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60,000 - 54,000 |
54,000 - 48,000 |
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42,000 - 36,000 |
36,000 - 30,000 |
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Visitors
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Lives/Generations 900 - 1 900 10 Per number
0 - 1 180
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0 - 1 180
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0 - 1 180f
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360 - 180 180
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180 - 1 180
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100,000 year Mayan age 105 - 5 |
3rd Great year 77.76 - 51.84 |
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2nd Great year 51.84 - 25.92
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Interbreeding between Humans & Neanderthals 54,000 - 40,000 14,000 |
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Haplogroup F Sri Lankan, Indian, Nepali, SE Asia vCF ^F1 F2 F3 GHIJK SAs 28 60,000 |
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Haplogroup GHIJK vF ^ G, HIJK Caucasus, W Asia G, J, R S Asia H, J, L, R Europe I, J, Q, R, N E Asia, SE Asia, Oceania K, M, N, P, O, S C Asia P, Q, R most Native Americans Q, R As 8 47,500 |
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Haplogroup HIJK vGHIJK ^H, IJK Eur, C As I, J, N, Q R M East NE Af J T S As H, L, R SE Asia E Asia O Oceania K, M, O , S many Native Americans Q As 4 47,500 |
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Haplogroup IJK vHIJK ^IJ, K Eur I J R N M East, NE Africa J, T S As J L R E As,SE As, Pacific K M O P S N Eurasia N Q Native Americans Q R 3 47,000 |
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Haplogroup H vHIJK ^H1, H2, H3 Romani, Kmer, Bell Breaker Culture S As 3 47,000 |
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Haplogroup IJ vIJK ^I, J Scandinavia, Balkans, Anatolia, M East, Caucasus, Levant, Mesopotamia, coastal N Af. Americas, Australasia. W As 9 44,400 |
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Haplogroup K vIJK ^K2, LT Island South East Asia, Melanesia S As 4 47,000 |
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Haplogroup I vIJ ^I, I1, I2 N Eur, SE Eur ^Caucasus, Eur, SW As 4 33,000 |
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Haplogroup J vIJ ^J-M172, J-M267 ^W As vN Af, Horn Af, Socotra, Caucasus, S Eur, W, C, S, SE As .44,400 |
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Haplogroup LT vK ^L, T ^S, W As vHorn of Af, N Af, S, W, C Asia, Europe 2 44,400 |
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Haplogroup K2 vK ^K2A, K2B, K2C, K2D, K2E ^SW As vAustralasia, Oc, SE, S, E, C Asia, Americas, Eur, Horn of Africa1 44,400 |
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Haplogroup K2a vK2 ^K-M2313, NO^Eurasia vE A, N Eurasia, SE Asia 2 55 - 47 NO 47 - 38 |
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Haplogroup K2b vK2 ^K2b1, P ^SE As vSE Asia, Oceania 4 50 - 40 |
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Haplogroup NO vK2a1 ^N, O ^E SE As vChina, Japan, Mongolia, Korea, Tuvalu, Samoa 4 45,620 |
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Haplogroup N vK2a1 ^N, O ^E SE As vChina, Japan, Mongolia, Korea, Tuvalu, Samoa 4 45,620 |
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Haplogroup T vLT ^T1, T2 ^Horn Af vAfars, Somalis, Antemoro Madagascar Lodha, Bauri, Yerukula, Raju, Mahli E India Armenians Sasoon, Turkey Chians Cretans Lasithi Greece Saccensi, Aquilanis Italy Fula West/Central Africa Ibizans Spain Jews NE Portugal; Lemba S Af Bakhtiaris, Kermani, Zoroastrians Iran Tuareg, Toubou, S Egyptians N Africa Georgians; Tajiks, Kazakhs Central Asia Quechua S America 28 40,000 |
Chinese >< Piman , Uzbek , Samoan , Korean >< New Guinea >< Italian >< Georgian , German >< Saami , English , Crimean , Dutch , French 60 |
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Hausa >< Mbuti 57 |
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Georgian >< German 53 |
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Yoruba 2 >< Lisongo 52 |
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Pimian >< Uzbeck >< Samoan >< Korean 51 |
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Siberian Inuit >< Guarani >< Japanese 41 |
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Evenki , Buriat , Khirgiz >< Warao 37 |
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Saami >< Eng , Crim , Dutch , French 36 |
Neanderthal Man, in Africa & Europe 100 - 40 60 |
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People from Mu migrate to Central & South America. 52 - 12 |
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60,000 - 54,000 |
54,000 - 48,000 |
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42,000 - 36,000 |
36,000 - 30,000 |
Pleistocene Epoch
2.588 - 11,650 2,576,350
Tarantian Age
126,000 - 11,650 114,350
 60 - 11 49 Channel islands mammoth, Mammuthus ecilis, Channel islands, California |
60 - 50 10 Barents–Kara Ice Sheet gouges lakes. |
60 Y-chromosomal Adam in Africa (most likely Ethiopia or Sudan). He is most recent common ancestor from whom all male human Y chromosomes are descended.
Y-chromosomal Adam is not same individual at all points in human history. most recent common patrilineal ancestor of humans alive today is different from one for humans who will be alive a thousand years in future: as male lines die out, a more recent individual, Y-mrca of a subtree of preceding Y-Adam, becomes new Y-Adam. |
60 - 0 MI Pangolin Manidae, Pholidota, Pholidotamorpha, Ferae, Ferungulata, Mammalia, 1821 |
59 Xenarthra Magnorder, Placentalia, Mammalia, 1889 |
57 Cro-Magnons in Europe. |
57 - 29 28 Marine Isotope Stage 3 |
56 Afroinsectiphilia Superorder Afrotheria, Mammalia, 4Or |
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Pleistocene Epoch
2.588 - 11,650 2,576,350
Tarantian Age
126,000 - 11,650 114,350
54 - 52.722 Conferences of five nations about wild troublesome animals. |
54 - 52 Atlantean technology advances. |
52 Mu & Atlantis lose land to sea. |
52 Atlantis becomes five islands. |
52 - 12 People from Mu migrate to Central & South America. |
50 - 40 10 Emiran culture in the Fertile Crescent |
25.92 - 21-21-2012 One Great Year. Astrological age cycle crossing Galactic plane. Solar systems revolution around Sirius. |
10,000 - Present Holocene Epoch |
50 Neanderthal dissapeared from Asia. 1200 - 1900 CC cranium  |
52 - 12 People from Mu migrate to Central & South America. |
50 Modern humans expand from Asia to Australia & Europe. Expansion along coasts happens faster than expansion inland. |
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Pleistocene Epoch
2.588 - 11,650 2,576,350
Tarantian Age
126,000 - 11,650 114,350
50 - 40 10 human behavior arose through cognitive, genetic changes abruptly around |
43 Lincombian-Ranisian-Jerzmanowician culture leaf points made on long blades made by the last Neanderthals |
43 - 26 17 Aurignacian tradition early modern humans preceeded by Ahmarian, Châtelperronian followed by Gravettian
sites: E Spain, Cantabria, Pyrenees, Aquitaine, Burgundy, Languedoc, Provence, Liguria, Central Italy, Adriatic, Bosnia, Slovenis, Venice, Meuse-Rhine, Swabia, Lower /austria, Moravia, Silesiaa, Bukk mountains, E Slovakia, transylvania, Uraine-Moravia, Don Valley, Crimea, Greece, Levantine Aurignacian |
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Pleistocene Epoch
2.588 - 11,650 2,576,350
Tarantian Age
126,000 - 11,650 114,350
41.5 Kurile Lake, Kamchatka Peninsula, Russia; Golygin eruption; about ka; VEI 7 |
40+ Ngarrabullgan Australia |
37 Sophisticated cave art in SW Europe & South America
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40 Writings on stone or burnt clay tablens in India & Tibet. |
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Pleistocene Epoch
2.588 - 11,650 2,576,350
Tarantian Age
126,000 - 11,650 114,350
35 - 29 6 Levantine Aurignacian Culture Levant preceded by Emiran, Ahmarian followed by |
- 33 Populations of steppe mammoth persisted in N China & Mongolia |
33,000 Red Lady of Paviland Upper Paleolihic Art in Europe |
32 - 30 2 BP Chauvet Cave Chauvet horses |
31 Mladeč Caves Czech Republic |
31 Modern humans enter North America from Siberia in numerous wAves, some later waves across Bering land bridge, but early waves probably by island-hopping across Aleutians. At least two of first waves had left few or no genetic descendants among Americans by time Europeans arrived across Atlantic Ocean. Humans reach Solomon Islands. Humans move into Japan. |
M343, a genetic marker, first appears. This marker is estimated to have originated in an individual male in Africa 30,000 or more years ago & has propagated since then. This genetic marker is carried by most Western Europeans. It is carried by 70% of entire population of England & 90% of some parts of Spain & Ireland & is also descended from Cro-Magnon. |
31 - 16 15 Last Glacial Maximum in Britain Dimlington Stadial |
30 Neanderthal dissapeared from Europe. 1200 - 1900 CC cranium  |
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Lives/Generations 15 - 1 15
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60,000 - 54,000 |
54,000 - 48,000 |
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42,000 - 36,000 |
36,000 - 30,000 |
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