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

American Indians and Turkic People Share Deep Ancestry

Wednesday, June 06, 2012
Check Out DNA Fingerprint Plus $300 


We've known or suspected as much for a long time. American Indians and Turkic peoples of the Altai region of southern Siberia share common ancestors. American scientists Thomas Jefferson and Constantine Rafinesque were the first to demonstrate this genetic similarity, long before the days of DNA. Now an article in American Journal of Human Genetics has clenched the argument with mitochondrial and Y chromosomal DNA studies.

The groundbreaking citation is:  Matthew C. Dulik et al., Mitochondrial DNA and Y Chromosome Variation Provides Evidence for a Recent Common Ancestry between Native Americans and Indigenous Altaians, AJHG 90/2, 229-246. The full article may read here.

From Old World Roots of the Cherokee, a book appearing June 15 by Donald N. Yates:

--Thomas Jefferson thought American Indians were Turks and Tartars coming across the Bering Sea from Asia, while his contemporary John Filson believed them to be Phoenicians. (See Boorstin, Daniel J. The Lost World of Thomas Jefferson, Chicago:  U of Chicago P, 1993.)

--(quoting Rafinesque) "Many other empires having begun to rise in the vicinity of Aztlan, such as those of Bali [Indonesia, perhaps Oppenheimer’s Eden in the East?], Scythia [Russian steppes], Thibet, Oghuz [Lake Baikal area], the Iztacan were driven eastwards, north of China; but some fragments of the nation are still found in the Caucasus, &c. such as the Abians or Abassans, Alticezecs [Altai Turks], Cushazibs, Chunsags, Modjors, &c. 

--"The six Iztacan nations being still pressed upon by their neighbours the Oghuzians [Uigur Turks], Moguls [Mongols], &c. gradually retreated or sent colonies to Japan, and the islands of the Pacific ocean; having discovered America at the peninsula of Alasca [Alaska, a Chinese word], during their navigations, the bulk of the nation came over and spread from Alasca to Anahuac, establishing many states in the west of America, such as Tula [Toltec], Amaquemeca, Tehuajo [Tewa, Tiwa, Tawa], Nabajoa [Navajo], Teopantla, Huehue, and many others.

--"After crossing the mountains, they discovered and followed the Missouri and Arkanzas rivers, reaching thus the Mississippi and Kentucky (26-27)."

How long will it take American history books to catch up to this new proof? We predict:  never. The jingoistic Smithsonian has its own versions of things and these are ingrained into anthropological dogma as deeply as Manifest Destiny. Interestingly, Turkish and Muslim historians have already entered it as a basic fact of history. They have long claimed American Indians as their genetic cousins.



Comments

Anonymous commented on 11-Jun-2012 01:18 PM

The people of Iran already have known for eons that the ancestors of the Navajo came from that general area originally. For simple comparison, the smilarities between the design elements of Navajo vs. tribal rugs and weavings from Iran, Turkey, Afghanistan,
The Caucasus and other areas cannot be simply a "coincidence"; and therefore cannot be summarily ignored. Now, DNA evidence speaks loudly in favor of what has already been known for milennia.

Brian Costello commented on 21-Jul-2012 03:14 AM

The ancestors of the American Indians came from Siberia. However most of Siberia is Yenesian and Tungus not Turkic. Turkic peoples arrived in Siberia very late. The Yakuts were not Turkified until the 15th century A.D.


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

 

 


Recent Posts


Tags

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

Archive