It is plausible that there were such families in the Roman Empire. They were extremely improbable, & certainly not typical.
-
-
First, I commend you: You have evidence & you brought it in full. Still, this doesn't quite live up to my expectations of an aDNA paper..
-
it simply states the ancestry of the individual, w/o the bare support of a mitochondrial marker.
-
But this really quite astounding to me. What's the proposed theory on the (significant) admixing of sub-Saharan Africans w/o good transport?
-
Not your expertise, I guess. But this peturbs my tidy box of "what I think I know" .https://twitter.com/Billare/status/894778068195315712 …
-
Thank you :) And, yes! But that's why I love studying history & archaeology, its ability to upend our assumptions and beliefs! Reading >
-
> your thread, I think the key here is that Saharan and trans-Saharan trading in antiquity has seen a major reassessment in recent years >
-
> as a result of the Fazzan Project & study of the Garamantian kingdom. See in particular Andrew Wilson's fab paper: http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/0067270X.2012.727614 …
- 3 more replies
New conversation
Loading seems to be taking a while.
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.