By all means, I just found out that Japanese, Koreans, Chinese, and Hmong are all cousins in the O family. We are O-M7 while the Chinese are O-M117. By genetics, the Chinese are our younger cousins that branched off from us. If we go BACK to the story of Chiyou, Chiyou had 3 sons to govern each different tribe. One was to rule us, the other ruled Korea, and my hypothesis for the third son is to rule the Han Chinese that joined us. The Ainu, Yayoi, and Jomon shared the same O type blood with us. My hypothesis is that the second son of Chiyou might have migrated from Korea to Japan. If we go back and study the Liangzhu culture/Leej Txwv ces cais, we are known as the first asian man that made rice everyday. If this is true, that means rice isn't Chinese food. Rice did belong to our culture of the Liangzhu. This only means that the Chinese had stole our culture and adopted to theirs. Also, this includes our technology of farming, metal, and other tools that we use to kill them. The Hmong empire lasted for 500 years in the earlier metal age at the post Stone Age of men. The question is: Is Hmong the first Asian tribes before others are born? I know that the Austro-people are WAAAY different from us. All of Hmong people are Neolithic people in the northern tribes in East Russia of Siberia. If Yayoi, Ainu, and Jomon are related to the people of Liangzhu culture, then they are Hmong that got turned into Japanese. The Y-DNA is the 50% of haplogroup O group are from Koreans and Japanese. If Koreans and Japanese are alike, since they do have a common thing and some similarities in their culture and practices, then they all came from the same place of Shandong, which is Dongyi.
What's your opinion? Does it sound something that we Hmong people can go and research about our origins? Are Hmong the first people in China before other race are born?
1. the chinese did not "branch off" from hmong. hmong/miao (O-M7, O-002611) and chinese (O-M134, O-M117) branched from O-M324 in PARALLEL.
http://familypedia.wikia.com/wiki/Haplogroup_O_(Y-DNA)2. don't use the Chi You myth to try and establish facts...it just makes hmong people look ignorant.
3. Liangzhu culture is not associated with hmong people. Liangzhu culture is associated with people from yDNA O-M119. hmong/miao people are associated with Pengtoushan, Daxi, Qujialing and Shijiahe cultures in the neolithic.
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/6180520_Y_chromosomes_of_Prehistoric_People_along_the_Yangtze_Riverhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pengtoushanhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daxi_culturehttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qujialing_culturehttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shijiahe_culture4. hmong are the originators of rice in East Asia, but it wasn't from Liangzhu culture, it was from Daxi culture. the type of rice found at Liangzhu died out. all modern Japonica rice comes from Daxi rice.
http://archaeobotanist.blogspot.com/2012/10/a-genome-map-that-is-not-map-of-origins.html5. hmong are not the "first asians", far from it. hmong and chinese are some of the very last asians. hmong and chinese are both predominantly from yDNA O3. hmong and chinese yDNA O3 most likely came from O3 in austro-asiatic people:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1226206/http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0024282...and austroasiatic people most likely came from tai-kadai people:
http://www.nature.com/articles/srep15486"We demonstrated that the O2a1-M95 lineage (high frequency in austro-asiatic and tai-kadai peoples) originated in the southern East Asia among the Daic-speaking populations ~20–40 thousand years ago and then dispersed southward to Southeast Asia after the Last Glacial Maximum..."
6. hmong people in the neolithic were not in Siberia. really, when will hmong stop this nonsense about Mongolia and Siberia? again, hmong people in the neolithic are associated with the Pengtoushan, Daxi, Qujialing and Shijiahe cultures, encompassing areas in modern day Hunan and Hubei provinces in China.
7. Yayoi, Ainu, and Jomon are not associated with Liangzhu. high frequencies of yDNA O-M119 was found at Liangzhu. people today with high frequencies of yDNA O-M119 are austronesian speakers.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haplogroup_O-M175