stemelbow wrote:As for your question, that's my point. Its not relevant. This thread was started to discuss mtDNA, and the Lemba doesn't lend to that discussion, it seems. For the second question, that's been discussed the link I gave. The CMH group is prevalent among the Levite simitic peoples.
I was unaware that you were making the point that the Lemba are irrelevant to discussions of mtDNA. I must have misunderstood your point.
Perhaps of their time.
Precisely, but you are insisting that we don't know what Middle Easter DNA from that time might look like.
One thing seems evident concerning this bullet point—the people of Mongolia don’t have a defined origin themselves. If your assumption is correct, “it would be reasonable to expect some Middle Eastern markers in the NA mt DNA” then we ought to at least be able to find what would be expected among the women of the ancient group.
Yup. Again, you seem to believe that we don't know anything about the genetic makeup of ancient peoples. I don't know why you think this.
What? The CMH is present in approximately 45-55% of Ashkenazic and Sephardic Cohens, compared to 2-3% of non-Cohen Jews. It is also found in the Buba clan of the Lemba tribe of Zimbabwe, the Bnei Menashe of India, and in several non-Jewish populations, including Armenians, Kurds, Hungarians, and central and southern Italians.
In other words, it is present in all diaspora groups. Thank you for confirming my point.
And
Jewish DNA researcher Dr. Ken Jacobs states: "The only Jewish subgroup that does show some homogeneity--descendants of the Cohanim, or priestly class--makes up only about 2 percent of the Jewish population. Even within the Cohanim, and certainly within the rest of the Jewish people, there's a vast amount of genetic variation."13
The reason it is called the diaspora is that Jews migrated and mixed with non-Jewish groups. Not sure what this has to do with the presence of CMH. Unless you can tell me of some Jewish group that is entirely free of CMH, my point stands.
I’d say that’s at least a bit overstated.
Following the discovery of the first, more common, Native American mtDNA haplogroups in the early 1990s (originally termed A, B, C, and D and later renamed A2, B2, C1, and D1 to distinguish them from their Asian "cousins"), a fifth haplogroup was identified in 1996 by Forster and colleagues and named haplogroup X (not to be confused with the X chromosome).35 Contrary to nearly all the world haplogroups, it is not geographically confined, but it is found at low frequency among several populations: Europeans, Africans, Asians, Middle Easterners, and Native Americans.
Do you know where the X group originated and when it spread? It originated in Siberia (you know, the place where that land bridge was that you don't believe in. There are two theories of how the X haplogroup ended up in the Americas: either Siberians brought it over the land bridge, or Solutreans brought it from Europe. Either way, the migration occurred during the Ice Age, some 16,000 years BC. Not exactly a support for the Book of Mormon.
The only pronouncement I have stuck to, and its argued int eh link, is the CMH marker. The point regarding Middle Eastern mtDNA is up in the air as I see it. There are plenty of reasons to question what one would expect from Lehi and co DNA and mt DNA.
Again, you seem to rest on the assumption that we don't know what ancient Middle Eastern DNA should look like. Here's a good place to start educating yourself:
Archeogenetics of the Near East.
As is often the case, when I actually check the sources for a FAIR the evidence is either not as conclusive as the article claims or is a distortion. I am going to write up what I've found from source-checking the FAIR article you linked to. Let's just say I am not impressed.