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{{Ping|Joshua Jonathan}} & {{Ping|Doug Weller}} - This on wikicommons (does not seem to have wikipedia account?) has been adding unreliable/unsourced maps like these on several pages. Claiming Oceanians are Africans and not East Eurasians. | |||
He guesstimates "Negrito" (onge) ancestry in South Asians and also associates it with Sub Shaharan African ancestry. Here is link to talk page and talk page. I have pointed how () models East Asians as roughly 75% Onge (Andamanese)-related and 25% Tianyuan-related (fig.3) where Onge is capturing deep proxy ancestry. Similarly, Onge is also capturing deep proxy for hypothesized AASI ancestry which is poor fit for AASI as several studies have pointed out. | |||
* ] | |||
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I cited various peer-reviewed studies from reich and haravrd groups, pointed out Negrito and Australians descend from East Eurasian clad along with East Asians, however he won't seem to get it. | |||
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:''"New Guinea and Australia fit well as sister groups, with their majority ancestry component forming a clade with East Asians (with respect to western Eurasians). Onge fit as a near-trifurcation with the Australasian and East Asian lineages"'' - | |||
Again and again you a showing your ignorance.What do you know about Srilankan problem to talk about it here?.Who said Singalese are lighter than the tamils?. | |||
You assumed that they are lighter because they speak an aryan language?. | |||
Singalese eventhough they speak a aryan language the generel population is darker than the general population of south India.This is a fact.Go and have a look if you want to.This is another classical exapmle of the | |||
people getting darker because of the geographical posoition.Here you can see the so called Aryans are darker than the So called dravidians!!!!.But darker or lighter singalese and tamils look the same. | |||
The problem in SL is NOT RACIAL it is just like your hutus and tutsis fighting each other.It is a ETHINICAL violance.It is Minority versus Majority!!!.Even during the civil war lots of tamils pretented as singales and vice versa to escape.They can only identify when they open their mouth.That is when they start talking!!!!.They speak 2 diffent languages thats all!!!!.Did'nt you see my earlier posts???.You are asking again and again why untouchables | |||
became darker from lighter.As I am telling for the 100th time that caste syatem was occupation based.may be people who were well off might have been able to choose good looking spouses! and where as the ones who did 'DIRTY' jobs could'nt do so!.You black americans look better than your counterparts in Africa.Why it is that?.You are living in better conditions than your counterparts in africa but both of you belong to the same race.If you want ask me again and agin scroll up the archive one and look into my earlier posts.--] 01:20, 28 February 2007 (UTC) | |||
:''"Deep ancestry of the indigenous hunter-gather population of India represents an anciently divergent branch of Asian human variation that split off around the same time that East Asian, Onge and Australian aboriginal ancestors separated from each other."'' He also notes that East Eurasian clad spread ''"From a single eastward spread, which gave rise in a short span of time to the lineages leading to AASI, East Asians, Onge, and Australians"'' - | |||
:If you must have this idiotic debate can you do so on a relevant page? ] 01:39, 28 February 2007 (UTC) | |||
:''"If one of these population fits (for AASI), it does not mean it is the true source; instead, it means that it and the true source population are consistent with descending without mixture from the same homogeneous ancestral population that potentially lived thousands of years before. The only fitting two-way models were mixtures of a group related to herders from the western Zagros mountains of Iran and also to either Andamanese hunter-gatherers or East Siberian hunter-gatherers (the fact that the latter two populations both fit reflects that they have the same phylogenetic relationship to the non-West Eurasian-related component likely due to shared ancestry deeply in time)"'' | |||
I am sorry!.I got pissed off with this Bcr who always asks idiotic questions. | |||
Can you pls ask him to stop!.I dont know how many ignorant afroctrics I have to encounter in my Life!!!:(.yes I have had enough!!!--] 01:47, 28 February 2007 (UTC) | |||
While he cites Non-peer reviewed study, which has not been peer-reviewed for months. Which came out last year claiming Oceanians are mix of European/Indian and African/Archic ancestry, and not Asians. It claims that modern humans originated in hunan province of China, and that they found Chinese ancestry in Africans (recent Shum Lake paper didn't mention this part lol). There was discussion about this on Anthorogenica explains why & . It is telling why the study was not peer-reviewed. | |||
Brother Bcr I have given enough evidence to show that there is no color/race bias is Indian subcontinent but if you still feel otherwise then it is up to you!!!. | |||
Wish you all the best for a bright future.Looking at any person based on a racial term is very wrong thats what I feel at the end of the day.We are all but one race the Human race!!!.Anyway we have 'entertained' people like Paul B!!! | |||
--] 03:00, 28 February 2007 (UTC) | |||
Reliable peer-reviewed ancient DNA study suggests otherwise, this from () based on ancient DNA will help understand East Eurasian clad and it's branching, along with this study. | |||
You still need to give me evidence from a history book or article where is says that Dalits started out light-skinned and were dark because they were exposed to the sun. By the way, I am not your brother. And I want the evidence not from your mouths but from a book or article. And don't try to talk about Africa to avoid the question. If not, then you guys have officially not influenced me! --Bcr 01:59, 29 February 2007 | |||
Those two maps is pretty misleading, one of them is on several pages. He is guesstimating "negrito" ancestry based on Onge proxy ancestry found in mainland Asians and also associating it with Saharan/African ancestry, when in reality Negritos branched from East Eurasian clad and share deep ancestry with all East Eurasians. ] (]) 20:33, 13 March 2020 (UTC) | |||
I have removed them for now.] (]) 23:04, 13 March 2020 (UTC) | |||
See my answer at ] ] (]) 18:41, 9 May 2020 (UTC) | |||
What are you talking about millions of tamils get murdered. Actually there are only 3 millions and "only" 60000 to 80000 people died in the Sri Lankan ethnic war. Who told you that Singhalese are in generall lighter? Singhalese and Tamils look all the same. Most people wont be able to tell who is Singhalese and who is Tamil, even most Sri Lankans cant. India didnt support the SL Gov. They first even supported the LTTE. But after Rajiv Ghandi was killed they turned down their support. | |||
Dont talk BS if u dont know anything about that Issue. Your ignorance is bloody. | |||
No one of us ever said that Dalits were once light skinned. They may be a few shades "lighter". But that doesnt mean they were light skinned.] 20:47, 28 February 2007 (UTC) | |||
==Map from the Horniman museum is correct== | |||
:I thought that I should mention something. Not all conflicts are based on color like in the United States. Actually, all this color classification was started in the United States: Black for Africans, Whites for Anglos, Yellow for Asians (ie.Chinese), Brown for Hispanics, and Red for Native Americans. So, what color are people from Middle East, India, and Sri Lanka. I think that basing things on color, is baseless. Anyways, I do agree that Sinhalese and Tamils colors vary. I have seen both Sinhalese and Tamils in variou shades of Black, Brown, and light Brown. ] 01:24, 1 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
Dear user: Rsk6400 ! Why do you call the map outdated? | |||
:There are no people in "shades of Black" nowhere. MiddleEasterners and SouthAsians are usually called Browns. No matter what shade of brown they are.] 12:08, 1 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
The Caucasian , Mongoloid, Negroid and Australoid groups of races exist accoriding to the genetic distances of various ethnic groups based on autosomal genetic researches.--] (]) 17:28, 9 May 2020 (UTC) | |||
:The issue (for me) is not whether those groups exist. For other reasons, I don't believe the map is entirely correct. For instance: It seems to show/color code New Zealand (i.e. the Maori) as "Australoid", when as Polynesians they would be classified as (mostly) "Mongoloid". Also, it shows/codes the Indian subcontinent as entirely "Caucasoid", when in fact the people of that region are, to varying degrees, a mixture of "Caucasoid"/Western Eurasian and a non-Caucasoid/non-Western Eurasian population (labelled by recent genetic studies as "ASI" or more recently as "AASI") that is distantly related to "Australoids" and to the Andamanese. In adition, people from the Horn of Africa are generally mixed as well ("Caucasian" and sub-Saharan African) and not fully Caucasian as the map incorrectly indicates. It seems to me ] was correct to remove it. ] (]) 17:36, 9 May 2020 (UTC) | |||
::Please see my reply at ] ] (]) 18:47, 9 May 2020 (UTC) | |||
== The article is about a historical race concept == | |||
::You're joking right? Browns? That was a term used during the Chicano movement in California during the 1960s up to now. I have seen people from North and East Africa much lighter in complexion than that of some of the Tamilians or Malayalees. What part of Jaffna are you from? ] 16:22, 1 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
A clearly defined "Australo-Melanesian" or "Australoid" race or population doesn't exist in modern science (biology or genetics). So I changed the lede and some parts of the article in order to clarify that we are dealing with a ]. --] (]) 06:01, 19 July 2020 (UTC) | |||
::Well what shade is "Brown"? White people call themselve brown if they have a tan. But most say its still white. Some Blacks call themselve brown, others say ur black. I have seen some Somalis/Ethiopians who were kinda "light skinned" but still dark for my point of view (or a "tamil" point of view), well at least darker than me, and I'm kinda dark. But there are definitely some SouthIndans who are darker than EastAfricans. But most arent. Thats why we call EastAfricans Black and NorthAfrican Arab. Ur the first one I come across who call EastAfricans lighter skinned than Tamils/Malaiyalees. But on one thing ur right NorthAfricans are lighter skinned than SouthIndians its mostly true, with some exceptions. But u know Tamils/Malaiyalees vary a lot in term of skin colour. Some are nearly as dark as Blacks some are nearly as light as Greeks/Turks. And I never met a person before who called EastAfricans "Browns". | |||
:{{Ping|Rsk6400}} I agree that it's not a "clearly defined race". However, reliable sources still make reference to an "Australo-Melanesian" genetic grouping (e.g. from this 2015 article: https://www.science.org/doi/abs/10.1126/science.349.6246.354 and this 2021 article: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-021-03823-6). I suggest that we make the distinction between the historical race concept and the contemporary genetic grouping. --] (]) 02:44, 30 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
::A source that just proves that some scientist has used the term in some paper is a primary source for the usage of the term, see ]. At least in the nature source ({{tq|Morphological characters indicate that this Toalean forager was a 17–18-year-old female with a broadly Australo-Melanesian affinity}}), I see no indication that it is a "genetic grouping". It may just mean "looks like somebody from Australia or Melanesia". --] (]) 10:13, 30 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
:::{{Ping|Rsk6400}} Okay on both points (PSTS and phenotype rather than genotype). Here are a couple of secondary sources that use the term "Australo-Melanesian" to refer to a genetic grouping (based on the 2015 ''Science'' article): https://www.courthousenews.com/early-north-americans-likely-more-diverse-than-previously-thought/ https://arstechnica.com/science/2015/07/studies-find-genetic-signature-of-native-australians-in-the-americas/ --] (]) 10:25, 30 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
{{Ping|Degeneration1}} Please don't mark potentially controversial edits as "minor", see ]. You might also want to read ]. The ] is a respected international body of scientists, so their declarations not opinions, but science. --] (]) 05:28, 8 August 2021 (UTC) | |||
::And no we arent talking about America. SouthAsians are Browns in allmost every country. The "Asians" in UK are called Browns. And even in ur America. hmmm I've never said I'm from Jaffna. What has that to do from which part I'm from?] 18:34, 1 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
No, this not a genetic grouping, but a cover term for the ancestral component of the diverse indigenous populations of SE Asia and Oceania. The genomes of many of these peoples still overwhelmingly comprise this ancestry component, but many also to various degrees display multiple geneflow from later East Asian migrations, so there ''no'' support from genetics that there is a clearcut "genetic grouping" of "Australo-Melanesians". What I support is to mention that the term "Australo-Melanesian" is used in genetics for this complex ancestral component, but a detailed discussion belongs in articles that discuss the peopling and genetic history of SE Asia and Oceania. A ''real'' secondary source (and not just a pop-sci news report quoting a primary source) for the current use in genetics is e.g. this one by Skoglund & Mathieson (2018). –] (]) 13:32, 30 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
:::I'm assuming you must be from Kayts due to the tone of your previous messages. Basically making noise and nonsense. ] 21:04, 1 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:Thanks. I found a few additional sources for the current use of the term "Australo-Melanesians" in genetics: Buckley and Oxenham (2015), Bulbeck et al. (2017), and Carson (2018). ] (]) 15:00, 30 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
::Yes, but still we need to strictly separate between obsolete pseudoscience (i.e. the racial category "Australo-Melanesian") and hard science (i.e. the books and papers you bring up here about the loose cover term for that can mean different things in different contexts). Blurring the line between these two by covering both in one article is not helpful for our readers. –] (]) 15:12, 30 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
::I suggest to add a brief section "Other uses of the term" or similar, where we can add scholarly sources from archaeology, genetics etc. And FWIW {{ping|Rsk6400}} unlike all the "-oid" terms, "Australo-Melanesian" doesn't have the reek of pseudoscience. E.g. for ] and colleagues, the term has been a useful cover term for the hunter-gatherer groups that inhabited (and still inhabit in remnant areas) SE Asia before the Austronesian, Austrasiatic and Tai expansions. –] (]) 15:51, 30 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
:::Yes, ] I support this suggestion —] (]) 15:54, 30 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
:::No problem with that. Only, it should be based on good secondary sources, and those sources should say explicitly something like "We use the term Australo-Melanesian to describe ..." or similar. --] (]) 16:52, 30 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
::::Sure, attestation alone is not sufficient for verification. I'll see what I can dig up. –] (]) 22:33, 30 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
:::This recent source claims that "Australo-Papuan" is a better term —] (]) 01:39, 31 December 2021 (UTC) | |||
::::''''Australo-Papuan'''' is the valid modern term used in most genetics studies on these peoples as of 2022. ''''Oceanian'''' is also increasingly used. ''''Australo-Melanesian'''', however, is also still used in some studies This article should reflect this, and refer to these which are in widespread academic use, as well as mention the other now outdated terms as already in place in the article. 'Australo-Papuan' is a valid and clearly defined 'racial' or biological category (subpopulation, ], biogeographic ancestry or ] all overlap with one another) of diverse, yet related, human groups indigenous to New Guinea, Australia and nearby islands. But it is a genetic category that is clearly distinguished from the highly diverse ] subgroups of mainland southeast Asia and the Philippines. The content about the discussion over the use of the term 'race' here is also irrelevant to the article. That is covered in other articles. This article is specifically about a valid subcategory of human biogeographic ancestry common to the ] and nearby islands, ] and other ]. ] (]) 09:33, 22 August 2022 (UTC) ''' ''' ] (]) 09:50, 22 August 2022 (UTC) | |||
:::::The terms ecotype, subpopulation, subspecies are not applicable to humans. See any reliable source published in this millenium, see any discussion on relevant talk pages. The next time you revert, I'll take the case to ]. ] (]) 09:48, 22 August 2022 (UTC) | |||
::::::What are you talking about? All of those are applicable and used in modern humans. Clearly you have not read any reliable source published in this millennium from the expert on the topic. All three are used by experts. Most use subpopulation. Alan Templeton uses subpopulation, but also makes not that subspecies can even be used depending on context. Others, like ], use ecotypes. uses all of them (read: ), and clearly defines how any can be applied to modern humans and to biological race. It's an ongoing discussion among experts. The genetic distances (Fst) between human subpopulations are greater than those between subpopulations and subspecies of ]. Talk pages on Wiki are not expert sources, but they never hae resolved it either. ] (]) 09:55, 22 August 2022 (UTC) | |||
:::::::Feel free to seek dispute resolution. ] (]) 09:58, 22 August 2022 (UTC) | |||
::::::::I will seek dispute resolution. This article is falsely claiming that terms like 'Australo-Papuan' and 'Australo-Melanesian' are not used in modern scientific studies to refer to a valid biological category or subpopulation of humans, ''when clearly they are''. ''Practically every genetics study on them as of 2022 uses one of these terms.'' The current format of the article is misinformation. I just gave you 8 studies from 2020 to 2022 after one quick search on Google using the terms to refer to a genetic cluster and biological category. There are differences within it, just as there is within ], ], ], ], ], ], ] or ], ], ], ],as well as ], ] or other ] ancestry exclusive to certain modern human groups. ] (]) 10:12, 22 August 2022 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::No-one refers to these ancestral lineages and the present-day populations which predominantly display these ancestries in their genome as races. We have known for a long time that you are convinced that modern genetics research corroborates obsolete racial classifications. It doesn't, read the sources, period. –] (]) 10:28, 22 August 2022 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::There is a case for renaming this article as "Australo-Papuan" or "Oceanian" (to refer to the human sub-population). The article can then make reference to the obsolete racial classifications (noting that the issues with the term 'race'). ] (]) 20:09, 23 August 2022 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::Is there any secondary (sic !), recent, scientific ] about an Australo-Papuan or Oceanian human sub-population ? ] (]) 16:28, 24 August 2022 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::::Yes, see Bellwood (2017) ''First Islanders: Prehistory and Human Migration in Island Southeast Asia'': "The term "Australo-Papuan" is often rendered "Australo-Melanesian" in other publications, but I hesitate to use this term since the islands of Melanesia ... have witnessed lots of population admixture"−] (]) 20:20, 24 August 2022 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::::The quote doesn't answer my question. Also: In this very thread, there are some very good remarks by Austronesier. And: I saw your revert of yesterday as disruptive. ] (]) 06:14, 25 August 2022 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::::::The answer to your question is, 'Yes.' Bellwood (2017) is a recent, scientific reliable source about an 'Australo-Papuan' human sub-population. Isn't that precisely your question? ] (]) 21:58, 25 August 2022 (UTC) | |||
===Australo-Melanesian, Australo-Papuan and Australasian in modern secondary sources about genetic research=== | |||
:::U assume a lot right now. No arguments anymore. Kayts??? never heard of that. Everywhere Dravidians try to differentiate them from Blacks, there is a ], haha boi u lost ur authenticity long time ago. Aint u that guy who tried to claim that Me and ] were the same and totally failed. U even complained it to an admin.... Haha how sad must ur life be. How I know that?...hmm there is something called "googling names". | |||
The terms "Australo-Papuan" and "Australasian" are often used in studies about the history of uniparental genetic markers and the full genome ("Australo-Melanesian" only rarely). The claim is that this research corroborates (or at least partially relates to) obsolete racial classifications as covered in this article. While modern geneticists simply to do not talk about "race" in their output (which actually should already be sufficient to put rac(ial)ist pipe dreams to rest), the claim circles around the notion of "sub-populations" in a ] which some people wilfully read into genetic research articles. | |||
:::Haha U allways come with ur EastAfricans, hahhaha which fuckin Indian cares about EastAfricans..] 23:34, 1 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
So let's have a look what the few relevant secondary review/overview articles have to say about "Australo-Melanesian" etc.: | |||
Firstly I have always mentioned that not all the untouchables are Darker or all a lighter!.They are lighter and darker just like other people of India.I even gave an | |||
example with Dr Ambedkar(an lighter skinned Untouchable) and Srinivas Ramanujam | |||
(dark skinned Brhamin).Generally north Indian daliths are lighter than south Indian daliths.They dont look that Good because of the hard contions that they were set to for generatuions!!. | |||
Several studies have shown that discrimination is India is not Color based!. | |||
pls see | |||
http://www.uwf.edu/lgoel/documents/AMythofAryanInvasionsofIndia.pdf | |||
and also pls see why untouchables became untouchables and the conclusion they have derived.see | |||
http://ambedkar.org/ambcd/39B.Untouchables%20who%20were%20they_why%20they%20became%20PART%20II.htm#a16 | |||
There are two studies with a global scope: | |||
http://ambedkar.org/ambcd/39A.Untouchables%20who%20were%20they_why%20they%20became%20PART%20I.htm#a07 | |||
*Skoglund & Mathieson (2018), , ''Annual Review of Genomics and Human Genetics'' '''19''':381–404. | |||
http://saxakali.com/southasia/broken.htm | |||
*Liu et al. (2021), , ''Science'' '''373''':1479–1484. | |||
And one more specifically about Asia and Oceania: | |||
http://ambedkar.org/ambcd/ | |||
*Yang (2022), , ''Human Population Genetics and Genomics'' '''2'''(1):0001. | |||
and go to the who is shudra section. | |||
These are the evidence that I could give within a short span.Understand that when | |||
there are Donkeys and Zebras(same color u'r black and white!!!) there are Horses(Different colors) as well.World is not only America!!.Finally pls dont always think that 'Dark' skin will always gets suppressed by the 'Light' skin.since in some part of the world Whites | |||
enslaved the Blacks it doesnt mean every where in the world it has to be like that!. | |||
--] 02:51, 1 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
Here are the relevant passages: | |||
:I do agree that the whole world is not America. However, prejudism and discrimination is worldwide. That's how wars get started. ] 04:21, 1 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
1) Skoglund & Mathieson (2018). There is a passing mention of "Australo-Melanesians" on pp. 391–392: {{tq|However, a genetic affinity between Amazonian and Australo-Melanesian populations suggests | |||
yes prejudism and discrimination is worldwide.It can be any thing from color,gender,tribe,religion,language,territory etc etc.It is not 'COLOR' always!!!. | |||
that we still do not have the full picture of the ancestry of the first Americans (102, 129). This suggests that the expansion into the Americas was substructured, with some subpopulations retaining greater affinity to an unknown northeastern Asian population related to present-day Australo-Melanesians}}. The authors to not define "Australo-Melanesians" in their article, but from the quote and the context it should be clear that they are not talking about sharply well-delineated taxonomic entities, but rather geographical clusters of various present-day populations which predominantly display a specific ancestry. | |||
Survival of the fittest is the norm of the world.whether you like it or not!.The mightier controlled the weak.man controlled woman to say so!. | |||
Bcr here you go pls read this | |||
http://www.countercurrents.org/dalit-ambedkar050703.htm | |||
this is about pre-untouchables written by the great untouchable Dr.Ambedkar.--] 04:59, 1 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:The mightier may control the weak, but when the weak is pushed to the limit, it becomes the other way around. By the way, what is with all the exclamation marks? Are you mad or something? ] 05:59, 1 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
2) Liu et al. (2021). No mention of "Australo-Papuan" etc. at all. They open the relevant section "Oceania" with the following sentence: {{tq|Archeological evidence suggests that human | |||
{{cquote|Firstly I have always mentioned that not all the untouchables are Darker or all a lighter!.They are lighter and darker just like other people of India.I even gave an example with Dr Ambedkar(an lighter skinned Untouchable) and Srinivas Ramanujam (dark skinned Brhamin).Generally north Indian daliths are lighter than south Indian daliths.They dont look that Good because of the hard contions that they were set to for generatuions!!. Several studies have shown that discrimination is India is not Color based!. pls see}} | |||
populations from Southeast Asia have initially settled in Sahul (present-day Australia, Tasmania, and New Guinea) before ~50 ka}}. They continue to discuss Aborignal Australians and Papuans individually. | |||
3) Yang (2022). This is a great source since the author defines the term "Australasian": {{tq|Australasian (AA) lineage—this lineage refers to the ancestral population that primarily contributed to human populations in Australasia, or the region consisting of Australia, New Zealand, and neighboring islands in the South Pacific Ocean. Represented primarily by present-day Australasians, e.g. Papuans and Aboriginal Australians}} (p. 8). NB that this an ancestry component that emerges in the modeling in the genetic history of modern-day populations, and is found among them to ''various'' degrees. But there is no taxonomic "Australasian" group, sub-population etc. of present-day populations! When applied to modern people, "Australasians" simply refers to the inhabitants of Australasia {{tq|(the region consisting of Australia, New Zealand, and neighboring South Pacific islands)}} (p. 4). | |||
'''To the anonymous user:''' what on earth is that supposed to mean? Certain people not looking that good because of the hard conditions that they were set to for generations? So, what you are saying is that people with Black or dark skin are ugly? What in your description would be a good looking person? Whoever thinks like that needs some real psychiatric help. ] 21:08, 1 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
Clearly, there is no link between obsolete classificatory "races" and the modern concept of ancestries. There is some crude overlap since the human genome also determines the phenotypical characteristics that were exploited by earlier racial classification. But to combine these two completely different paradigms is like mixing up the ] with ]. We can talk about "Australasian" ancestry in an article about the ], but not here. | |||
Firstly I am not an anonymous user.I have always signed.I can understand you. | |||
you main intention is to cause disruption!.You just jumbed between without knowing what was happening and talking irrelevent things!!You are calling me MAD because I simply used an exclmationmark.Now you are calling me psycopath!.What is wrong with you??.I certainly dont want to have ant conversation with you.I dont want to argue with you.I have explained to my maximun to the User Bcr.Finally people like Wikiraja Dont ASSUMEthings of your own.I never said blck is ugly!.Dont intepret it for me.Any person who lives in hard condition wont look that good.whether they are black,brown or yellow or white.Wikiraja pls have some decency in not to interupt(jump in without having any pripor knowledge).I dont know you are dravidian or not(so many pretend to be) but one thing There are idiots in every society.Dont reply me with a lenghthy mail I will never read it.FYI the argument is about whether Indians discriminate people based on color!.Untouchables were made untouchables because they possed Dark skin.This is the argument about.It is very indecent to | |||
jump in between without knowing anything.I know you provoke people and always complain them about.--] 21:54, 1 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
discriminate people based on colo | |||
A final word on Bellwood's book (even if he is an archaeologist and his book mostly a primary source for his model about the demic spread of the Neolithic from East Asia into Southeast Asia and Oceania): Bellwood primarily uses the term "Australo-Papuan" (actually "Australo-Melanesians" during most of his career) for the diverse inhabitants of Southeast Asia and Oceania prior to the expansion of people from East Asia into that area that began ~4kya. He also goes into saying things like {{tq|The modern Australo‐Papuan populations of Island Southeast Asia still form a coherent biological subdivision in terms of their DNA and phenotypic features.}} This is however simply at odds with modern genetic research, and also with a statement by Bellwood himself in the same paragraph: {{tq|However, many of the peoples of eastern Indonesia, especially in eastern Nusa Tenggara and of course in Papua itself, are today predominately Australo‐Papuan in genetic heritage.}} Australasian ancestry forms a cline in Wallacea (=eastern Indonesia), and there is no sensible cut-off point. This is of course true for most regions in the world, and the primary reason why modern geneticists consider the idea of races meritless. –] (]) 12:50, 26 August 2022 (UTC) | |||
:Calm down ], oops, I mean ]. ] 21:58, 1 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
–] (]) 12:50, 26 August 2022 (UTC) | |||
::Haha he still try it. Wasnt one IP from Canada and the other from Australia?(I cant remember exactly)HAHAHA. Well I'm in Europe if u want to know. I dont know where ] is from. Everything clear WikiMaliki? , ooohh sorry I mean ].] 23:44, 1 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
== Requested move 25 August 2022 == | |||
Another Black in Disguise!.Again you are trying your Provoking technique.HAHHAHAHAHHAH Why dont you try better technique?.--] 22:25, 1 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
<div class="boilerplate" style="background-color: #efe; margin: 0; padding: 0 10px 0 10px; border: 1px dotted #aaa;"><!-- Template:RM top --> | |||
== Inferiority complex == | |||
:''The following is a closed discussion of a ]. <span style="color:red">'''Please do not modify it.'''</span> Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on the talk page. Editors desiring to contest the closing decision should consider a ] after discussing it on the closer's talk page. No further edits should be made to this discussion. '' | |||
The result of the move request was: '''not moved.''' <small>(])</small> ] (]) 03:22, 2 September 2022 (UTC) | |||
WikiRaja Inferiority complex is not a reason to claim Dravidian heritage. Take Pride in ur Black EastAfrican heritage. Ur degrading all decent Black people trough ur behaviour. Just because ur desperate, doesnt mean we will change our Identity from Indians into Africans. (A meaningless comment should be deleted if WikiRaja read it, by himself :p)] 23:52, 1 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
---- | |||
:Ok, ], I mean ]. Nothing to really brag about. After all it was the British who gave that name Indian and the Sinhala government who gave the name Sri Lanka. As for inferiority complex, one who goes by color for good or for bad suffers with inferiority complex. If one were to look at all your posts, it shows a lot of defensiveness when it comes to color. Especially black color or anything associated with Africa. Talk about inferiority complex. Your posts also show a lot of racism. I am surprised that you have not been kicked out for that. You tell others not to claim Dravidian heritage if they are not of it. Then you should not claim Indian nationality if you are from there. So, what part of Jaffna are you from? ] 03:44, 2 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:Hmm. I never said anything based on skin clour. Never. Arguing that Tamils arent darker than EastAfricans is not colour based racism. Its a fact. And I never said anything bad against Black people or beeing black is something bad. ANd I never discriminated any person because of race or skin colour, or religion. Well I never claimed any nationality. I just claim to be Indian. Even Pakis are "Indians", anyone who has a indian ethnic background is Indian. U dont have to worry about where I'm from. I dont live in the subcontinent, so it doesnt matter anything. Just because u hate Sri Lankans. And I dont suit ur beliefs. | |||
:U havnt denied ur EastAfrican heritage....hmmm why?] 12:26, 2 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:You still haven't told me what part of Jaffna you are from. ] 20:47, 2 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::What does Jaffna has anyting to do with it? Are you racist toward people from Jaffna or what?. But it isnt only Jaffna where Tamils live in Sri Lanka.] 23:59, 2 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::I am only asking what part of Jaffna you are from. I have high regard for Tamils from Jaffna. Jaffna is the historical cultural Tamil capital. The Tamils of Jaffna I know are a dignified society, unlike your behavior. Also, for some time now, you have been posing as someone from India, which I now consider not true. Therefore, how can anyone believe a thing you say on Misplaced Pages when you state untrue things about yourself. ] | |||
:::When did I say I'm from India? Or when did I say I'm from Sri Lanka. Never I jsut said I have been there few times. If we talk about the Dravidian Issue, I have to talk about India because in Sri Lanka or any other SouthAsian country it desont really matter. ] 19:36, 3 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
It is indeed has become an idiotic conversation.If you both want to argue where both of you are from then get out of wikipedia and argue Out!!!.This is not a place to know if Wikiraja is a black or white or a donkey or a monkey.Or duracel and me are the same.Get out with your idotic converstaion.--] 03:56, 2 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:Ok, ], I mean ]. ] 04:34, 2 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
India never supported the LTTE. India always supported the racist Sinhalese Government. Even if there isn't much a difference between Tamils and Sinhalese "physically", the Sinhalese Government is still racist towards the Tamils. No Tamil has ever been a president of Sri Lanka. Tamils were not resisting the Sinhalese Government at first. At first, they were peacefully protesting. However, the Sinhalese government kept persecuting the tamils. In the summer of 1983, the Sinhalese Government along with Sinhalese "gangs" murdered 100,000 Tamils. So, as a result, the LTTE got angry and have launched a war ever since then. Sure, the Tamils and Sinhalese certainly have all kinds of complexions. I think I may of exaggerated the physical differences, because Tamils and Sinhalese are very similar, but its just they are different by language and culture. Tamils have never protested for no reason. When the British granted Sri Lanka independance, the Sinhalese were automatically in power and made sinhalese the official language and Buddhism an official religion. Apparently, Tamils speak "tamil" and Tamils are hindus, so the Sinhalese Government was, have been, and will forever be racist. By the way, I said I want evidence from a "book" not a biased article that states that most dalits started out light-skinned and became darker because of exposure to the sun. I'm not saying that all untouchables or dalits are dark, but most are. Some untouchables have been able to rise above and become doctors and lawyers. And nowadays, some people who are light are untouchables too. But most are dark, so they started out like that. Therefore, I want to know the strong evidence for the fact. The articles above are not enough. | |||
--Bcr 8:59, March 2 2007 | |||
Yes you are right about the Srilankan peoblem in certain ways.But it was Indidra Gandhi the then prime minister of India who gave the full support for the LTTE at the start.Everything is politically motivated at the interest of the Govermentent or the country.It certainly has nothing to do with Color:).Anyway I am an Indian who speaks tamil and I think Asia2duracell and Wikiraja are Srilankan tamils so they may be able to answer you more.About the Untouchables I ceratinly gave you a Valid info not a biased one since it was from an Untouchable who has fought for the untouchable that is by Dr Ambedkar.He has seriously done some research on it.Will provide more later.Again I repeat there are dark skinned Upper caste people too.there are light skinned lowercastes too.This is a fact.Will come back to you soon.--] 06:57, 3 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
Dr Ambedkar what? I looked in those articles that you provdided and I still don't see any evidence for the idea that dalits started out light-skinned and were dark because they were exposed to the hot sun. I want evidence from a "history book." And don't tell me that those articles are valid. I don't see the evidence in them. These articles don't even have any proposed author or source. I want evidence from a "book!" | |||
--Bcr 7:33, March 3 2007 | |||
:The idea that Dalits were light skinned at one time and stayed out in the sun to get dark is a load of nationalistic childish POV. How pathetic. ] 04:09, 4 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::Noone ever said Dalits started "light" skinned and became darker. Dont misinterpret things have been said. I said they might had a LIGHTER skin colour, than they have now. But that could be true for any Indian not just Dalits. Lighter doesnt mean lightskinned or even white. The Dalits in NorthIndia are in general slightly lighter than those of SouthIndia. But thats also true for the "Castepeople". Saying Dalits are of a different Race than Caste people, even thug they look the same is much more immature and ridiculous.] 15:23, 4 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
Oh get out of here! You always want to have the last word. Who said that Dalits are a different race from caste people. Everything Vandh Duracell say is nonsense. Look, as I have said, "most", not "all" of the dalits and untouchables have a dark complexion. I'm not implying that their dark complexion means that they are african or of a different race. I'm just saying that most have a dark complexion. They are in the same race with indians "offcourse", but its just that they happen to mostly have a darker complexion....THAT's ALL. Some are light-skinned, but most have a dark complexion. Africans and blacks have all kinds of complexions, but that does not mean that Beyonce isn't black. I'm not saying that Dalits or untouchables are not INDIAN. I'm saying that most of them happen to have a different complexion that is darker, and since most most are dark anyway, the caste system is discrimination. | |||
--Bcr 12:33, March 4 2007 | |||
] → {{no redirect|Australo-papuan}} – Recent publications (summarised by Bellwood (2017)<ref>{{cite web |last1=Bellwood |title=2017 |url=https://academic.oup.com/migration/article-abstract/10/2/316/5055425?redirectedFrom=fulltext&login=false}}</ref> use this term in preference over "Australo-Melanesian". ] (]) 22:09, 25 August 2022 (UTC) | |||
:''Who said that Dalits are a different race from caste people''.....u claimed Untouchable and Tribals to be of african origin (recently though). Whats ur point? most Indians also have a dark complexion. Not just Dalits. | |||
:At one time u say something, days later u claim something completly different, what happened?] 21:00, 4 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:Example of recent, reliable secondary source using the term "Australo-papuan": https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/The_Philippines/JmCpDwAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=australo-papuan+people&pg=PA15&printsec=frontcover ] (]) 23:08, 25 August 2022 (UTC) | |||
I said that "most" untouchables and dalits are of african origin because they are close "descendants" from Africa. This does not mean that I said they are african directly, I just think that they are black because they share a similar skin color with people in Africa. However, you and Vandh kept twisting the fact around as if I am saying that they are african in order to avoid the truth. I said that in my opinion, I define color by skin complexion, not by racial origin. When I said that most dalits are black, I said that this was due to their skin complexion. I never said they were black because they are african. I just see them as black because of skin complexion. You guys happen to believe that black means african, but I don't. I think that anybody could be black depending on how dark they are. The Aborigines of Australia are black. Does that mean that they are african. No! They just happen to have a skin complexion "similar" to africans, because they are "descended" from them. Otherwise, how would they have the dark complexion? By hot sun for a few thousand years? No! Obviously, dravidians, including dalits and untouchables would be of african origin because most have a dark complexion. Having an origin does not mean you are directly what the origin is. The white americans are of European origin. Does that mean that they are European? No. They just happen to be descendants of Europeans so they are white just like them. You guys need to read some books! As it says in nearly every history book relating to the origin of human beings, the first human beings came from Africa and migrated to other regions of the world. By migrating to other regions, they stopped in certain places in Asia such as India and Australia. Others took longer trips and migrated to Europe and the America. The people in Asia who have darker skin colors such as the Aborigines or some Dravidians are obviously more closely related to the early humans from Africa than Europeans. That's why they have skin color more closely related or "similar" to Africans! Come on, you know what I am talking about! Stop trying to bite every statement I make and turn it into nonsense. You said that Dravidians are mediterranean caucasiod so why would I care what you think I said anyway, you're probably in 1st grade. You are right, I did say that dravidians who were the early people of India including untouchables and tribals were of African origin, meaning that they are "descendants" of them. I wasn't saying that they are "directly" African. You talk as if I said that all Dravidians moved to India from Africa last year, but it was 500,000 years ago. So over time, the Dravidians would change, but they still originate or descend from Africa. Don't you know what origin means. --Bcr 7:53, March 4 2007 | |||
* '''comment'''- Please could the nom. provide some rationale for this move. I note the talk section where one source is found with the alternative designation, but that doesn't fit with the article content as it stands, and is hardly a consensus of sources demanding a change. I am not sure what I am missing here, but before I make my !vote I would like to understand why the new name would apparently be better. ] (]) 07:52, 26 August 2022 (UTC) | |||
*:In the review by Bellwood (2017), the term Australo-papuan is used (43 times) in preference of the term Australo-melanesian (5 times). The author comments that: "The term "Australo-Papuan" is often rendered "Australo-Melanesian" in other publications, but I hesitate to use this term since the islands of Melanesia ... have witnessed lots of population admixture." ] (]) 08:00, 26 August 2022 (UTC) | |||
*::When you say “review” and usage counts, I assume you mean a systematic review of the literature, but Bellwood is actually a text book. Are these numbers just the author’s preference? Or has he conducted a systematic review? I don’t see any evidence for the latter but I don’t have the book, so please let me know if he does discuss that. | |||
*::As for the reason for his hesitation - if your quote is accurate, I find that slightly disturbing considering what this page is currently about. The suggestion that the group should be defined by a genetic purity makes it look like the intent is to argue contrary to this articles first line in the lead which says: {{tq|Australo-Melanesians …. is an outdated historical grouping of various people indigenous to Melanesia and Australia.}} If you change the name you have to change the article. Now I note ]’s comments about there being two conflated concepts here, but I do not understand your rationale of how ''this'' solution will help with that. Is your intention to then create a new article under this name? How would this article need to be rewritten under the new name? This all seems very nebulous to me, sorry. ] (]) 08:51, 26 August 2022 (UTC) | |||
* '''comment''' Do you really want to move to "Australo-papuan" or is it "Australo-Papuan" ? ] (]) 08:10, 26 August 2022 (UTC) | |||
* '''oppose''' the page move. Per discussion above, I do not think the nom. has provided a good rationale for page move, and any such move would require rewriting the article. Essentially it proposes a move to make the page about something else completely. That is not a move, that is a back door deletion. I am also concerned about the proposed direction the new content would take. ] (]) 11:23, 26 August 2022 (UTC) | |||
*'''Oppose''' This is comparing apples with oranges. "Australo-Papuan" in modern genetic research ≠ "Australo-Melanesian" as an obsolete racial category. I have gone into this in some detail in the preceding section ]. –] (]) 12:53, 26 August 2022 (UTC) | |||
*'''Oppose''' It is the traditional name for the "racial" (obsolete) category. Albeit obsolete (regarding the term "race"), the name ''Australo-Melanesian'' traditionally covers a group of dark-skinned indigenous peoples from Southeast Asia, Australia and Oceania (Melanesia), covering Aboriginal Australians, Papuans and MELANESIANS. ] (]) 18:13, 26 August 2022 (UTC) | |||
*'''Oppose''' For the reasons already given above, especially Austronesier's clarification in the preceding section. ] (]) 18:55, 26 August 2022 (UTC) | |||
<div style="padding-left: 1.6em; font-style: italic; border-top: 1px solid #a2a9b1; margin: 0.5em 0; padding-top: 0.5em">The discussion above is closed. <b style="color: #FF0000;">Please do not modify it.</b> Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.</div><!-- from ] --> | |||
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{{reflist-talk}} | |||
This is the last time I will explain what I mean about the black issue. I already said that I base my own opinion on color on skin complexion. You guys keep trying to contradict everything I say and turn it into something it isn't. I said that since some Dravidians have a dark complexion, than they ought to be descended from Africans. I didn't say they are African directly. You guys make this foolish argument that Indians have always been the same and that the darker skinned dalits inherited dark skin. That's rediculous. The truth is that the early people of India were dark-skinned dravidians that were direct descendants from Africa. If they were'nt descedants from Africa, then how would they have a dark complexion? Then, the lighter-skinned Ayrans invaded in 1500 B.C. and subjected some of the Dravidians. Some dravidians resisted and became tribals. Others fled south to southern India, while others were forced into the bottom of the caste system as untouchables. That is the truth kids. I still want evidence from a historical book that says that Dalits started out light-skinned and became darker because they were exposed to the hot sun. You guys still haven't given any evidence for that and you 2 have not proven anything or made any sense. I am right after all! --Bcr 7:53, March 4 2007 | |||
== Dolichocephaly and similar pseudo-science == | |||
{{Ping|Ekdalian|AngelusVastator3456}} The IP was right in removing the newly added stuff about dolichocephalic people. While in the times of Huxley, the cephalic index could be regarded as scientific, in 2019 any attempts to draw conclusions about human ancestries without genome analysis are futile at best, probably pseudo-scientific. Anyway, a study is a primary source, we cannot gauge its relevance without secondary sources. ] (]) 14:07, 2 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
Are u frickin serious? Every fuckin human has his origin in Africa. Not just Dravidians... The whitest White man is of African origin. Yes American Whites are European, racially. Europe is as much apart as India is. Dont talk Bullshit. People moved to the MiddleEast than to CentralAsia, and then to India respectively to Europe. Answer one question, how did white people get white? when their ancestor were dark? | |||
:Just to bring some badly needed nuance into this discussion. Craniometrics is not pseudo-science. Sure, multiple studies have shown that populations which are genomically close can develop diverse cranial and skeletal types due to enviromental and nutritional factors, which casts legitimate doubts on the reliablity of craniometrics. Thus, in the absence of genomic data, it has become downgraded to a not fully reliable "second-best" way to draw conclusions about ancestral relations between ancient and modern populations. But in a climatic area were ancient genomic data is extremely hard to retrieve (as of now, we only have three(!) ancient pre-Neolithic genomes for the entire area of SE Asia + Oceania), cranial and skeletal measurements can still provide some preliminary and helpful insights. | |||
What are you talking about Drvidians came to India 500,000 years ago???? Dravidians came 6000-3500 B.C not earlier. Dravidians are not the original people of India get it. I'm Dravidian and even I recognize that, so whats ur problem. The Munda people are the Natives to India. I never said Dravidians were light skinned. Never. Go read about the Dravidians on the ] article. Aryans are not white, get it. Its the second fact u dont understand. "Aryans" are brown. | |||
:Matsumura is a leading expert in this field, and several of the co-authors of this widely-cited study are respectable archeaologists (Hung, Higham, Simandjuntak) who clearly do not engage in the pseudo-science of taxonimizing ancient and modern humans into "races", but rather use craniometric data as one piece of evidence to understand the dynamics of the peopling of eastern Eurasia. And that's the very reason why this paper does not belong as a source in this article, which is about an obsolete pseudo-scientific classification. –] (]) 10:05, 5 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
I dont fuckin care how u define people.Noone really cares about ur ridiculous definition. But most people define people by their culture and Race. Not skin colour. | |||
I dont want to destroy ur dreams but, Dravidians are least related to Africans. Most to East-, an WestAsians. u can read that on the ] page aswell. Do u think I take time to invent everything. | |||
Stop saying again and again Dravidians are of African origin. Every fuckin human on this planet is. Do you think we dont know that.] 19:04, 5 March 2007 (UTC) that. |
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On 25 August 2022, it was proposed that this article be moved to Australo-papuan. The result of the discussion was not moved. |
POV maps
@Joshua Jonathan: & @Doug Weller: - This User:LenguaMapa on wikicommons (does not seem to have wikipedia account?) has been adding unreliable/unsourced maps like these on several pages. Claiming Oceanians are Africans and not East Eurasians.
He guesstimates "Negrito" (onge) ancestry in South Asians and also associates it with Sub Shaharan African ancestry. Here is link to Negrito map talk page and Sub Sahaharan related map talk page. I have pointed how (McColl et al. 2018) models East Asians as roughly 75% Onge (Andamanese)-related and 25% Tianyuan-related (fig.3) where Onge is capturing deep proxy ancestry. Similarly, Onge is also capturing deep proxy for hypothesized AASI ancestry which is poor fit for AASI as several studies have pointed out.
I cited various peer-reviewed studies from reich and haravrd groups, pointed out Negrito and Australians descend from East Eurasian clad along with East Asians, however he won't seem to get it.
- "New Guinea and Australia fit well as sister groups, with their majority ancestry component forming a clade with East Asians (with respect to western Eurasians). Onge fit as a near-trifurcation with the Australasian and East Asian lineages" - Lipson et al. 2017
- "Deep ancestry of the indigenous hunter-gather population of India represents an anciently divergent branch of Asian human variation that split off around the same time that East Asian, Onge and Australian aboriginal ancestors separated from each other." He also notes that East Eurasian clad spread "From a single eastward spread, which gave rise in a short span of time to the lineages leading to AASI, East Asians, Onge, and Australians" - Narashimhan et al. 2018
- "If one of these population fits (for AASI), it does not mean it is the true source; instead, it means that it and the true source population are consistent with descending without mixture from the same homogeneous ancestral population that potentially lived thousands of years before. The only fitting two-way models were mixtures of a group related to herders from the western Zagros mountains of Iran and also to either Andamanese hunter-gatherers or East Siberian hunter-gatherers (the fact that the latter two populations both fit reflects that they have the same phylogenetic relationship to the non-West Eurasian-related component likely due to shared ancestry deeply in time)" Shinde et al. 2019
While he cites Non-peer reviewed Yuan et al. 2019 study, which has not been peer-reviewed for months. Which came out last year claiming Oceanians are mix of European/Indian and African/Archic ancestry, and not Asians. It claims that modern humans originated in hunan province of China, and that they found Chinese ancestry in Africans (recent Shum Lake paper didn't mention this part lol). There was discussion about this on Anthorogenica post 1 explains why & post 2. It is telling why the study was not peer-reviewed.
Reliable peer-reviewed ancient DNA study suggests otherwise, this Figure 4 from (McColl et al. 2018) based on ancient DNA will help understand East Eurasian clad and it's branching, along with this Lipson et al 2018 study.
Those two maps is pretty misleading, one of them is on several pages. He is guesstimating "negrito" ancestry based on Onge proxy ancestry found in mainland Asians and also associating it with Saharan/African ancestry, when in reality Negritos branched from East Eurasian clad and share deep ancestry with all East Eurasians. Ilber8000 (talk) 20:33, 13 March 2020 (UTC) I have removed them for now.Ilber8000 (talk) 23:04, 13 March 2020 (UTC)
See my answer at Talk:Negroid#Map_from_the_Horniman_museum_is_correct Rsk6400 (talk) 18:41, 9 May 2020 (UTC)
Map from the Horniman museum is correct
Dear user: Rsk6400 ! Why do you call the map outdated? The Caucasian , Mongoloid, Negroid and Australoid groups of races exist accoriding to the genetic distances of various ethnic groups based on autosomal genetic researches.--Liltender (talk) 17:28, 9 May 2020 (UTC)
- The issue (for me) is not whether those groups exist. For other reasons, I don't believe the map is entirely correct. For instance: It seems to show/color code New Zealand (i.e. the Maori) as "Australoid", when as Polynesians they would be classified as (mostly) "Mongoloid". Also, it shows/codes the Indian subcontinent as entirely "Caucasoid", when in fact the people of that region are, to varying degrees, a mixture of "Caucasoid"/Western Eurasian and a non-Caucasoid/non-Western Eurasian population (labelled by recent genetic studies as "ASI" or more recently as "AASI") that is distantly related to "Australoids" and to the Andamanese. In adition, people from the Horn of Africa are generally mixed as well ("Caucasian" and sub-Saharan African) and not fully Caucasian as the map incorrectly indicates. It seems to me User:Rsk6400 was correct to remove it. Skllagyook (talk) 17:36, 9 May 2020 (UTC)
- Please see my reply at Talk:Negroid#Map_from_the_Horniman_museum_is_correct Rsk6400 (talk) 18:47, 9 May 2020 (UTC)
The article is about a historical race concept
A clearly defined "Australo-Melanesian" or "Australoid" race or population doesn't exist in modern science (biology or genetics). So I changed the lede and some parts of the article in order to clarify that we are dealing with a historical race concept. --Rsk6400 (talk) 06:01, 19 July 2020 (UTC)
- @Rsk6400: I agree that it's not a "clearly defined race". However, reliable sources still make reference to an "Australo-Melanesian" genetic grouping (e.g. from this 2015 article: https://www.science.org/doi/abs/10.1126/science.349.6246.354 and this 2021 article: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-021-03823-6). I suggest that we make the distinction between the historical race concept and the contemporary genetic grouping. --Pakbelang (talk) 02:44, 30 December 2021 (UTC)
- A source that just proves that some scientist has used the term in some paper is a primary source for the usage of the term, see WP:PSTS. At least in the nature source (
Morphological characters indicate that this Toalean forager was a 17–18-year-old female with a broadly Australo-Melanesian affinity
), I see no indication that it is a "genetic grouping". It may just mean "looks like somebody from Australia or Melanesia". --Rsk6400 (talk) 10:13, 30 December 2021 (UTC)- @Rsk6400: Okay on both points (PSTS and phenotype rather than genotype). Here are a couple of secondary sources that use the term "Australo-Melanesian" to refer to a genetic grouping (based on the 2015 Science article): https://www.courthousenews.com/early-north-americans-likely-more-diverse-than-previously-thought/ https://arstechnica.com/science/2015/07/studies-find-genetic-signature-of-native-australians-in-the-americas/ --Pakbelang (talk) 10:25, 30 December 2021 (UTC)
- A source that just proves that some scientist has used the term in some paper is a primary source for the usage of the term, see WP:PSTS. At least in the nature source (
@Degeneration1: Please don't mark potentially controversial edits as "minor", see WP:ME. You might also want to read WP:BRD. The American Association of Physical Anthropologists is a respected international body of scientists, so their declarations not opinions, but science. --Rsk6400 (talk) 05:28, 8 August 2021 (UTC)
No, this not a genetic grouping, but a cover term for the ancestral component of the diverse indigenous populations of SE Asia and Oceania. The genomes of many of these peoples still overwhelmingly comprise this ancestry component, but many also to various degrees display multiple geneflow from later East Asian migrations, so there no support from genetics that there is a clearcut "genetic grouping" of "Australo-Melanesians". What I support is to mention that the term "Australo-Melanesian" is used in genetics for this complex ancestral component, but a detailed discussion belongs in articles that discuss the peopling and genetic history of SE Asia and Oceania. A real secondary source (and not just a pop-sci news report quoting a primary source) for the current use in genetics is e.g. this one by Skoglund & Mathieson (2018). –Austronesier (talk) 13:32, 30 December 2021 (UTC)
- Thanks. I found a few additional sources for the current use of the term "Australo-Melanesians" in genetics: Buckley and Oxenham (2015), Bulbeck et al. (2017), and Carson (2018). Pakbelang (talk) 15:00, 30 December 2021 (UTC)
- Yes, but still we need to strictly separate between obsolete pseudoscience (i.e. the racial category "Australo-Melanesian") and hard science (i.e. the books and papers you bring up here about the loose cover term for that can mean different things in different contexts). Blurring the line between these two by covering both in one article is not helpful for our readers. –Austronesier (talk) 15:12, 30 December 2021 (UTC)
- I suggest to add a brief section "Other uses of the term" or similar, where we can add scholarly sources from archaeology, genetics etc. And FWIW @Rsk6400: unlike all the "-oid" terms, "Australo-Melanesian" doesn't have the reek of pseudoscience. E.g. for Peter Bellwood and colleagues, the term has been a useful cover term for the hunter-gatherer groups that inhabited (and still inhabit in remnant areas) SE Asia before the Austronesian, Austrasiatic and Tai expansions. –Austronesier (talk) 15:51, 30 December 2021 (UTC)
- Yes, Austronesier I support this suggestion —Pakbelang (talk) 15:54, 30 December 2021 (UTC)
- No problem with that. Only, it should be based on good secondary sources, and those sources should say explicitly something like "We use the term Australo-Melanesian to describe ..." or similar. --Rsk6400 (talk) 16:52, 30 December 2021 (UTC)
- Sure, attestation alone is not sufficient for verification. I'll see what I can dig up. –Austronesier (talk) 22:33, 30 December 2021 (UTC)
- This recent source claims that "Australo-Papuan" is a better term —Pakbelang (talk) 01:39, 31 December 2021 (UTC)
- 'Australo-Papuan' is the valid modern term used in most genetics studies on these peoples as of 2022. 'Oceanian' is also increasingly used. 'Australo-Melanesian', however, is also still used in some studies This article should reflect this, and refer to these which are in widespread academic use, as well as mention the other now outdated terms as already in place in the article. 'Australo-Papuan' is a valid and clearly defined 'racial' or biological category (subpopulation, ecotype, biogeographic ancestry or subspecies all overlap with one another) of diverse, yet related, human groups indigenous to New Guinea, Australia and nearby islands. But it is a genetic category that is clearly distinguished from the highly diverse Negrito subgroups of mainland southeast Asia and the Philippines. The content about the discussion over the use of the term 'race' here is also irrelevant to the article. That is covered in other articles. This article is specifically about a valid subcategory of human biogeographic ancestry common to the indigenous peoples of New Guinea and nearby islands, Australian Aborigines and other Melanesians. 69.156.38.113 (talk) 09:33, 22 August 2022 (UTC) 69.156.38.113 (talk) 09:50, 22 August 2022 (UTC)
- The terms ecotype, subpopulation, subspecies are not applicable to humans. See any reliable source published in this millenium, see any discussion on relevant talk pages. The next time you revert, I'll take the case to WP:ANI/3RR. Rsk6400 (talk) 09:48, 22 August 2022 (UTC)
- What are you talking about? All of those are applicable and used in modern humans. Clearly you have not read any reliable source published in this millennium from the expert on the topic. All three are used by experts. Most use subpopulation. Alan Templeton uses subpopulation, but also makes not that subspecies can even be used depending on context. Others, like David Reich, use ecotypes. Michel Tibayrenc uses all of them (read: ), and clearly defines how any can be applied to modern humans and to biological race. It's an ongoing discussion among experts. The genetic distances (Fst) between human subpopulations are greater than those between subpopulations and subspecies of tigers. Talk pages on Wiki are not expert sources, but they never hae resolved it either. 69.156.38.113 (talk) 09:55, 22 August 2022 (UTC)
- Feel free to seek dispute resolution. Rsk6400 (talk) 09:58, 22 August 2022 (UTC)
- I will seek dispute resolution. This article is falsely claiming that terms like 'Australo-Papuan' and 'Australo-Melanesian' are not used in modern scientific studies to refer to a valid biological category or subpopulation of humans, when clearly they are. Practically every genetics study on them as of 2022 uses one of these terms. The current format of the article is misinformation. I just gave you 8 studies from 2020 to 2022 after one quick search on Google using the terms to refer to a genetic cluster and biological category. There are differences within it, just as there is within Early European Farmer, Western Hunter-Gatherer, Western Steppe Herder, Caucasus Hunter-Gatherer, Aeta, Negrito, Onge or Ancient North Eurasian, Ancient Beringian, Eastern Hunter-Gatherer, Scandinavian Hunter-Gatherer,as well as Denisovan, Neanderthal or other archaic hominin ancestry exclusive to certain modern human groups. 69.156.38.113 (talk) 10:12, 22 August 2022 (UTC)
- No-one refers to these ancestral lineages and the present-day populations which predominantly display these ancestries in their genome as races. We have known for a long time that you are convinced that modern genetics research corroborates obsolete racial classifications. It doesn't, read the sources, period. –Austronesier (talk) 10:28, 22 August 2022 (UTC)
- There is a case for renaming this article as "Australo-Papuan" or "Oceanian" (to refer to the human sub-population). The article can then make reference to the obsolete racial classifications (noting that the issues with the term 'race'). Pakbelang (talk) 20:09, 23 August 2022 (UTC)
- Is there any secondary (sic !), recent, scientific WP:RS about an Australo-Papuan or Oceanian human sub-population ? Rsk6400 (talk) 16:28, 24 August 2022 (UTC)
- Yes, see Bellwood (2017) First Islanders: Prehistory and Human Migration in Island Southeast Asia: "The term "Australo-Papuan" is often rendered "Australo-Melanesian" in other publications, but I hesitate to use this term since the islands of Melanesia ... have witnessed lots of population admixture"−Pakbelang (talk) 20:20, 24 August 2022 (UTC)
- The quote doesn't answer my question. Also: In this very thread, there are some very good remarks by Austronesier. And: I saw your revert of yesterday as disruptive. Rsk6400 (talk) 06:14, 25 August 2022 (UTC)
- The answer to your question is, 'Yes.' Bellwood (2017) is a recent, scientific reliable source about an 'Australo-Papuan' human sub-population. Isn't that precisely your question? Pakbelang (talk) 21:58, 25 August 2022 (UTC)
- The quote doesn't answer my question. Also: In this very thread, there are some very good remarks by Austronesier. And: I saw your revert of yesterday as disruptive. Rsk6400 (talk) 06:14, 25 August 2022 (UTC)
- Yes, see Bellwood (2017) First Islanders: Prehistory and Human Migration in Island Southeast Asia: "The term "Australo-Papuan" is often rendered "Australo-Melanesian" in other publications, but I hesitate to use this term since the islands of Melanesia ... have witnessed lots of population admixture"−Pakbelang (talk) 20:20, 24 August 2022 (UTC)
- Is there any secondary (sic !), recent, scientific WP:RS about an Australo-Papuan or Oceanian human sub-population ? Rsk6400 (talk) 16:28, 24 August 2022 (UTC)
- There is a case for renaming this article as "Australo-Papuan" or "Oceanian" (to refer to the human sub-population). The article can then make reference to the obsolete racial classifications (noting that the issues with the term 'race'). Pakbelang (talk) 20:09, 23 August 2022 (UTC)
- No-one refers to these ancestral lineages and the present-day populations which predominantly display these ancestries in their genome as races. We have known for a long time that you are convinced that modern genetics research corroborates obsolete racial classifications. It doesn't, read the sources, period. –Austronesier (talk) 10:28, 22 August 2022 (UTC)
- I will seek dispute resolution. This article is falsely claiming that terms like 'Australo-Papuan' and 'Australo-Melanesian' are not used in modern scientific studies to refer to a valid biological category or subpopulation of humans, when clearly they are. Practically every genetics study on them as of 2022 uses one of these terms. The current format of the article is misinformation. I just gave you 8 studies from 2020 to 2022 after one quick search on Google using the terms to refer to a genetic cluster and biological category. There are differences within it, just as there is within Early European Farmer, Western Hunter-Gatherer, Western Steppe Herder, Caucasus Hunter-Gatherer, Aeta, Negrito, Onge or Ancient North Eurasian, Ancient Beringian, Eastern Hunter-Gatherer, Scandinavian Hunter-Gatherer,as well as Denisovan, Neanderthal or other archaic hominin ancestry exclusive to certain modern human groups. 69.156.38.113 (talk) 10:12, 22 August 2022 (UTC)
- Feel free to seek dispute resolution. Rsk6400 (talk) 09:58, 22 August 2022 (UTC)
- What are you talking about? All of those are applicable and used in modern humans. Clearly you have not read any reliable source published in this millennium from the expert on the topic. All three are used by experts. Most use subpopulation. Alan Templeton uses subpopulation, but also makes not that subspecies can even be used depending on context. Others, like David Reich, use ecotypes. Michel Tibayrenc uses all of them (read: ), and clearly defines how any can be applied to modern humans and to biological race. It's an ongoing discussion among experts. The genetic distances (Fst) between human subpopulations are greater than those between subpopulations and subspecies of tigers. Talk pages on Wiki are not expert sources, but they never hae resolved it either. 69.156.38.113 (talk) 09:55, 22 August 2022 (UTC)
- The terms ecotype, subpopulation, subspecies are not applicable to humans. See any reliable source published in this millenium, see any discussion on relevant talk pages. The next time you revert, I'll take the case to WP:ANI/3RR. Rsk6400 (talk) 09:48, 22 August 2022 (UTC)
- 'Australo-Papuan' is the valid modern term used in most genetics studies on these peoples as of 2022. 'Oceanian' is also increasingly used. 'Australo-Melanesian', however, is also still used in some studies This article should reflect this, and refer to these which are in widespread academic use, as well as mention the other now outdated terms as already in place in the article. 'Australo-Papuan' is a valid and clearly defined 'racial' or biological category (subpopulation, ecotype, biogeographic ancestry or subspecies all overlap with one another) of diverse, yet related, human groups indigenous to New Guinea, Australia and nearby islands. But it is a genetic category that is clearly distinguished from the highly diverse Negrito subgroups of mainland southeast Asia and the Philippines. The content about the discussion over the use of the term 'race' here is also irrelevant to the article. That is covered in other articles. This article is specifically about a valid subcategory of human biogeographic ancestry common to the indigenous peoples of New Guinea and nearby islands, Australian Aborigines and other Melanesians. 69.156.38.113 (talk) 09:33, 22 August 2022 (UTC) 69.156.38.113 (talk) 09:50, 22 August 2022 (UTC)
Australo-Melanesian, Australo-Papuan and Australasian in modern secondary sources about genetic research
The terms "Australo-Papuan" and "Australasian" are often used in studies about the history of uniparental genetic markers and the full genome ("Australo-Melanesian" only rarely). The claim is that this research corroborates (or at least partially relates to) obsolete racial classifications as covered in this article. While modern geneticists simply to do not talk about "race" in their output (which actually should already be sufficient to put rac(ial)ist pipe dreams to rest), the claim circles around the notion of "sub-populations" in a taxonomic sense which some people wilfully read into genetic research articles.
So let's have a look what the few relevant secondary review/overview articles have to say about "Australo-Melanesian" etc.:
There are two studies with a global scope:
- Skoglund & Mathieson (2018), "Ancient Genomics of Modern Humans: The First Decade", Annual Review of Genomics and Human Genetics 19:381–404.
- Liu et al. (2021), "Insights into human history from the first decade of ancient human genomics", Science 373:1479–1484.
And one more specifically about Asia and Oceania:
- Yang (2022), "A genetic history of migration, diversification, and admixture in Asia", Human Population Genetics and Genomics 2(1):0001.
Here are the relevant passages:
1) Skoglund & Mathieson (2018). There is a passing mention of "Australo-Melanesians" on pp. 391–392: However, a genetic affinity between Amazonian and Australo-Melanesian populations suggests
that we still do not have the full picture of the ancestry of the first Americans (102, 129). This suggests that the expansion into the Americas was substructured, with some subpopulations retaining greater affinity to an unknown northeastern Asian population related to present-day Australo-Melanesians
. The authors to not define "Australo-Melanesians" in their article, but from the quote and the context it should be clear that they are not talking about sharply well-delineated taxonomic entities, but rather geographical clusters of various present-day populations which predominantly display a specific ancestry.
2) Liu et al. (2021). No mention of "Australo-Papuan" etc. at all. They open the relevant section "Oceania" with the following sentence: Archeological evidence suggests that human
populations from Southeast Asia have initially settled in Sahul (present-day Australia, Tasmania, and New Guinea) before ~50 ka
. They continue to discuss Aborignal Australians and Papuans individually.
3) Yang (2022). This is a great source since the author defines the term "Australasian": Australasian (AA) lineage—this lineage refers to the ancestral population that primarily contributed to human populations in Australasia, or the region consisting of Australia, New Zealand, and neighboring islands in the South Pacific Ocean. Represented primarily by present-day Australasians, e.g. Papuans and Aboriginal Australians
(p. 8). NB that this an ancestry component that emerges in the modeling in the genetic history of modern-day populations, and is found among them to various degrees. But there is no taxonomic "Australasian" group, sub-population etc. of present-day populations! When applied to modern people, "Australasians" simply refers to the inhabitants of Australasia (the region consisting of Australia, New Zealand, and neighboring South Pacific islands)
(p. 4).
Clearly, there is no link between obsolete classificatory "races" and the modern concept of ancestries. There is some crude overlap since the human genome also determines the phenotypical characteristics that were exploited by earlier racial classification. But to combine these two completely different paradigms is like mixing up the Aether theory with Quantum electrodynamics. We can talk about "Australasian" ancestry in an article about the Peopling of Oceania, but not here.
A final word on Bellwood's book (even if he is an archaeologist and his book mostly a primary source for his model about the demic spread of the Neolithic from East Asia into Southeast Asia and Oceania): Bellwood primarily uses the term "Australo-Papuan" (actually "Australo-Melanesians" during most of his career) for the diverse inhabitants of Southeast Asia and Oceania prior to the expansion of people from East Asia into that area that began ~4kya. He also goes into saying things like The modern Australo‐Papuan populations of Island Southeast Asia still form a coherent biological subdivision in terms of their DNA and phenotypic features.
This is however simply at odds with modern genetic research, and also with a statement by Bellwood himself in the same paragraph: However, many of the peoples of eastern Indonesia, especially in eastern Nusa Tenggara and of course in Papua itself, are today predominately Australo‐Papuan in genetic heritage.
Australasian ancestry forms a cline in Wallacea (=eastern Indonesia), and there is no sensible cut-off point. This is of course true for most regions in the world, and the primary reason why modern geneticists consider the idea of races meritless. –Austronesier (talk) 12:50, 26 August 2022 (UTC)
–Austronesier (talk) 12:50, 26 August 2022 (UTC)
Requested move 25 August 2022
- The following is a closed discussion of a requested move. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on the talk page. Editors desiring to contest the closing decision should consider a move review after discussing it on the closer's talk page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
The result of the move request was: not moved. (closed by non-admin page mover) – robertsky (talk) 03:22, 2 September 2022 (UTC)
Australo-Melanesian → Australo-papuan – Recent publications (summarised by Bellwood (2017) use this term in preference over "Australo-Melanesian". Pakbelang (talk) 22:09, 25 August 2022 (UTC)
- Example of recent, reliable secondary source using the term "Australo-papuan": https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/The_Philippines/JmCpDwAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=australo-papuan+people&pg=PA15&printsec=frontcover Pakbelang (talk) 23:08, 25 August 2022 (UTC)
- comment- Please could the nom. provide some rationale for this move. I note the talk section where one source is found with the alternative designation, but that doesn't fit with the article content as it stands, and is hardly a consensus of sources demanding a change. I am not sure what I am missing here, but before I make my !vote I would like to understand why the new name would apparently be better. Sirfurboy🏄 (talk) 07:52, 26 August 2022 (UTC)
- In the review by Bellwood (2017), the term Australo-papuan is used (43 times) in preference of the term Australo-melanesian (5 times). The author comments that: "The term "Australo-Papuan" is often rendered "Australo-Melanesian" in other publications, but I hesitate to use this term since the islands of Melanesia ... have witnessed lots of population admixture." Pakbelang (talk) 08:00, 26 August 2022 (UTC)
- When you say “review” and usage counts, I assume you mean a systematic review of the literature, but Bellwood is actually a text book. Are these numbers just the author’s preference? Or has he conducted a systematic review? I don’t see any evidence for the latter but I don’t have the book, so please let me know if he does discuss that.
- As for the reason for his hesitation - if your quote is accurate, I find that slightly disturbing considering what this page is currently about. The suggestion that the group should be defined by a genetic purity makes it look like the intent is to argue contrary to this articles first line in the lead which says:
Australo-Melanesians …. is an outdated historical grouping of various people indigenous to Melanesia and Australia.
If you change the name you have to change the article. Now I note User:Austronesier’s comments about there being two conflated concepts here, but I do not understand your rationale of how this solution will help with that. Is your intention to then create a new article under this name? How would this article need to be rewritten under the new name? This all seems very nebulous to me, sorry. Sirfurboy🏄 (talk) 08:51, 26 August 2022 (UTC)
- In the review by Bellwood (2017), the term Australo-papuan is used (43 times) in preference of the term Australo-melanesian (5 times). The author comments that: "The term "Australo-Papuan" is often rendered "Australo-Melanesian" in other publications, but I hesitate to use this term since the islands of Melanesia ... have witnessed lots of population admixture." Pakbelang (talk) 08:00, 26 August 2022 (UTC)
- comment Do you really want to move to "Australo-papuan" or is it "Australo-Papuan" ? Rsk6400 (talk) 08:10, 26 August 2022 (UTC)
- oppose the page move. Per discussion above, I do not think the nom. has provided a good rationale for page move, and any such move would require rewriting the article. Essentially it proposes a move to make the page about something else completely. That is not a move, that is a back door deletion. I am also concerned about the proposed direction the new content would take. Sirfurboy🏄 (talk) 11:23, 26 August 2022 (UTC)
- Oppose This is comparing apples with oranges. "Australo-Papuan" in modern genetic research ≠ "Australo-Melanesian" as an obsolete racial category. I have gone into this in some detail in the preceding section above. –Austronesier (talk) 12:53, 26 August 2022 (UTC)
- Oppose It is the traditional name for the "racial" (obsolete) category. Albeit obsolete (regarding the term "race"), the name Australo-Melanesian traditionally covers a group of dark-skinned indigenous peoples from Southeast Asia, Australia and Oceania (Melanesia), covering Aboriginal Australians, Papuans and MELANESIANS. Scheridon (talk) 18:13, 26 August 2022 (UTC)
- Oppose For the reasons already given above, especially Austronesier's clarification in the preceding section. Rsk6400 (talk) 18:55, 26 August 2022 (UTC)
References
- Bellwood. "2017".
Dolichocephaly and similar pseudo-science
@Ekdalian and AngelusVastator3456: The IP was right in removing the newly added stuff about dolichocephalic people. While in the times of Huxley, the cephalic index could be regarded as scientific, in 2019 any attempts to draw conclusions about human ancestries without genome analysis are futile at best, probably pseudo-scientific. Anyway, a study is a primary source, we cannot gauge its relevance without secondary sources. Rsk6400 (talk) 14:07, 2 November 2024 (UTC)
- Just to bring some badly needed nuance into this discussion. Craniometrics is not pseudo-science. Sure, multiple studies have shown that populations which are genomically close can develop diverse cranial and skeletal types due to enviromental and nutritional factors, which casts legitimate doubts on the reliablity of craniometrics. Thus, in the absence of genomic data, it has become downgraded to a not fully reliable "second-best" way to draw conclusions about ancestral relations between ancient and modern populations. But in a climatic area were ancient genomic data is extremely hard to retrieve (as of now, we only have three(!) ancient pre-Neolithic genomes for the entire area of SE Asia + Oceania), cranial and skeletal measurements can still provide some preliminary and helpful insights.
- Matsumura is a leading expert in this field, and several of the co-authors of this widely-cited study are respectable archeaologists (Hung, Higham, Simandjuntak) who clearly do not engage in the pseudo-science of taxonimizing ancient and modern humans into "races", but rather use craniometric data as one piece of evidence to understand the dynamics of the peopling of eastern Eurasia. And that's the very reason why this paper does not belong as a source in this article, which is about an obsolete pseudo-scientific classification. –Austronesier (talk) 10:05, 5 November 2024 (UTC)
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