Micle S, Kobilyansky E, Nathan M, Arensburg B, Nathan H
Am J Phys Anthropol. 1977 Jul;47(1):89-91. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.1330470115.
Sixty-eight ancient skeletons, unearthed at Jerusalem and En Gedi and, according to the archeological data belonging to Jewish residents of these places from about 1,600 to 2,000 years ago, were ABO-typed by means of the hemagglutination-inhibition test. The blood groups of 13 skeletons were undiagnosable and the remaining 55 showed the following distribution: 30.91% A-group, 14.54% B-group, 50.91% AB-group and 3.64% O-group. According to these findings, the population to which these skeletons belonged must have had a high frequency of genes IA and IB, and a low occurrence of O blood group and its related IO gene.
在耶路撒冷和恩盖迪出土了68具古代骨骼,根据考古资料,这些骨骼属于约1600至2000年前这些地方的犹太居民,通过血凝抑制试验对其进行了ABO血型鉴定。13具骨骼的血型无法诊断,其余55具显示出以下分布:A型占30.91%,B型占14.54%,AB型占50.91%,O型占3.64%。根据这些发现,这些骨骼所属的人群中IA和IB基因的频率一定很高,而O血型及其相关的IO基因出现的频率较低。