Originally posted by chegitz guevara
I don't think Brazil's a really good place to do a study, honestly. Brazil is a country with a lot of mixed blood, and the Portugese aren't pure Europeans either, having imported Africans en mass to their own country and interbred.
It doesn't make sense that genetic variations between isloated groups would be reflected. They need to use better groups, such as Icelanders, Jews, Aboriginies, etc.
I don't think Brazil's a really good place to do a study, honestly. Brazil is a country with a lot of mixed blood, and the Portugese aren't pure Europeans either, having imported Africans en mass to their own country and interbred.
It doesn't make sense that genetic variations between isloated groups would be reflected. They need to use better groups, such as Icelanders, Jews, Aboriginies, etc.
The link posted by GP defines race as "a large population that has a gene pool that is substantially different from that of other large populations."
This study shows the problem with this definition. The whites in the study would be considered as part of the white race even though half of the gene markers did not come from Europe. In other words, the gene pool of whites might not be substantially different from Asians or Blacks, or whatever.
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