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Korean gene pool established around the 4th century

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There was a group that came down to the Korean Peninsula when it got cold 18,000 years ago.

But as soon as it got warmer, this group moved north again up the Korean Peninsula.

Can’t I just stay on the Korean Peninsula?

Just as we are centralized in Seoul, so were prehistoric humans.

Because you can do anything only when there are a lot of people.

8,200 years ago, when it became cold, they moved south again to the Korean Peninsula and pottery was delivered at this time.

There is a ruin called Devil’s Gate Cave in Maritime Province.

Genetic analysis shows that the closest group other than the natives there are Koreans, followed by Japanese.

Koreans are not from the North

The main inhabitants of the Korean peninsula were hunter-gatherers until the south of the Liaodong Liaoxi region.

Of course, the rate of population growth of farmers is much higher, so they have no choice but to beat hunter-gatherers.

I don’t like the expression “single race,” but if I were to be specific, there hasn’t been much change in the gene pool since around the 4th century.

It seems like it can be seen as the same group then and now.

I saw this somewhere else

Is it possible that the gene pool could not be introduced in the process of fighting the Tang Dynasty, Mongolia, Japan, and the Manchurians?

This means that there was no significant southward migration and settlement of large groups within the Korean Peninsula and it was a form of all-out war, so there was no significant impact on the gene pool.

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