abu afak
ALLAH SNACKBAR!
- Mar 3, 2006
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Sorry creationists but this thread is only for those of some knowledge/fact acceptance.
This is what's slowly been suggested/emerging the last few years. Human Evo was in part a web. Combos/re-combos of separately but parallel evolved hominin/species not a single line. The article says we all have app 2% Neanderthal DNA, but this does not apply to sub-Saharans.
Humans Interbred with Four Extinct Hominin Species, Research Finds
Jul 29, 2019 by News Staff / Source
Humans Interbred with Four Extinct Hominin Species, Research Finds | Genetics, Paleoanthropology | Sci-News.com
As anatomically modern Homo sapiens migrated out of Africa and around the rest of the world, they met and interbred with at least four different hominin species, according to new research from the University of Adelaide, Australia. Strikingly, of these hominins, only Neanderthals and Denisovans are currently known; the others remain unnamed and have only been detected as traces of DNA surviving in different modern populations.
Reconstruction of Homo floresiensis, an extinct hominin species that lived on the Indonesian island of Flores between 74,000 and 18,000 years ago.
“Each of us carry within ourselves the genetic traces of these past mixing events,” said Dr. João Teixeira, co-author of a paper published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
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This is what's slowly been suggested/emerging the last few years. Human Evo was in part a web. Combos/re-combos of separately but parallel evolved hominin/species not a single line. The article says we all have app 2% Neanderthal DNA, but this does not apply to sub-Saharans.
Humans Interbred with Four Extinct Hominin Species, Research Finds
Jul 29, 2019 by News Staff / Source
Humans Interbred with Four Extinct Hominin Species, Research Finds | Genetics, Paleoanthropology | Sci-News.com
As anatomically modern Homo sapiens migrated out of Africa and around the rest of the world, they met and interbred with at least four different hominin species, according to new research from the University of Adelaide, Australia. Strikingly, of these hominins, only Neanderthals and Denisovans are currently known; the others remain unnamed and have only been detected as traces of DNA surviving in different modern populations.

Reconstruction of Homo floresiensis, an extinct hominin species that lived on the Indonesian island of Flores between 74,000 and 18,000 years ago.
“Each of us carry within ourselves the genetic traces of these past mixing events,” said Dr. João Teixeira, co-author of a paper published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[................]
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