Buffalo wrote:The Vikings didn't come to stay permanently - the Vikings were raiders.
That conclusion is a safe one for sure, but the study I linked for you earlier suggested its possible that your conclusion is not true--that Vikings could have inhabited, and perhaps could have stayed permanently. They wouldn't know that from what's been found so far.
The Nephites came and stayed for 1000 years, and grew to populations in the millions.
I think that's a bit misleading considering the text. Afterall, it was relatively early on, when the term "lamanite" was used to talk about those who weren't Nephites moreso than any real genetic links to Laman and Lemuel and whoever else disaffected with them.
The "Northern Kingdom" thing is a red herring. First, Semtic DNA is Semitic DNA. There are certain markers from the middle east - finding any of them in Amerindian populations would be a tremendous find. They've found none. It's like claiming that the O'Dohertys would have totally different DNA type than the Doyles because they're different families - but their both Irish. They'd be similar, even if not identical.
I just don't think where your dogmatic sounding conclusions are coming from. I hope from a reliable source. Anything?
Second, it doesn't matter if the Northern Kingdom were descended from the Portuguese or the Dutch, they'd still be foreign to Native American populations and their introduction into the bloodline would be easily detectable.
And what's more, you're smart enough to know I'm right.
I just disagree. Prove to me that a relative small population which incorporates into another population is detectable in each case genetically? That is, afterall, what you'd be claiming. I don't' know if its all that easy. It seems quite complicated to me, just by reading the text itself.