Ashkenazi jews origins
[DOCX File]Franciscan Friars
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Jews The ancestors of the Jewish populations of the U.S., Argentina and other countries can be classified (with exceptions too small to require attention here) as either Ashkenazi, meaning they lived in Eastern Europe in the 18th and 19th centuries, or Sephardi, meaning they lived in Spain or Portugal until 1492, then moved to various places ...
[DOC File]Toward a Genetic Profile of Melungeons in Tennessee
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Non-Ashkenazi Jews––Sephardim and Oriental Jews who have undergone more intermixing––do not have higher average IQ scores, nor are they more likely to be in high-achieving jobs. While the IQ differences between Jews and northern Europeans may not seem large, in practical terms they could result in a dramatically higher proportion of ...
Ashkenazi - New World Encyclopedia
The centrality of Apulia and Calabria to Ashkenazi origins is echoed by the presence of a virtually identical matching profile for J-M172, with Ashkenazi Jews having 23.2% and Calabrian samples, 22.8% and 20.0%. Table 3, also taken from the Semino study, shows Ashkenazi Jews with a total of 23.2% J-M172 (J2), and 14.6% J-M267 ( J/J1).
[DOC File]Toward a Sephardic Haplogroup Profile in the New World
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Ashkenazi Jews are the Jews of France, Germany and Eastern Europe, and their descendants. Most American and Australian Jews today are Ashkenazi, descended from Jews who emigrated from Germany and Eastern Europe. Sephardi Jews are the Jews of the Middle East and their descendants. Their origins are closer to the Israelites of the Bible.
[DOC File]DNA and the Book of Mormon - Ancient America
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This is the source of contemporary Ashkenazi and Sephardic practice. The following sources, both entitled Kitzur Shulchan Aruch (one written by Rabbi Shlomo Ganzfried in the 19th century, and the other by Rabbi Refael Toledano in the 20th), represent common custom among Ashkenazi …
[DOC File]Mehadrin Min Ha-mehadrin - Teacher's Guide
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Motulsky, Arno G. (1995). “Jewish Diseases and Origins,” Nature Genetics 9/2:99-101. Nebel , A. et al. (2005). “Y Chromosome Evidence for a Founder Effect in Ashkenazi Jews.” European Journal of Human Genetics 13/3:388-91. ----- (2001). “The Y Chromosome Pool of Jews as Part of the Genetic Landscape of the Middle East.”
[DOC File]Issues to be solved: - Brown University
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DNA research on Ashkenazi origins may establish Jewish migration from the Southern Mediterranean to the Northern European regions. One study indicates that the Y chromosome of both Ashkenazi and Sephardic Jews are of Middle Eastern origin, similar …
[DOC File]Palestine has been under military occupation for more than ...
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In order to evaluate the overlap between genetic risk factors contributing to PD in Ashkenazi Jews and other populations, we tested all hits with P-values
Multicenter study of Parkinson’s disease in Ashkenazi Jews
Douglas Forbes14 points out that Y-chromosome SNP biallelic marker Q-P36 (also known by the mutation marker M-242), postulated by Behar and colleagues to be a founding lineage among Ashkenazi Jewish populations,15 is also found in Iranian and Iraqi Jews,16,17 and is a founding lineage group18 present in 31% of self-identified Native Americans ...
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