I just want to let you know that I have revised almost the entire page on haplogroup E1b1b. I have added phylogenetic trees for E-V13 and E-M123 and rewritten separate history sections for V13, M81 and M123.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature currently requires accessing the site using the built-in Safari browser.
I just want to let you know that I have revised almost the entire page on haplogroup E1b1b. I have added phylogenetic trees for E-V13 and E-M123 and rewritten separate history sections for V13, M81 and M123.
Please forgive this tag for attention, but I thought it would be interesting if you did a map of Celto-Germanic Y DNA, not least for my personal interest (which clearly is not enough to warrant the amount of effort you put into your maps), but also because it would fit very well into the red hair article (being a Celto-Germanic trait).
Amazing page btw, but, and it may just be me, lots of pages don't fully load (e.g. the page containing all the Y DNA maps, it doesn't go past I2a2), whereas they do on archive.org
Great work Maciamo. some quick points i would like to highlight:
1- In the E1b1b tree V6 and V92 were placed above Z830 while it should be placed below CTS11051 (E-V1515)
2- The highest frequencies of E-M123 are observed in Jordanians from the Dead Sea (31%) not in Ethiopia
2- M123 originated in Anatolia or Levant as per NG Genographic Project
All the dates in this paragraph here have some match with important climate data. The popping up of V13 at 7800 years is not far from the 8.2k event (Misox oscillation, Finse event) caused by the Gulfstream pump breakdown, the 5500 years are close to the 5.9k event (First Piora oscillation), which changed the overall weather pattern, desertificated the Sahara and forced people to move to the big river valleys, which initiated the building of big culture centers, and finally the 4.2k event, the big culture killer, which left traces almost everywhere in the Old World. All of them caused serious, sometimes long lasting droughts. While the first two may be just coincidence, the last one seems very revealing. Not only is it quite accurately at the same time, the sudden production of new subgroups in fast succession lets me think that this population was under severe environmental stress, causing the acceleration of the mutation rate and forcing the population to move....it has been calculated that E-V13 emerged from E-M78 some 7,800 years ago, when Neolithic farmers were advancing into the Balkans and the Danubian basin. Furthermore, all the modern members of E-V13 descend from a common ancestor who lived approximately 5,500 years ago, and all of them also descend from a later common ancestor who carried the CTS5856 mutation. That ancestor would have lived about 4,100 years ago, during the Bronze Age. Almost immediately afterwards, CTS5856 split into six subclades, then branched off into even more subclades in the space of a few generations. In just a few centuries, that very minor E-V13 lineage had started an expansion process that would turn it into one of Europe's most widespread paternal lineages...
I once read the Nile didn't flow all the way north until 13000 years ago. Desertification of the Sahara would also have forced people into Europe. There's also the Sea People climate event.All the dates in this paragraph here have some match with important climate data. The popping up of V13 at 7800 years is not far from the 8.2k event (Misox oscillation, Finse event) caused by the Gulfstream pump breakdown, the 5500 years are close to the 5.9k event (First Piora oscillation), which changed the overall weather pattern, desertificated the Sahara and forced people to move to the big river valleys, which initiated the building of big culture centers, and finally the 4.2k event, the big culture killer, which left traces almost everywhere in the Old World.
This thread has been viewed 10259 times.