Нисам сигуран да ли ће о Бездањачи бити речи јер је у питању предавање о генетском наслеђу римског подунавског лимеса.
Не знам да ли сте примјетили, али у овом раду о Албанцима су споменули и узорке из Бездањаче. Ево њиховог коментара.
"We mention here naming differences based on a re-interpretation of the samples in question. Individuals I18723, I18721, I18719 from Bezdanjača Cave in Croatia, which were archaeologically dated to the Bronze Age (1500-800 BCE), were interpreted in previous studies as outliers compared to the contemporary population of Croatia (5, 6). We argue that based on insights from the PCA and their uniparental markers, these outlying individuals likely date to post- Medieval times. Individuals I18721 and I18719 are assigned to haplogroup I2-M423>I-Y3120 (Table S23), which is associated with the Slavic expansion toward southern Europe during the Migration Period, and has experienced major founder effects in the South Slavic population of the Balkans (48, 68, 82). This haplogroup is extremely unlikely to have entered the Western Balkans in the Bronze Age, as our extensive haplogroup dataset shows that subclades downstream of I2-M423 appear in the region primarily during the Migration Period (Fig.
, as expected. Occasional migrants from the Balto-Slavic world to southern Europe are known in the Iron Age, such as two mercenaries from the Battle of Himera in Sicily (58). However, the Bezdanjača Cave outliers are unlikely to represent BA migrants from northern Europe, as the mitochondrial haplogroup of individual I18719 (HV0a1a1b), has a TMRCA of 225 years before present with a person from modern Germany (77). Furthermore, previous archaeological studies in Bezdanjača Cave radiocarbon-dated an ancient individual to the 17th century CE, and also reported the remains of two skeletons which date to World War II (86). Another sample that might be misdated is I13170 from Velika Gruda in Montenegro, attributed to the Iron Age (800-400 BCE) (6). This individual, which was not radiocarbon dated, clustered with modern South Slavs (6), and was therefore excluded from our analyses."