11:28 The term is Subfossil, if anyone is wondering.
@beepboop20411 ай бұрын
cheers mate
@brooke_reiverrose29492 ай бұрын
Bravo. Fascinating.
@AlfOfAllTrades11 ай бұрын
It's the first time I've felt I had to slow down the playback... Fast talker, that man 🤣
@lakrids-pibe11 ай бұрын
yep. 75% hehe
@briantaylor947511 ай бұрын
And he starts five sentences before he gets halfway through two more before finally finishing one. He needs to ditch the Red Bull and actually think about what he is going to say. Oh, and drop the incessant "uh, no yeah". I really wanted to listen to this but I only lasted four minutes. Sheesh!
@jj605111 ай бұрын
@@briantaylor9475 Being nervous is absolutely a thing, he had a lot of interesting stuff to say, I'd say it is well worth your time to still listen through the whole thing. Maybe in sessions?
@jarrettpage70611 ай бұрын
My wife has him beat in the speed talk department.
@rdklkje138 ай бұрын
@@briantaylor9475 He's young. Jackson tripped him up by asking about things the other way around than how he'd planned to talk about them and hence included them in his presentation. In his efforts to be flexible and oblige the older (now YT) academic who'd invited him, and of whom he's a long-term fan, he got quite lost. Most people need to learn through experience that sticking to your own plan is generally the best option in situations like this. And most hosts similarly need to learn that more prior co-ordination with guests is usually helpful. In addition to this, either some variants of US English are becoming crazy fast, almost like Danish, or more and more people with (undiagnosed) ADHD participate in talks like this 🙃 Maybe both.
@arkaig16 ай бұрын
Good to see part 1 now too. Perhaps that also brings me to my questions over on part 2? Rechecking this one now. I'll recheck that other video next maybe. Thanks again!
@RCSVirginia11 ай бұрын
The Quagga Project is one in South Africa that was started by conservationist Reinhold Rau who suspected from their skins and skeletons that the extinct Quagga was a subspecies of the Plains Zebra. Later DNA examination would confirm that identification. So, since 1987, volunteers and ranchers have been selectively breeding Southern Plains Zebras to create individuals that resemble the lost Quagga in appearance. The process is quite far along, and there are now the new Quaggas, ofttimes called Rau Quaggas after the conservationist who started the process, that have brown hindquarters nearly devoid of stripes like the original Quaggas.
@BobbyBermuda198611 ай бұрын
Lecturing tips for Daniel: slow down, stop apologizing, don't hedge so much. You do have authority to speak.
@arquebusierx11 ай бұрын
It's something many of us struggle with, but with enough practice/confidence can be overcome!
@brooke_reiverrose29492 ай бұрын
Hedging is important. It’s unhelpful to convey false certainty.
@bogdannarancic576311 ай бұрын
Some studies for people interested: Vikings: Margaryan et al. (2020), Rodríguez-Varela et al. (2023) Goths: Stolarek et al. (2023) Langobards: Amorim et al. (2018) Anglo-Saxons: Gretzinger et al. (2022) Celtic Britons: Patterson et al. (2021) Etruscans: Posth et al. (2021) Italic peoples: Antonio et al. (2019) Mycenaeans/Minoans: Skourtanioti et al. (2023) Italians/Greeks: Raveane et al. (2022) Sardinians: Fernandes et al. (2020), Marcus et al. (2020) Balkan populations: Olalde et al. (2023)
@nandam377911 ай бұрын
Fascinating. Thank you!
@aniketanpelletier8211 ай бұрын
Thank you for covering this!
@melissahdawn11 ай бұрын
I always find it fascinating that archeosamples will have enough shared information to decide that I am descended from the same sample (or at least share a source) but, the closest modern match for the sample is a place that is not at all included in my family history.
@Vlad1968ful11 ай бұрын
The forum that Daniel spoke about - The GenArchivist Forum
@herdyhely349611 ай бұрын
You should try and get Razib Khan on to talk genetics, he is brilliant.
@overworlder11 ай бұрын
I read somewhere that anyone with English or maybe British ancestry could claim descent from Edward III or anyone alive in England/Britain then or earlier, same with anyone with European ancestry from Charlemagne or anyone alive then or earlier (in Europe). As you say. It’s called the ‘genetic isopoint’.
@hugonyyc11 ай бұрын
Daniel, so much good info. Watched to the end. But you need to slow down, everyone is here to listen to you cause you the boss. Also Mr Crawford should jump in there once in a while lol.
@bob___11 ай бұрын
Great discussion. Just to put in a comment on randomness, it's a mathematical concept used to model circumstances where cause and effect are too complex to observe or describe (or are unknown). Actual randomness doesn't happen in the tangible world, because the result would be an effect that is not attributable to a cause. This is not intended to criticize the work described in this presentation, because it's mathematical work.
@beepboop20411 ай бұрын
under-determined =/= in-determinate v un-determinable, it is all higher level stuff which can be unpacked
@bob___11 ай бұрын
@@DarranUaM That's the discussion.
@jabezcreed10 ай бұрын
75 percent is definitely a good speed. Great content, but totally his brain is running at a faster speed than mine. Appreciate the knowledge and the varied expertise recently.
@bombfog110 ай бұрын
Zoomers are difficult to listen to, that said I greatly appreciate the edification.
@tainicon46396 ай бұрын
He talks more like a genomics guy than a zoomer… like the super nerd vibes
@brooke_reiverrose29492 ай бұрын
How does a gradual replacement model fit in with the evidence? For example the incomers having a social or economic advantage that leads to more successful children, and, over a few generations, has a large impact on the genetics of a population? You say they weren’t intermarrying, what’s the evidence for that? Lack of native European mitochondrial haplogroups vs Y? Does it appear whole families moved in? Could it have been that they did intermix but those who did, and those who were native to the region, were less successful over a few generations? Thank you so much. Very interesting topic. Probably will watch multiple times.
@bjarnitryggvason786611 ай бұрын
Y-chromosome replacement by the Yamnaya intrusion into Europe seems shockingly abrupt and violent. Forget about paying these bands of Yamnaya herders tribute like the sedentary farmers would wrt to nomads like the Scythians, Alans and the Mongols later on. Seems that business model hadn't been invented back then so it's just a very brutal straight up near total replacement. 🤔
@RCSVirginia11 ай бұрын
To @bjarnitryggvason7866 It could be a question of, "Do you want some of their wealth in the form of tribute, or do you want their lands and their women?"
@raptor491611 ай бұрын
@@RCSVirginiaand also their lands because you killed them?
@vv653311 ай бұрын
Interestingly enough there are no mass graves found in Asia (Iran and Indian subcontinent) like in Europe. Indo-European expansion into Europe was brutal.
@maggan824 ай бұрын
CWC brothers to Yamnaya, or possibly decendants. Guess we soon will know.
@r.hagenau354111 ай бұрын
Interesting. But please cut back the "ahs", the "likes", the "kind ofs", etc. Clear articulation also helps.
@GustavSvard11 ай бұрын
Sounds like nervousness to me. Nervousness combined with being excited to talk about what interests you, combined with trying to not slide into jargon. Not as relaxing to listen to as Jackson's voice, but interesting still. And feels like he gets more comfortable along the way.
@williamliamsmith492311 ай бұрын
1:15:00 I think the data is not showing CW are descendants of Yamanaya particularly because the Y haplogroup of Yamanaya is R1b-L23 and that of CW is R1b-269 which are “cousins”.
@tat16429 ай бұрын
So hard to watch for a non native English speaker, this speed is unintelligible
@mrchewbacca34007 ай бұрын
/jámnaja/, not /jamnája/.
@beepboop20411 ай бұрын
@GriffinParke11 ай бұрын
Steppe is probably better than Yamnaya as their Y-DNA doesn't match most European men, despite being genetically similar.