Imran Abdullah

Supporters of racist trends believe in white supremacy that there are "pure white" ellipticals for Europeans before the recent waves of migration, but genetic testing of the remains of ancient settlers shows that Europe is almost a melting pot for the migration of ancestral strains from Africa, the Middle East and present Russia, The last Europeans were about five thousand years ago.

The diaries show that the ancestors of Europeans living on European soil today came thousands of years ago from non-European places and brought with them three main waves of migration: art, music, agriculture, cities, domesticated horses, invention of the wheel - and plague - and the roots of the Indo- Speaking in most parts of the European continent today.

While the ideology of the white racial right raises fears of immigrants and adopts hostile policies and attitudes towards them, scientists now offer new and different answers to the question: Who are the Europeans really? Where did they come from?

The origins of the first Europeans belong to Africa, the Middle East and Russia (the island)

Mixed variety
The findings of right-wing racists indicate that Europeans living in Europe today are a diverse mix of ancestral breeds descended from Africa, the Middle East and Russia and melted into the melting pot of Europe since the Ice Age, according to a report by Andrew Carey of National Geographic.

All studies deny the notion of European racial purity on which Western right-wingers are based, and modern genetic research embodies the ancient, African, Middle Eastern and Russian origins of the European continent.

Archeological excavations and analysis of ancient teeth and bones provide genetic evidence of African, Middle Eastern and Russian migrations; Europe's early inhabitants were formed. The study of linguistics and the field of new paleontology offers similar evidence confirming the same results. It has been possible over the last decade to arrange and analyze the entire genome of humans who have lived tens of thousands Years.

The DNA study shows that humans all share an ancient migration story in which all people descended from ancestors who left Africa more than 60,000 years ago, and that the first modern humans had ventured into Europe about 45,000 years ago - covered by ice sheets - across the Middle East .

Dark skin
Their DNA indicates that Europe's first modern humans may have dark skin and light eyes, while in some European areas where warmth was found, wildlife and primordial humans whose ancestors migrated from Africa and adapted to cold and harsh conditions were found.

According to a National Geographic report, primitive humans in Europe lived hunters and collectors in small nomadic groups and followed rivers, especially the Danube, for thousands of years.

Modern humans in the snow-free south continued to adapt to the cold climate, when the Ice Age swept Europe about 27,000 years ago and lived on mammals such as mammoths, horses and modern cattle ancestors. They settled in the caves, sheltering from harsh nature and leaving behind paintings and engravings Amazing.

Some 14,500 years ago, when Europe became warmer, people followed the glaciers north, developed stone tools, and settled in small villages that formed the so-called "Middle Stone Age".

DNA analysis of ancient teeth and bones allowed researchers to understand population shifts, follow the wave of ancient African migration and the wave of migration from Anatolia and the subsequent Middle East.

Analysis of ancient bone DNA among Europe's population from Africa, the Middle East and Russia (Getty Images)

Genome analysis
Technical advances in the past few years have made genome analysis technology cheap and effective, and it is now possible to analyze the sequence of part of a well-preserved skeleton by about $ 500.

The technique facilitated the acquisition of new information that changed the course of archeology. In the year 2018, genomes of more than 1,000 prehistoric persons - most of them ancient fossil bones preserved in museums and archaeological laboratories - were scientifically refuted by any scientific idea of ​​purity European ethnicity.

The country of Anatolia was home to ancient farmers from the early days of agriculture more than ten thousand years ago, and spread within a thousand years the Neolithic Revolution - as it is called north through Anatolia and southeast Europe - while they were about six thousand years ago farmers and herders in All over Europe, according to the National Geographic report, but European residents knew agriculture through ancient Turkey and the Levant, but researchers do not assert that the old European farmers came from the same country.

DNA evidence from the Bunjuklu site (next to the Turkish city of Konya), studied by Johannes Krauss and his team at the German Max Planck Institute for Human History, indicates that the farmers of this village planted their land and migrated their descendants hundreds of miles to the northwest, Across Europe.

The evidence added that ancestral genes have spread their way of life on the northern Mediterranean coast, the Sardinian Islands, Sicily, southern Europe, Portugal and the UK. Anatolian genetic fingerprints have appeared in all ancient European farming areas.

Asian Migration
A group of international researchers in a previous study of the Journal of the American Association of Advanced Sciences that contemporary Europeans are a combination of three groups: fishermen, farmers and the old population, and these groups have moved in large numbers separately since several thousand years BC from the plains of Russia and the northern Black Sea and the country Caucasus to Europe.

These groups, especially the nomadic nomadic shepherds of Lamnaya, who were among the first to ride horses, contributed to the spread of the Indo-European languages ​​when they migrated west in search of green grazing past Eastern, Central and Western Europe and brought with them a mobile lifestyle European stone and weapons and innovative metal tools, probably helped push Europe towards the Bronze Age.

The study revealed that the mass migration of the Aymanaya pastoralists from the Black Sea plains brought the Indo-European languages ​​to Europe about 4,500 years ago, and that these languages ​​represent the majority of the languages ​​spoken in much of Europe at present.