you think alnortedelsur is smarter than Oda.
Tell your 'friend' not to worry, 'his' results are within the natural variation of results for 'his' supposed ancestry. And if 'he' asks the exact same question again later tell 'him' to refer back...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ID5tc61iksY