sfs
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- Jun 30, 2003
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No, that isn't right. To a good approximation, Europeans and east Asians each have a subset of African genetic diversity, but they are only partly overlapping. You can find some numbers here (p. 30 of the online supplementary materials for the 2nd article listed under 2007). Comparing two western European chromosomes, they find an average of 0.6044 differences per thousand base pairs, but 0.6579 per thousand when comparing European and East Asian chromosomes. The within-Europe comparison is not much smaller, but it is smaller. (Note that within-Africa comparisons are statistically indistinguishable from African/non-African comparisons.)the studies I've seen show that the two irish men would have more differences in their dna than when compared to a korean man. Sure its possible they have more genetic similarity, but its even more possible that they have more genetic differences between them than one and a korean.
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