Thread:Argali1/@comment-27097330-20160807015023/@comment-26184570-20160808232902

Well, there was one migration that produced the common ancestor of the Austral peoples (Dravidians, Melanesians, Aboriginal Australians, Andamanese etc) and the Axumoid peoples, and they became the first people to become distinct from Africans. Then, when they were crossing into the Arabian Peninsula, they split between the Austral peoples I spoke of before, and the "Axumoid peoples" (that term is one my brother coined, spread the word, it's useful). The Axumoid peoples where basically modern-day East Africans, and some of them went North into Europe and the Middle East, mixing with Neanderthals and creating the first (half) Homo-Sapien population in Europe, who looked like Modern-day Somalians who have no Arab-mixing, but with heavier jaws, heavier brow-ridges, rectangular eye-sockets (that's a trait that comes from Neanderthals that no one has today), wavy, ginger hair and green eyes. The ones who came to the Middle East and mixed with those already inpure Neanderthals wound-up looking the same as the original Axumoid peoples. Some of those Pleistocene Europeans wandered East, and mixed with a group of people rather akin to modern-day Dravidians, migrated Northeast and mixed heavily with the "Yangdong Hominin", a mysterious Heidelbergensis offshoot that we know very little about. After that mixing, they became isolated in a very different enviroment than before, and underwent a huge genetic change, resulting in the ancestor of all East-Asians, Siberians Native Americans and Pacific Islanders. Then, the Ice-Age ended, and as snow-glare went away, Middle-Easterner's skin and hair became lighter, and their noses changed shape. Most people think that East-Africans look like dark-skinned Arabs, but it's actually the other way around. Then, some of those Middle-Easterners came into Europe, and mixed with those Pleistocene Europeans I mention a lot. However, one pocket remained relatively untouched by these new Middle-Easterners, and they became the Basque. Then, around the Caucasus, Northern-European Borialaxumoid people mingled with Southern-European Australaxumoid people, and this new, mixed group headed East, all the way to Siberia. They mixed with Siberian hunter-gatheres, and fully assimilated them. The only lasting changes those Siberians provided where hair-texture, nose-shape and their Y Haplogroup (R, which is what most Europeans have today). Then, this group headed back West, and flooded Europe. Their language was differentiated by the local languages, and they took on the local phenotypes again (but with the addition of their new traits I mentioned above). Thus, the Indo-Europeans where born. The only place that they didn't manage to conquer was, you guessed it, Basque-Country.

*gasps for air* That good?