Categories: CultureNews

The Harvard Medical School on the Origins of Europeans

On the basis of the latest innovative genetic studies, researchers at the Harvard Medical School discussed new theories of human migration identified by complex DNA analyzes. The answers to the human past are hidden in the DNA of the bones in ancient burial mounds and graves.

Increasingly, these answers are being identified, as geneticists at Harvard University and of other countries use sophisticated methods to extract DNA with readable information, despite the devastating effects of time.

Geneticists from the Harvard Medical School (HMS), the Harvard Institute for Advanced Studies, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology emphasized these evolving methods and told about the latest results.

The conclusion of the research states that previously unknown group made a huge contribution to the gene pool of modern Europeans and Native Americans.

They also discussed the results of preliminary studies, which show that the ancient civilization located between the Black and Caspian Seas could create the main group of modern languages, covering English, German, Russian, Urdu, Punjabi, and Hindi.

More information: news.harvard.edu

All modern genetic analyzes point to the Armenian Highlands as the cradle of humanity in all senses. However, it is not yet customary to call things by their proper names.

Therefore, it is very important to not forget and inform the world community about the fact that Armenia is the Armenian Highlands, not Transcaucasia, not the South Caucasus, not Eastern Anatolia, but the Armenian Highlands.

Thus, by destroying Armenians and Armenia, as well as indulging in the policy of destruction, humanity destroys itself. Here it all began, here it all be over!

Vigen Avetisyan

Recent Posts

The Armenian Genocide: State Crime, Mass Participation, and the Burden of Historical Responsibility

The Armenian Genocide (1915–1921 ...) was not an accident of war, nor a tragic byproduct…

3 days ago

The First Printed Armenian Bible (Amsterdam, 1666–1668)

Introduction The first printed edition of the Bible in the Armenian language stands as one…

1 week ago

Armenopolis (Gherla): An Armenian “Ideal City” in the Heart of Europe

Armenopolis (modern-day Gherla, Romania) is a remarkable example of how the Armenian diaspora not only…

1 week ago

Statement by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia

Regarding the Remarks of the Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group at the Permanent Council…

2 months ago

The Armenian Genetic Code: An 8,000-Year Unbroken Journey

While empires rose and fell and borders shifted across millennia, one remarkable constant has endured:…

2 months ago

Idea of a Deferred Referendum on the Status of Nagorno-Karabakh

Former Co-Chair of the OSCE Minsk Group and Representative of the President of Russia, Ambassador…

2 months ago