Profile
Name
LADYHAGUA
Description
Cuando está la luna
sobre el horizonte
muchos enanitos
juegan en el monte.
A las esquinitas
y a la rueda,rueda,
juegan los enanos
bajo la arboleda.
Muy blanca la barba,
muy rojo el vestido,
los enanos juegan
sin hacer ruido.
Y así, como blandos
ovillos de lana,
por el campo corren
hacia la montaña.
SALUDOS A TODOS!!!! CANTO POR QUE ME GUSTA Y RECOMIENDO A TODOS CANTAR, ES UNA BUENA TERAPIA DESEANDO A TODOS LO MEJOR...GRACIAS POR COMPARTIR!!!
Beginning about 20,000 years ago, when the global human population was perhaps a million, the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) pushed the population of northern Europe south to refuge areas in southern France, northern Spain, the Balkans and Ukraine, while the now fully-developed northern Mongoloid population in Siberia was also forced south to eastern and southern China. Both populations were greatly reduced in number during this period. (The expansion of the southern Mongoloids into Malaya and Indonesia, partly replacing and partly assimilating the native Australoids, probably occurred during this period.) When the Last Glacial Maximum began to recede about 15,000 years ago (13,000 B.C.) the survivors of these populations expanded northward again from their refuge areas, with Scandinavia being occupied by humans for the first time about 10,000 years ago, by which time the global human population had risen to about 10 million. Agriculture and the Neolithic period also began about 10,000 years ago in both the Middle East and China. The genetic ancestry of the native European population as a whole is about 80% from the original Upper Paleolithic inhabitants who survived the 5,000 years of the Last Glacial Maximum in southern refuge areas and then re-expanded and repopulated the central and northern regions of the continent, and 20% from the Neolithic farmers who expanded from Anatolia into Europe starting about 8,000 years ago, with the latter element concentrated primarily in the Mediterranean lands of southern Europe, indicating that the initial spread of agriculture into central and northern Europe was a process of cultural diffusion rather than a movement of people.
sobre el horizonte
muchos enanitos
juegan en el monte.
A las esquinitas
y a la rueda,rueda,
juegan los enanos
bajo la arboleda.
Muy blanca la barba,
muy rojo el vestido,
los enanos juegan
sin hacer ruido.
Y así, como blandos
ovillos de lana,
por el campo corren
hacia la montaña.
SALUDOS A TODOS!!!! CANTO POR QUE ME GUSTA Y RECOMIENDO A TODOS CANTAR, ES UNA BUENA TERAPIA DESEANDO A TODOS LO MEJOR...GRACIAS POR COMPARTIR!!!
Beginning about 20,000 years ago, when the global human population was perhaps a million, the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) pushed the population of northern Europe south to refuge areas in southern France, northern Spain, the Balkans and Ukraine, while the now fully-developed northern Mongoloid population in Siberia was also forced south to eastern and southern China. Both populations were greatly reduced in number during this period. (The expansion of the southern Mongoloids into Malaya and Indonesia, partly replacing and partly assimilating the native Australoids, probably occurred during this period.) When the Last Glacial Maximum began to recede about 15,000 years ago (13,000 B.C.) the survivors of these populations expanded northward again from their refuge areas, with Scandinavia being occupied by humans for the first time about 10,000 years ago, by which time the global human population had risen to about 10 million. Agriculture and the Neolithic period also began about 10,000 years ago in both the Middle East and China. The genetic ancestry of the native European population as a whole is about 80% from the original Upper Paleolithic inhabitants who survived the 5,000 years of the Last Glacial Maximum in southern refuge areas and then re-expanded and repopulated the central and northern regions of the continent, and 20% from the Neolithic farmers who expanded from Anatolia into Europe starting about 8,000 years ago, with the latter element concentrated primarily in the Mediterranean lands of southern Europe, indicating that the initial spread of agriculture into central and northern Europe was a process of cultural diffusion rather than a movement of people.
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