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I've deleted this recently added text because no supporting evidence was provided. See Wikipedia:No original research. Until hard evidence (DNA from ancient remains) is found, it's premature and speculative to draw these links between haplogroups and ancient migrations. Agiseb ( talk) 22:50, 31 July 2010 (UTC)
Slovakia, Poland, and Hungary (among other nations or parts of nations) are in Central Europe. And so, with the ethnic group with the highest percentage of mtDNA Hg I being the Lemkos in SE Poland, eastern Slovakia, extreme SW Ukraine, and NE Hungary... how can the author of this article (or the reference cited therein) state that I is not found in Central European populations?
During the Cold War, this part of Europe was often thought of as Eastern Europe. It made things easier. West vs. East. Us vs. them. 'Free' states and Soviet-controlled states. However, geographically, Slovakia is in Central Europe. Kosice and Bratislava are closer to Paris than they are to Moscow. Eastern Europe is most of Russia, eastern Ukraine, European nations in the Caucasus, Moldova, etc. Hungary and Slovakia and southern Poland are basically in the very heart of Europe, both based on culture and latitude and longitude. Lemkos are Central Europeans. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 75.175.156.253 ( talk) 01:59, 15 February 2012 (UTC)
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Given the geographical and chronological sequence, the sentence "Haplogroup I displays a strong connection with the Indo-European migrations;..." makes absolutely no sense. It is far before the IE migrations i Spain and Iran, but absent in the early steppe populations. HJHolm ( talk) 15:25, 20 March 2022 (UTC)
"I3a has also been found in the Unetice Culture in Lubingine, Germany 2,200 B.C. to 1,800 B.C. courtesy article on Unetice Culture Wikipedia of 2 Skeletons that were DNA tested." The location "Lubingine" does not exist in Brand 2013, nor in google maps, and the whole sentence is very much confused. HJHolm ( talk) 10:08, 23 March 2022 (UTC)
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I've deleted this recently added text because no supporting evidence was provided. See Wikipedia:No original research. Until hard evidence (DNA from ancient remains) is found, it's premature and speculative to draw these links between haplogroups and ancient migrations. Agiseb ( talk) 22:50, 31 July 2010 (UTC)
Slovakia, Poland, and Hungary (among other nations or parts of nations) are in Central Europe. And so, with the ethnic group with the highest percentage of mtDNA Hg I being the Lemkos in SE Poland, eastern Slovakia, extreme SW Ukraine, and NE Hungary... how can the author of this article (or the reference cited therein) state that I is not found in Central European populations?
During the Cold War, this part of Europe was often thought of as Eastern Europe. It made things easier. West vs. East. Us vs. them. 'Free' states and Soviet-controlled states. However, geographically, Slovakia is in Central Europe. Kosice and Bratislava are closer to Paris than they are to Moscow. Eastern Europe is most of Russia, eastern Ukraine, European nations in the Caucasus, Moldova, etc. Hungary and Slovakia and southern Poland are basically in the very heart of Europe, both based on culture and latitude and longitude. Lemkos are Central Europeans. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 75.175.156.253 ( talk) 01:59, 15 February 2012 (UTC)
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Given the geographical and chronological sequence, the sentence "Haplogroup I displays a strong connection with the Indo-European migrations;..." makes absolutely no sense. It is far before the IE migrations i Spain and Iran, but absent in the early steppe populations. HJHolm ( talk) 15:25, 20 March 2022 (UTC)
"I3a has also been found in the Unetice Culture in Lubingine, Germany 2,200 B.C. to 1,800 B.C. courtesy article on Unetice Culture Wikipedia of 2 Skeletons that were DNA tested." The location "Lubingine" does not exist in Brand 2013, nor in google maps, and the whole sentence is very much confused. HJHolm ( talk) 10:08, 23 March 2022 (UTC)