So all non African humans are part Neanderthal...

Sean312

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And all pure africams contain no DNA from Neanderthals... how does that happen? Are blacks human? Are whites sub human.
 
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Lemme take a crack at this.

Neanderthals and other forms of Subhumans existed outside of Africa.

When humans started leaving Africa. They met these Sub-Humans and mated with them/made them go extinct.

That's why you got Neanderthal DNA in ALL non-Africans. If we wanted to go deeper. Technically everyone who has Neanderthal DNA isn't fully a Anatomical Modern Homo Sapien (AMHS).
 
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Dominic Decoco

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Can someone explain this deeper for me? The difference between us and Neanderthals?
 

KplusK

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Y'all do know cacs(neantherdal) as y'all say do come from us they was just misguided somewhere down the line :yeshrug:
or did God make us and then them :patrice:
or we was so smart one black man got bored and said hey let me make a neantherdal and see whats happens :patrice:
maybe aliens put them here just to fukk with us cause they was actually doing an experiment about humans and wanted to see what happens when you let peasants take over the kings and queens to see how they act :patrice:

the first africans picked on the wrong dude and he left out and said fukkk it I'm gonna show them and left then came back with a whole new vengeance plan to make them pay:patrice:
 

Zyne

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Can someone explain this deeper for me? The difference between us and Neanderthals?

They were our close "cousins". They were stronger than us and could beat us in a short sprint distance but we could run longer without getting tired and we were smarter than them.

When our ancestors first migrated out of Africa around 60,000 years ago, they were not alone. At that time, at least two other species of hominid cousins walked the Eurasian landmass—Neanderthals and Denisovans. As our modern human ancestors migrated through Eurasia, they encountered the Neanderthals and interbred. Because of this, a small amount of Neanderthal DNA was introduced into the modern human gene pool.

Everyone living outside of Africa today has a small amount of Neanderthal in them, carried as a living relic of these ancient encounters. A team of scientists comparing the full genomes of the two species concluded that most Europeans and Asians have between 1 to 4 percent Neanderthal DNA. Indigenous sub-Saharan Africans have no Neanderthal DNA because their ancestors did not migrate through Eurasia.

On one level, it’s not surprising that modern humans were able to interbreed with their close cousins. According to one theory, Neanderthals, Denisovans, and all modern humans are all descended from the ancient human Homo heidelbergensis. Between 300,000 to 400,000 years ago, an ancestral group of H. heidelbergensis left Africa and then split shortly after. One branch ventured northwestward into West Asia and Europe and became the Neanderthals. The other branch moved east, becoming Denisovans. By 130,000 years ago H. heidelbergensis in Africa had become Homo sapiens. Our modern human ancestors did not begin their own exodus from Africa until about 60,000 years ago, when they expanded into Eurasia and encountered their ancient cousins.

The revelation that our ancient ancestors mated with one another could help explain one of the great mysteries in anthropology: Why did the Neanderthals disappear? After first venturing out of Africa, Neanderthals thrived in Europe for several hundred thousand years. But they mysteriously died out about 30,000 years ago, roughly around the same time that modern humans arrived in Europe.

Some scientists have suggested modern humans outcompeted or outright killed the Neanderthals. But the new genetic evidence provides support for another theory: Perhaps our ancestors made love, not war, with their European cousins, and the Neanderthal lineage disappeared because it was absorbed into the much larger human population.

Even though Neanderthals and Denisovans are both extinct, modern humanity may owe them a debt of gratitude. A 2011 study by Stanford University researchers concluded that many of us carry ancient variants of immune system genes involved in destroying pathogens that arose after we left Africa. One possibility is that these gene variants came from other archaic humans.
Why Am I Neanderthal?Why Am I Neanderthal?Why Am I Neanderthal?
 

Sean312

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I also read that some people have a % of unknown DNA . Or alien DNA . But how could Neanderthals be everywhere but I'm Africa when all life started in africa? And they were around like 300,000 years before us right?
 

Anwulika

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I saw a BBC documentary about the history of the world and hey said that there were Neanderthals living in Africa just as they did in Europe. The only difference is that our ancestors chose to kill them off rather than mate with them. I don't know why the non-Africans chose to mate with them.
 

MischievousMonkey

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I don't know much about this topic, but I'm reading Superior: The Return of Race Science and it prompted some questions...

I never knew that Neanderthals were considered another species than humans :ohhh:

That revelation prompted some google searches and it appears that they indeed aren't humans, even if closely related enough to the Homo Sapiens to inbreed :ohhh:
Are we descended from Neanderthals?

And that Eurasians carry the most residual genes from the mixing :ohhh:
Did humans and Neanderthals interbreed?
A analysis suggests that the earliest encounter between the two species was 100,000 years ago, just as the earliest wave of Homo sapiens was migrating out of Africa. They met Neanderthals moving eastwards from Europe to Asia and swapped genes. Later interbreeding periods happened 55,000 and 40,000 years ago, and each time we acquired some Neanderthal genes. Unless you are of sub-Saharan descent, your genome contains 1-4 per cent Neanderthal DNA.

My mind is lowkey blown right now :wow:
 
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