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Can the Turanian blood in East Germany be attributed to the Soviet **** in WW2?
At least 100,000 women are believed to have been **** in Berlin, based on surging abortion rates in the following months and contemporary hospital reports,[13] with an estimated 10,000 women dying in the aftermath.
Pythagoras and his followers were a shunned minority. He advocated the end of animal sacrifice, going against the traditions of the Pagan world. Beef and dairy eating Indo-Europeans crushed neolithic grain gruel guzzling queers like yourself.
The history of animal testing goes back to the writings of the Ancient Greeks in the 4th and 3rd centuries BCE, with Aristotle (384–322 BCE) and Erasistratus (304–258 BCE) one of the first documented to perform experiments on animals.[1]
Lot has been made about how violent Indo-Europeans were to Neolithic European Farmers or European Hunter Gatherers or to the Indus Valley, but what no one talks of is they were the worst to their own people. R1a clans wiped out all R1b clans down to the last man on the Steppe.3:59 AM · Jan 4, 2023·80.1K Views85 Retweets11 Quote Tweets649 Likes
See also:https://trueleft.createaforum.com/news/re-duginism-1134/
🝫 ✹ ᴰʳᵉᵃᵐ ᴶᵒᵘʳⁿᵃˡⁱˢᵗ@mike_boreasKhanty mother and child eating fresh reindeer, Yamal, Siberia.
Thousands of Yamnaya skeletons were found in graves and analysis has shown signs of changes caused by horse riding.Scientists from the University of Helsinki and Hartwick College in New York focused on the remains of five individuals that had been unearthed from kurgans, or prehistoric burial mounds, in Romania, Bulgaria and Hungary.A study of their bones proved them to be “the oldest humans identified as riders so far” because they exhibited clear signs of “horsemanship syndrome”, which included changes to the riders’ pelvis, thigh, spine and back.Yamnaya individuals originated in Ukraine and are known for their equine prowess which is said to have allowed them to spread throughout Europe.The riding opened up new possibilities in transportation, warfare and supply chains which led to horses becoming one of the most prized possessions for millennia.Volker Heyd, a study co-author, said that mounting steeds gave the people the ability to greatly enhance their mobility.“[It] enabled them to keep large herds of cattle and sheep and, as we now know, to guide them on horseback,” he said.David Anthony, from Hartwick College, added: “It made herding cattle and sheep three times more efficient, it changed the human conception of distance and it was an aid in warfare.”The new findings show people were riding horses for around 1,000 years before previously thought and also suggest humans had kept horses as livestock for their milk for around 500 years before deciding to learn to ride them.Skeletons in the study displayed changes to their femur caused by gripping onto the sides of the horse, a well-known morphological change to the human body among horse riders.There was also some evidence of degeneration to the vertebrae in the spine which may have been the result of the up-and-down movement of horse riding....The scientists write that signs of “biomechanical stress” on the skeletons “provide a viable way to further investigate the history of horseback riding and may even provide clues about riding style and equipment”.The team also said that a position called “chair seat”, which involved no saddle or stirrups, was also employed by early riders despite it being “physically demanding”.It requires the rider to constantly squeeze their legs together to stay on the back of their steed and is a test of one’s balance and strength as it would also be used when fighting or herding livestock.
Southern Arc papers are finally here. The biggest upending in archaeogenetics since the original Haak et al 2015. The consensus amongst all scholars now is that the original homeland of the Indo-Europeans was in West Asia (North Caucasus, SE Anatolia or Armenia).
The Sethites were to gradually expand northwards into the Turanian steppe that offers the best pastoral land for their herds, and hence gradually to become Turanians*.
It looks like Dr. David Reich believes that Indo-Anatolian (the originator of Proto Indo European) came from West Asia (Iran?) and not the Steppes, on the basis of 731 new samples. He thinks the Pontic Caspian Steppes was only a site of secondary dispersal, not primary.
Reich grew up as part of a Jewish family in Washington, D.C.
a time when the social order was under the spell of mighty andturbulent aristocrats thirsting for glory and plunder without consid-eration for the pain and hardship they brought onto the world.