If you want to discover your genetic history and where you came from... you’ve found the right place!

888-806-2588

review of scientific and news articles on dna testing and popular genetics

Were Solutreans in Ancient America Egyptians?

Tuesday, June 19, 2012
Check Out DNA Fingerprint Plus $300 


Yes, according to Bill Tiffee, whose article on Solutreans in America will appear in volume 29 of the series Epigraphic Society Occasional Papers. Titled "Were Ancient Egyptians the Solutreans Who First Settled America?" the new study, he says, "looks at the possibility that the Solutreans who first settled America were from Egypt, and that the genetic marker X is found in the highest concentrations among the Druze (who migrated from Egypt 1,000 years ago)and the descendants of the Moundbuilder Native groups including the Sioux and Algonquin and possibly the Cherokee."

We have previously suggested that the Cherokee incorporate both Greek and Egyptian DNA. Chapter 3 of Donald Yates' new book Old World Roots of the Cherokee is devoted to the DNA story of the so-called "anomalous" Cherokee lines, including haplogroups T and X. 

Several prominent scholars have argued that Europeans known to archeologists as the Solutreans of France and Spain around 18,000 years ago were the first to settle the Americas. Tiffee examines the similarities between Solutrean and Clovis or Paleo-Indian stone technology and reconstructs the Solutrean culture in Egypt beginning 24,000 years ago (p. 119). He links ancient Egyptians with genetic marker E-M78, mitochondrial haplogroup X, Tula and the Spiro Complex mounds in Oklahoma, among other North American sites. He also discusses the Great Flood of about 10,000 years ago, the legends surrounding Osiris and the rise of agriculture in southern Turkey (Gobekli Tepe). 

"Perhaps," he concludes, "Egyptologists need to rethink their paradigms of ancient Egypt. And perhaps modern Native American descendants of the Moundbuilders, the Algonquin groups, Sioux, Cherokee, Chickasaw (and other Native cultures closely related to mound-building) need to reconsider where their most ancient ancestors came from (129)."

In DNA Consultants' Cherokee DNA study, "Anomalous Mitochondrial DNA Lineages in the Cherokee," as well as numerous blog posts since 2009, it was reported that haplogroups U, T, K, J, N, X and L are found in Cherokee descendants in frequencies mirroring those of Egypt. 

Comments

Please tell us what you think

Name, website, and email are optional; if we publish your comment, your name will be shown, and may be linked to your website if provided, but the email you enter will not be published.





Captcha Image

Bookmark and Share

 

 


Recent Posts


Tags

Bill Tiffee Applied Epistemology DNA testing companies Nature Genetics Janet Lewis Crain Salt River university of North Carolina at Chapel Hill race methylation Sam Kean Bradshaw Foundation Philippa Langley Middle Eastern DNA cancer Majorca African DNA Y chromosome DNA Helladic art DNA databases polydactylism New York Review of Books Nikola Tesla haplogroup U corn Navajo India giants Bryony Jones Arabia Epigraphic Society IntegenX Tucson Neanderthals DNA Fingerprint Test Chauvet cave paintings Promega cannibalism Chromosomal Labs Bode Technology haplogroup X myths Pueblo Indians Sorbs Genome Sciences Building Harold Goodwin Asian DNA breast cancer human migrations ancient DNA Hohokam horizontal inheritance Leicester Barack Obama Anglo-Saxons personal genomics Michael Grant Algonquian Indians Gunnar Thompson evolution epigenetics Comanche Indians occipital bun rapid DNA testing Stacy Schiff mitochondrial DNA Khoisan Beringia Shlomo Sand Abenaki Indians Greeks Donald N. Yates clan symbols N. Brent Kennedy Kentucky Maya pheromones genetic determinism Discover magazine prehistory Columbia University DNA security Melungeons FBI Tom Martin Scroft Jim Bentley archeology Cornwall INORA palatal tori GlobalFiler Arabic climate change Ashkenazi Jews Horatio Cushman Abraham Lincoln George van der Merwede Sinti haplogroup J Bode Technology Rafael Falk immunology Richard Lewontin Chuetas Kurgan Culture Scientific American Alec Jeffreys DNA Fingerprint Test megapopulations Science magazine Eric Wayner education Joseph Jacobs Chris Stringer El Castillo cave paintings mutation rate Marija Gimbutas Michael Schwartz Cohen Modal Haplotype haplogroup T single nucleotide polymorphism Tifaneg Harold Sterling Gladwin Charles Darwin genealogy history of science Paleolithic Age Mary Settegast Etruscans AP Virginia DeMarce Cajuns Choctaw Indians Panther's Lodge news The Nation magazine Gypsies M. J. Harper American Journal of Human Genetics Harry Ostrer Great Goddess North Carolina Kate Wong DNA Forums French Canadians Science Daily, Genome Biol. Evol., Eran Elhaik, Khazarian Hypothesis, Rhineland Hypothesis Wales forensics Peter Parham oncology Nadia Abu El-Haj Jack Goins Middle Ages EURO DNA Fingerprint Test Clovis human leukocyte antigens Celts Elizabeth C. Hirschman ISOGG Hopi Indians Turkic DNA National Health Laboratories Marie Cheng Victor Hugo linguistics Nephilim, Fritz Zimmerman England autosomal DNA Theodore Steinberg Russia Native American DNA University of Leicester Micmac Indians Egyptians New York Academy of Sciences American history Hohokam Indians religion Britain Melanesians genetics Zionism rock art Barnard College Jon Entine Plato Havasupai Indians Discovery Channel FOX News population genetics Lebanon Population genetics Irish history health and medicine Henriette Mertz Alabama Holocaust George Starr-Bresette Y chromosomal haplogroups surnames Lab Corp Akhenaten Finnish people Moundbuilders Freemont Indians Phoenix hominids PNAS Phoenicians Arizona haplogroup N King Arthur Scotland NPR Pomponia Graecina Keros Phillipe Charlier Arizona State University Stone Age Gravettian culture population isolates bloviators familial Mediterranean fever Daily News and Analysis Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute Gila River Telltown medicine seafaring haplogroup B Charles Perou Smithsonian Magazine Thuya Stephen Oppenheimer Richard III Svante Paabo Riane Eisler Les Miserables Henry IV Rutgers University Belgium Jone Entine Israel Caucasian Grim Sleeper Henry VII Maronites Bentley surname research Phyllis Starnes mummies BBCNews Constantine Rafinesque Magdalenian culture Roberta Estes Pima Indians ethnicity human leukocyte testing Austronesian, Filipinos, Australoid hoaxes Nova Scotia Jews and Muslims in British Colonial America First Peoples Cherokee DNA genomics labs Isabel Allende Cancer Genome Atlas Louis XVI Wendy Roth Melungeon Union Ireland National Geographic Daily News Basques Iran Teresa Panther-Yates Bryan Sykes Rare Genes Terry Gross Russell Belk mental foramen Tintagel far from the tree X chromosome Sasquatch Colin Renfrew Anne Marie Fine Chris Tyler-Smith Dienekes Anthropology Blog Tutankamun Jews Albert Einstein College of Medicine Pueblo Grande Museum Nature Communications Europe North African DNA Richard Buckley Patagonia Oxford Nanopore andrew solomon Roma People Melungeon Heritage Association Altai Turks European DNA Khazars Current Anthropology Jewish genetics Fritz Zimmerman Early Jews and Muslims of England and Wales (book) John Wilwol clinical chemistry ethics Gregory Mendel Rush Limbaugh anthropology Solutreans Normans Zuni Indians Bigfoot King Arthur, Tintagel, The Earliest Jews and Muslims of England and Wales Neolithic Revolution Mark Thomas MHC microsatellites Sea Peoples haplogroup H Melba Ketchum Penny Ferguson Cleopatra Italy Acadians Cave art Wikipedia Sarmatians statistics research Native American DNA Test ethnic markers Indo-Europeans China BATWING Colin Pitchfork Anasazi consanguinity Israel, Shlomo Sand HapMap Timothy Bestor French DNA DNA magazine Life Technologies Denisovans haplogroup E

Archive