03-11-2025, 02:37 PM
(02-26-2025, 07:56 PM)nureb Wrote: What about one for J2?
(03-11-2025, 11:51 AM)RCO Wrote: As I wrote here J1 is diversity.
My J1 lineage is related to Ancient Iranians around the Caspian Sea, we are Indo-Europenas in NW Iberia and we participated in the Medieval Portuguese victory against Semitic Arabs, Berbers, Moors and Jews. The Portuguese Empire fought against Castilians and all other European Empires in the Atlantic and as a Brazilin J1 we are here in the biggest and major part of the former Portuguese Empire.
Of course, our haplogroup has many different branches. In J1, there are also typically Semitic ones. We proceed from the moment of consolidation of the haplogroup, its division into branches, as a certain starting point. At that time, there were no peoples or languages, in our classical understanding of these terms. Modern ethnicities are more often indicated by autosomal DNA. Haplogroups are used mainly for genealogy. In our case, we are talking about pre-literate times of early civilizations, so the genealogy here turns out to be quite mythological. For comparison, the average age of a language is considered to be 7,500 years, which means that during the time of a haplogroup branch in the conditional 27,000-30,000 years, only in this one haplogroup 2-3 languages will be born and die, provided that they are completely isolated. Moreover, early languages were associated with descriptive images and we have no idea how they sounded.