Peace and blessings I enjoy watching these kind of videos. It puts everything in perspective for me. How blessed and charmed my life has been if it were not for my fisherman grandfathers, uncles.and granmama. When I saw that deer meat my first thought was barbque ribs and then they started eating it raw...again I was knocked off my comfortable seat. What a hard tiring life for these people...but did we hear them complaining? Did they say Oh another hard day at the office...me oh my got too many kids to feed. Did they depend on government welfare food, medical, housing? No these are the salt of the earth people just like the American indians who lived off the land and only killed that which they consumed...and only killed humans who attacked them...so why even bother to comnent on how these people like their meat. If they are happy with their lives then we should be happy for them. Thanks for this upload. 3/25/18. 1:46 PM Dallas Texas
A really good documentary. :) And btw these people seem so nice and kind, maybe even sort of hypnotizing or how to describe it. :) Kinda surprising considering the harsh conditions they have to live in. I'd totally love to visit this wonderful part of the world one day.
Yeah, Khanty are about 60% Mongoloid and 40% Caucasoid based on Tambets et al. (2018) (genomebiology.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13059-018-1522-1 ).
Tough people leading simple lives. But, do they seem unhappy? I have seen much more unhappy and bitter people in major Western Cities with Iphones in their pockets and tofu in their pita bread sandwiches but broken families and the firm belief that everything is someone else's fault.
Khanty (like Mansi and Bashkirs) are about half white and half Asian, so it's not like they have nothing in common with Hungarians genetically. Based on the ADMIXTURE results in journals.plos.org/plosgenetics/article?id=10.1371/journal.pgen.1005068, Udmurts, Maris, Chuvashes, and Tatars are roughly 30% Asian, Komis 20%, and Mordvins and Finns 10%.
@@anth1338 Just plainly not true. Khanty are Uralic (Ugric) and different from Bashkir but related to Uralic Mansi There are many Uralic languages. Bashkir speak Turkic. Hungarians were thought by euro science to be Mongolic Huns. Turns out they speak the older language and in their gene pool is indeed Uralic dna.
@Anne Illerbrun Look at the second figure in the study I linked to. The ADMIXTURE results of Komis, Maris, and Udmurts look like the results of Chuvashes and Tatars, the results of Hungarians look like the results of other Central Europeans, and the results of Nenetses and Nganasans look like the results of Kets. A few months ago a new genome-wide association study about Uralic-speaking peoples was released: genomebiology.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13059-018-1522-1. In the ADMIXTURE results of that study at K=3, Khanty have about 60% of the Asian component and Bashkirs about 40-50%. Mansi range from about 10% Asian for a few individuals to about 60% Asian for other individuals. At K=9, the proportion of the K9 admixture component which is predominantly found in Uralic-speaking peoples is close to 100% in Khanty but virtually 0% in Hungarians, even though it is about 30% in Bashkirs and Chuvashes. In the same study, the Y-DNA haplogroup N whose origin is likely considered to be in Eastern Eurasia has a prevalence of 30% or more among all Uralic-speaking peoples other than Hungarians (0.9%), Mordvins (18.3%), and Selkups (6.9% and 9.3% for two different population samples). It is 33.7% in Chuvashes, 31.3% in Bashkirs, and 23.5% in Tatars. Affinity with early European farmers (LBK) is 0% in Khanty, 1% in Saami from Sweden and Udmurts, 3% in Mansi and Maris, 7% in Kola Saami, 8% in Komis, 14% in Karelians and Vepsans, and 16% in Finns, Estonians, and Mordvins. Affinity with ancient Siberians is 61% in Khanty, 35% in Maris, 34% in Mansi, 30% in Udmurts, 24% in both Kola and Swedish Saami, 19% in Komis, 12% in Vepsians, 11% in Mordvins, 8% in Finns, 6% in Karelians, and 5% in Estonians. I thought that Mansi would have had higher affinity with East Asians or Siberians. Maybe it is because the Mansi sample includes 9 individuals who the authors of the study consider to be outliers: > On the contrary, ‘Mansi’ has a distinctive admixture profile-nine Mansi samples cluster closely together with VUR [Volga-Ural region] populations and, similarly to them, show evidence for substantial recent admixture with Europeans around sixteenth to eighteenth century. This group is considered as an outlier here. The rest of the Mansi are clustered with Khanty people following the linguistic grouping of Ob-Ugric. In the UPGMA tree featured in the study Mansi are even placed in the branch for the Volga-Ural region along with Chuvashes, Komis, Maris, Tatars, and Udmurts. That might however be because of the Mansi sample used in the study is not representative. Hungarians and Mordvins did not share excess IBD with any other Uralic people tested in the study, and Estonians only shared it with other Baltic Finnic peoples. The authors of the study even conclude that "one of the notable observations that stands out in the fineSTRUCTURE analysis is that neither Hungarians nor Estonians or Mordovians form genetic clusters with other Uralic speakers but instead do so with a broad spectrum of geographically adjacent samples" and that "there is nothing in the present-day gene pool of the sampled Hungarians that we could tie specifically to other Uralic speakers." The study also states that "the Uralic speakers, along with other populations speaking Slavic and Turkic languages, are scattered along the first PC axis in agreement with their geographic distribution (Figs. 1 and 2a) suggesting that geography is the main predictor of genetic affinity among the groups in the given area."
Narrator is irritating, as are his comments. Almost like he is trying to gather followers with his pseudo mystical bullcrap. Pedantic and uninteresting. Ruins what would have been a nice production.
Janno Simm автор. Эстония. Дипломная работа университета Тромсо (Норвегия). Сам снимал, жил, монтировал этнографию- нет, неверно, он свои корни искал... древние, неразбуженные. И он нашёл надеюсь.
Fantastic! Thank you for this intimate look at this population of little known people.
I really love this film.
Peace and blessings
I enjoy watching these kind of videos. It puts everything in perspective for me.
How blessed and charmed my life has been if it were not for my fisherman grandfathers, uncles.and granmama.
When I saw that deer meat my first thought was barbque ribs and then they started eating it raw...again I was knocked off my comfortable seat.
What a hard tiring life for these people...but did we hear them complaining? Did they say Oh another hard day at the office...me oh my got too many kids to feed. Did they depend on government welfare food, medical, housing? No these are the salt of the earth people just like the American indians who lived off the land and only killed that which they consumed...and only killed humans who attacked them...so why even bother to comnent on how these people like their meat. If they are happy with their lives then we should be happy for them.
Thanks for this upload.
3/25/18. 1:46 PM
Dallas Texas
Great Documentary,
A really good documentary. :) And btw these people seem so nice and kind, maybe even sort of hypnotizing or how to describe it. :) Kinda surprising considering the harsh conditions they have to live in. I'd totally love to visit this wonderful part of the world one day.
Adds a whole new meaning to "make mine rare"
I love shit like this!
Good Looking People...
Tough people
They look like a mix with Caucasoid and Mongoloid.
Yeah, Khanty are about 60% Mongoloid and 40% Caucasoid based on Tambets et al. (2018) (genomebiology.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13059-018-1522-1 ).
they are
nice
Fishing brigade, Reindeer brigade... why brigade?
Tough people leading simple lives. But, do they seem unhappy? I have seen much more unhappy and bitter people in major Western Cities with Iphones in their pockets and tofu in their pita bread sandwiches but broken families and the firm belief that everything is someone else's fault.
I speak Hungarian and can't hear anything sounding similar. Yet I can hear Russian from time to time. Are they even speaking khanty?
Sam Sung they speak russian
@László Patakfalvi hol tanulhatnék többet erről?
They all seem to like to smoke.
rough life
😳😳😳😰😰
but to eat fresh meat is not nice. lolz
Why do you think so?
More nutritious and wastes less resource.
Also, they raise the animals themselves, not industrially raised tortured animals
I love Russian
They are good hunters,but eat raw meat is....grrrr and drink fresh blood.
Вылетые китайцы
They are linguistically reletives to the Magyars or Hungarians! Yet, genetically they have nothing common with Hungarians!
Khanty (like Mansi and Bashkirs) are about half white and half Asian, so it's not like they have nothing in common with Hungarians genetically.
Based on the ADMIXTURE results in journals.plos.org/plosgenetics/article?id=10.1371/journal.pgen.1005068, Udmurts, Maris, Chuvashes, and Tatars are roughly 30% Asian, Komis 20%, and Mordvins and Finns 10%.
I speak Hungarian and can't hear anything similar. Yet I can hear Russian from time to time. Are they even speaking khanty?
@@anth1338 Just plainly not true. Khanty are Uralic (Ugric) and different from Bashkir but related to Uralic Mansi There are many Uralic languages. Bashkir speak Turkic. Hungarians were thought by euro science to be Mongolic Huns. Turns out they speak the older language and in their gene pool is indeed Uralic dna.
@Anne Illerbrun Look at the second figure in the study I linked to. The ADMIXTURE results of Komis, Maris, and Udmurts look like the results of Chuvashes and Tatars, the results of Hungarians look like the results of other Central Europeans, and the results of Nenetses and Nganasans look like the results of Kets.
A few months ago a new genome-wide association study about Uralic-speaking peoples was released: genomebiology.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13059-018-1522-1.
In the ADMIXTURE results of that study at K=3, Khanty have about 60% of the Asian component and Bashkirs about 40-50%. Mansi range from about 10% Asian for a few individuals to about 60% Asian for other individuals.
At K=9, the proportion of the K9 admixture component which is predominantly found in Uralic-speaking peoples is close to 100% in Khanty but virtually 0% in Hungarians, even though it is about 30% in Bashkirs and Chuvashes.
In the same study, the Y-DNA haplogroup N whose origin is likely considered to be in Eastern Eurasia has a prevalence of 30% or more among all Uralic-speaking peoples other than Hungarians (0.9%), Mordvins (18.3%), and Selkups (6.9% and 9.3% for two different population samples). It is 33.7% in Chuvashes, 31.3% in Bashkirs, and 23.5% in Tatars.
Affinity with early European farmers (LBK) is 0% in Khanty, 1% in Saami from Sweden and Udmurts, 3% in Mansi and Maris, 7% in Kola Saami, 8% in Komis, 14% in Karelians and Vepsans, and 16% in Finns, Estonians, and Mordvins. Affinity with ancient Siberians is 61% in Khanty, 35% in Maris, 34% in Mansi, 30% in Udmurts, 24% in both Kola and Swedish Saami, 19% in Komis, 12% in Vepsians, 11% in Mordvins, 8% in Finns, 6% in Karelians, and 5% in Estonians.
I thought that Mansi would have had higher affinity with East Asians or Siberians. Maybe it is because the Mansi sample includes 9 individuals who the authors of the study consider to be outliers:
> On the contrary, ‘Mansi’ has a distinctive admixture profile-nine Mansi samples cluster closely together with VUR [Volga-Ural region] populations and, similarly to them, show evidence for substantial recent admixture with Europeans around sixteenth to eighteenth century. This group is considered as an outlier here. The rest of the Mansi are clustered with Khanty people following the linguistic grouping of Ob-Ugric.
In the UPGMA tree featured in the study Mansi are even placed in the branch for the Volga-Ural region along with Chuvashes, Komis, Maris, Tatars, and Udmurts. That might however be because of the Mansi sample used in the study is not representative.
Hungarians and Mordvins did not share excess IBD with any other Uralic people tested in the study, and Estonians only shared it with other Baltic Finnic peoples.
The authors of the study even conclude that "one of the notable observations that stands out in the fineSTRUCTURE analysis is that neither Hungarians nor Estonians or Mordovians form genetic clusters with other Uralic speakers but instead do so with a broad spectrum of geographically adjacent samples" and that "there is nothing in the present-day gene pool of the sampled Hungarians that we could tie specifically to other Uralic speakers." The study also states that "the Uralic speakers, along with other populations speaking Slavic and Turkic languages, are scattered along the first PC axis in agreement with their geographic distribution (Figs. 1 and 2a) suggesting that geography is the main predictor of genetic affinity among the groups in the given area."
Hungarians still have a very small amount of siberian genes, like other europeans in the region.
Narrator is irritating, as are his comments. Almost like he is trying to gather followers with his pseudo mystical bullcrap. Pedantic and uninteresting. Ruins what would have been a nice production.
Janno Simm автор. Эстония. Дипломная работа университета Тромсо (Норвегия). Сам снимал, жил, монтировал этнографию- нет, неверно, он свои корни искал... древние, неразбуженные. И он нашёл надеюсь.
Спасибо Валерий, Вы очень любезны обучать.
Damn at least cook the meat! Sick ...
what does this nation have., cannibals., raw danging eaters., virgin drinkers., fellow wild animals ..