Archive for January 24th, 2009
1/3 World Population is Taiwanese
• 2008 SatUTC2009-01-24T16:15:10+00:00. 15 • 2 CommentsPosted in Journalism, News, Discovery
Tags: Taiwan, Taiwanese, Europe, Australia, Rose Corsler, 1/3 World Population is Taiwanese, The Man Behind the Ancestry, Jonathan S. Friedlaender, ahtropology, Temple University, Genetic Structure of Pacific Islanders, PLoS Genetics, 800 genetic markers, Neanderthals, Polynesians, Melanesians, X-chromosome, Y-chromosome, mitochondrial DNA, Taiwan Aborigines, Aborigines, East Asians, folklore, fast train hypothesis, slow boat hypothesis, entangled bank hypothesis, National Geographic, The Linguistic Evidence, Austronesian family, Formosan language, Hawai'i, Savai'i, Tahiti, Paul J.K. Li, Formosan vs. non-Formosan features in some Austronesian languages in Taiwan, Yami, Atayal, Most Endangered Formosan Languages, Jean Treajut, Mackay Memorial Hospital, Taiwanese have been isolated from Chinese for 20000 years, Public Library of Science, Findings in Archaeology, Patrick Kirch, University of California, Berkely, National Geographic review, New Guinea, New Zealand, Chinese, Dr. Spencer Wells, National Geographic Society, Genographic Project, Future Migration Patterns, In Shock and Awe, headless bodies, Yanuatu, Matthew Spriggs, archaeologist, Australian National University, Pacific Islands, Stuart Bedford, Ralph Regenvanu, Vanuatu National Museum, ritual sacrafice, LiveScience, Live Science, Imaginova, Constantly Curious, MAP an Discovery, The Chinese Voyage to America, The Chinese voyage to America theory, 1421, 1421: The Year China Discovered America, Gavin Menzies, Zheng He, Cheng Ho, Liu ganng, North America, South America, Americas, Menzies theory, Geoff Wade, University of Singapore, Asia Research Institute, 1418 map, 1419 European voyages of exploration, 1412 bunkum, The Map That Changed The World, Thinkers in the early 1800s, James Cook, 1500 BC, Polynesian Triangle, 1000 AD, Easter Island, No Bones About It, DNA matched fowls breeds of Polynesia, over a century before the arrival of the Spainairds, over a century before the arrival of the Spanish, Lisa Maitsoo-Smith, University of Auckland, Thhor Heyerdahl, Kon-Tiki, Norwegian, Norwegian anthropologist, Andean sculptures
