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Old 08-17-2010, 01:49 AM   #18
Bill-Watson

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
492
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True, it correlates a progressive expansion of this idiomatic group quite neatly.
On the other hand L is not that strong in all areas where R2 is, today in India R1a1 and R2 go hand in hand and are strong and weak in the same communities and areas, L (L1 mostly) is mostly on the western side and sort of very weak on the eastern side, this tells me that the R1a1 and R2 people might have had a similar migration time-line to India and were probably the same stock for most part when they arrived.
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