02:3302:33, 18 March 2018diffhist+42
Norman Conquest
→Language: source is referring to the Old Norman dialect of Old French, which was influenced heavily by Old Norse; that was the source for Anglo-Norman, not the French of Paris or Rheims
22:5822:58, 17 March 2018diffhist+175
Cheddar Man
Undid revision 830956399 by
Thomas.W (
talk) none of your re-verts are valid, and do not correspond with the information in the studies; no explanation for removal of additional study I postedTag: Undo
22:3122:31, 17 March 2018diffhist+30
Cheddar Man
Undid revision 830954547 by
Thomas.W (
talk)yes it does, which is why it is included in this article; Cheddar Man has to do with ancestry of indigenous Anglo-Celtic BritonsTag: Undo
22:1922:19, 17 March 2018diffhist+15
Cheddar Man
no explanation for why these were changed; only indigenous Anglo-Celtic and today light skinned Britons have descent from British Mesolithic WHG
22:1822:18, 17 March 2018diffhist+30
Cheddar Man
→Genetic change since the Mesolithic: "indigenous" is not contestable at all; that is who the studies are referring to - those descended from the populations who arrived thousands of years ago and have been largely isolated since, not those of recent foreign origins and migration in the past two centuries
21:4621:46, 17 March 2018diffhist+1
Basques
numbers of ethnic Basques in diaspora also included; these people are genetically and physically Basque, identify as such in ethnicity, which is not nationality or citizenship (Basque-Argentine, Basque-Chilean, etc) and retain varying degrees of Basquecultural features
21:4421:44, 17 March 2018diffhist+2,025
Basques
also, you have to include Chile, where a huge number of Basques went and have a strong identity; included a lot of source for this, so it CAN be entered here; The Basque diaspora are also ethnic Basques, and you should not exclude them
21:3921:39, 17 March 2018diffhist+1,511
Basques
re-including these regions; will also include Chile; this infoobox includes estimates in most ethnic groups articles, not just actual counts; this section is also about REGIONS with specific populations, not just numbers; also, these sources are ALL valid and acceptable per WP; I will include Chile figures later one
20:0920:09, 17 March 2018diffhist+493
Cheddar Man
Undid revision 830929591 by
Thomas.W (
talk) No they aren't ,and certainly not in the section about the source of other genes in modern indigenous Britons; Haak study also discussed the Mesolithic WHG percentages in modern British and other EuropeansTag: Undo
02:3302:33, 18 March 2018diffhist+42
Norman Conquest
→Language: source is referring to the Old Norman dialect of Old French, which was influenced heavily by Old Norse; that was the source for Anglo-Norman, not the French of Paris or Rheims
22:5822:58, 17 March 2018diffhist+175
Cheddar Man
Undid revision 830956399 by
Thomas.W (
talk) none of your re-verts are valid, and do not correspond with the information in the studies; no explanation for removal of additional study I postedTag: Undo
22:3122:31, 17 March 2018diffhist+30
Cheddar Man
Undid revision 830954547 by
Thomas.W (
talk)yes it does, which is why it is included in this article; Cheddar Man has to do with ancestry of indigenous Anglo-Celtic BritonsTag: Undo
22:1922:19, 17 March 2018diffhist+15
Cheddar Man
no explanation for why these were changed; only indigenous Anglo-Celtic and today light skinned Britons have descent from British Mesolithic WHG
22:1822:18, 17 March 2018diffhist+30
Cheddar Man
→Genetic change since the Mesolithic: "indigenous" is not contestable at all; that is who the studies are referring to - those descended from the populations who arrived thousands of years ago and have been largely isolated since, not those of recent foreign origins and migration in the past two centuries
21:4621:46, 17 March 2018diffhist+1
Basques
numbers of ethnic Basques in diaspora also included; these people are genetically and physically Basque, identify as such in ethnicity, which is not nationality or citizenship (Basque-Argentine, Basque-Chilean, etc) and retain varying degrees of Basquecultural features
21:4421:44, 17 March 2018diffhist+2,025
Basques
also, you have to include Chile, where a huge number of Basques went and have a strong identity; included a lot of source for this, so it CAN be entered here; The Basque diaspora are also ethnic Basques, and you should not exclude them
21:3921:39, 17 March 2018diffhist+1,511
Basques
re-including these regions; will also include Chile; this infoobox includes estimates in most ethnic groups articles, not just actual counts; this section is also about REGIONS with specific populations, not just numbers; also, these sources are ALL valid and acceptable per WP; I will include Chile figures later one
20:0920:09, 17 March 2018diffhist+493
Cheddar Man
Undid revision 830929591 by
Thomas.W (
talk) No they aren't ,and certainly not in the section about the source of other genes in modern indigenous Britons; Haak study also discussed the Mesolithic WHG percentages in modern British and other EuropeansTag: Undo