Dairy farming was essential to the survival of the White race when it migrated into Europe from the Middle East. Yet evolutionists still cling to the absurd notion that "aboriginal" meso-/neo-lithic cavemen somehow developed the ability to digest milk through some random gene mutation.
A recent archeological discovery in Poland of ancient pottery used as a milk sieve has inadvertently provided overwhelming evidence that "immigrants" brought their dairy herds with them from the Middle East thousands of years ago, which would explain why most people who retain the ability to digest milk can trace their ancestry to Europe.
"Burger and several other LeCHE participants found that domesticated cattle at Neolithic sites in Europe were most closely related to cows from the Middle East, rather than indigenous wild aurochs. This is a strong indication that incoming herders brought their cattle with them, rather than domesticating locally, says Burger. A similar story is emerging from studies of ancient human DNA recovered at a few sites in central Europe, which suggest that Neolithic farmers were not descended from the hunter-gatherers who lived there before."
http://www.nature.com/news/archaeology- ... on-1.13471
The milk fat residue found on these ancient pottery shards seems to match similar milk fats found in Anatolia:
"Evershed and his LeCHE collaborators found milk fat on pottery in the Middle Eastern Fertile Crescent going back at least 8,500 years, and Roffet-Salque's work on the Polish pottery offers clear evidence that herders in Europe were producing cheese to supplement their diets between 6,800 and 7,400 years ago."
As evidence mounts that the migration theory is correct, "scientists" are busy spinning damage control by insisting that "evolution" must remain part of the paradigm:
“For a long time, the mainstream of continental European archaeology said Mesolithic hunter-gatherers developed into Neolithic farmers,” says Burger. “We basically showed they were completely different.”