She looks like she belongs in ancient Egypt

Bawon Samedi

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@Poitier

Here's another one.
3735578345_16a3c0ced4.jpg

:dead:
 

Bawon Samedi

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@kidstrangehold

my point is they look closer to what op posted then what these militants are saying.
As you can see in the pics you are posted they are light brown and have slim noses for the most part

No they're not. You're just seeing what you want to see. The pictures posted all appear to have medium brown or dark brown skin tones with features common in African groups. None of them seemed to appear like this.
O0NnXrP.jpg


Are you high or trolling?

If anything the pictures I posted seem to look like this Nilotic women in skin tone and features.
nquwec.jpg

(Note she has a non-typical African nose.:troll:)


But more importantly the Ancient Egyptians resembled Nilotics more because they WERE nilotics. None of this picture spamming will change anything. Anyways I'm out to pick up my chinese food. I'll be back.
 

Poitier

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A. Early Neolithic Prelude


The earliest evidence for Neolithic settlement near the Nile occurs in poor and dispersed sites or site-complexes without durable structures or deep deposits, which lack the transitions and detailed interconnections that make later sequences cohesive historical units. Although regionally distinctive features suggest that groups occupied areas as spheres of activity for long periods, important features of pottery, implements, and a rich rock art which emphasized cattle can be traced across the Sahara, indicating widespread relationships (Haland 1987; Striedter 1984). This era of changing climate in northeastern Africa produced widely varying opportunities for human existence in any small area, but always allowed some kind of habitation in the region. By obstructing movement, the desert increasingly encouraged regional cultures (Eiwanger 1987: 83).
B. Emergence of Regional Cultures
In the sixth and fifth millennia B.C., human occupation shifted from the drying desert toward its southern and northern margins, the Nile, and the oases. Areas occupied included the mountainous desert east of the Nile, savanna lands east of the Nile in the south, Kordofan [region constituting the central area of The Sudan. It lies between Darfur on the west and the valley of the White Nile River on the east. Kordofan was originally inhabited by brown-skinned Nubian-speaking peoples, and the region's name may be derived from the Nubian word kurta, meaning “men.” Here, an annual inundation removed surface salts, leaving a layer of new silt, naturally fertilizing and irrigating the land well enough to support a limited population (Krzyzaniak 1977: 25-27, 55; Butzer 1976: 18-20).
1. Stone Tools and Interrelations. Regional cultures are present in the Nile Valley from the Middle Neolithic to the Egyptian 1st Dynasty. Despite their differences, these cultures shared such developments as trends in stone tool making. From Sudan to northern Egypt, the earliest Neolithic industries were blade industries. Thereafter, a bifacial core industry predominated until the Maadi and Naqada cultures of Egypt revived blade technique (Eiwanger 1983: 63-67). Mutual contacts and those with Asia correlate the cultures, but chronology in real time remains approximate, despite the application of radiometric techniques (Kantor fc.). The earliest phases in northern Egypt shared significant features with the pottery Neolithic of Palestine, but these contacts were severed (Eiwanger 1983) until the Chalcolithic period, when they again became important.
2. Egypt and the Middle Nile. The three major regional cultures in the northern Nile Valley were centered in northern Egypt, Upper (or southern) Egypt, and Lower Nubia, respectively. Far to the south, The Sudanese-Saharan tradition appears in small settlements supported mainly by hunting, fishing, and gathering, notably at Khartoum. Later, people also raised cattle and crops (Haland 1987: 51-56, 59-62). Distant contacts are illustrated by the widespread adoption of a special form of harpoon in Africa and Palestine (Haland 1987: fig. 3). In the Khartoum Neolithic phase contemporary with the Naqada period of Upper Egypt, a major center comparable in size to the great sites of Upper Egypt was established at Taragma near Meroe, a concentration previously unsuspected in the region (Reinold 1987: 17-43).

http://wysinger.homestead.com/neolithic.html
 
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