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|   DNA
  STUDIES REVEAL CLOSE ANCESTRY OF SOME     NATIVE
  AMERICAN TRIBES WITH PEOPLES OF SIBERIA          Scientists have long
  suspected that Native Americans are closely related to the peoples of Siberia
  and especially those of the Altai, which is a tiny region in Central
  Russia.  The Altai people are believed
  to have migrated from Siberia across Chukotka and Alaska, and their
  descendents south to Tierra del Fuego in South America.  The DNA evidence now indicates that Native American ancestors initially reached America from Siberia at
  most 23,000 years ago, only later differentiating into today’s distinct
  groups.  Now, after more than a century of speculation, an international group of
  geneticists using DNA evidence has proven that the Aztecs, Incas, and
  Iroquois are closely related to the peoples of Altai, in the Siberian region that
  borders China and Mongolia.  Altai is a key area because according to Dr Theodore
  Schurr, from the University of Pennsylvania in the United States, people have
  been moving in and out of that area for thousands of years.  In 2015 the Russian geneticist, Oleg Balanovsky, finally confirmed
  the theory.  In addition, Dr.
  Balanovsky's studies also proved that some Native Americans have kinship with
  the indigenous populations of Australia.  Research by Valery Ilyinsky at the RAS Institute of General
  Genetics confirms the theory that the Altai peoples are closely related to
  Native American tribes (see He Yu 2020).         
  Paleo Native Americans from Siberia would most likely have crossed
  into the Americas across Beringia when a
  Land Bridge was present.  Paleo-Siberians are closely related to
  Indigenous Americans as well as to East and Southeast Asian groups, with whom
  they share a common origin from and Ancestral East Asian source population in
  Mainland Southeast Asia.  However, the
  occasional ancient contacts in America by people from other world geographic
  areas, such as Japan, Middle East and Africa do not seem to have affected the
  genomes of present day Native Americans significantly (See ethnic1).         
  Additional analyses of
  genetic markers has also been used to link groups of indigenous peoples.  Studies focused on markers on the Y
  chromosome, which is always inherited by sons from their fathers.
   Haplogroup Q is a unique mutation shared among
  most indigenous peoples of the Americas.  Studies have found that 93.8% of Siberia's Ket people and 66.4%
  of Siberia's Selkup people possess the mutation. The principal-component
  analysis suggests a close genetic relatedness between some northern Native
  Americans (the Chipewyan [Ojibwe] and the Cheyenne) and certain populations
  of central/southern Siberia (particularly the Kets, Yakuts, Selkups,
  and Altaians), at the resolution of major Y-chromosome haplogroups.  This pattern agrees with the distribution
  of mtDNA haplogroup X, which is found in North America, is absent from
  eastern Siberia, but is present in the Altaians of southern central Siberia.            The history of American
  colonization remains a fertile area of continued study with new findings
  being presented as research advances. 
     | 
 
        
                CLICK on Photos to enlarge:
 
|   Worldwide human emigrations     |   Beringia 2022     |   Beringia abt. 16,000 BCE   | 
 
| Altai region of Siberia     |       | View of the Siberian Altai region     | 
 
 
                                                      SCENES FROM EASTERN & SOUTH-CENTRAL
SIBERIA
 
                                                                                (Provision of photos from Siberia
is gratefully acknowledged)
 
| Siberia #1     | Siberia #2     | Siberia #3     | Siberia #4     | Siberia #5     | 
| Siberia #6     | Siberia #7     | Siberia #8     | Siberia #9     | Siberia #10     | 
 
 
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  2016.  Plant and animal DNA suggests first Americans took the
  coastal route.  Nature. 536 (7615):   138.    Christopher N.  2016. 
  Bison phylogeography constrains dispersal and viability of the Ice Free Corridor in western Canada.        Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 113 (29):  8057–8063.   De Azvedo, Soledad,  Bortolini, Maria C. & Bonatto, Sandro
  L.; et al.  2015. 
  Ancient Remains and the First Peopling of the Americas:       Reassessing
  the Hoyo Negro Skull.  American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 148 (3):  514–521.     Dulik, Matthew C.;
  Zhadanov, Sergey I., Osipova, Ludmila P., Askapuli, Ayken, Gau, Lydia,
  Gokcumen, Omer, Rubinstein, Samara &       Schurr, Theodore G.  2012.  Mitochondrial
  DNA and Y Chromosome Variation Provides Evidence for a Recent Common        Ancestry between Native Americans and
  Indigenous Altaians.  The American Journal of
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