What's the origins of the Pasiegos and the Cantabrians ?

Your paper actually gives 43% of R1b for the Pasiegos, 60% for the Lebaniegos, and 58% for other Cantabrians (and 60% for Asturias). The average for Cantabria is 52% (71 out of 137 samples). What's interesting is that the Pasiegos have 18% of R1a1. That's huge for Spain. The mtDNA data show that Cantabrians have a fairly unique incidence of hg I, U2, U3 and U4, which are usually found among Pontic steppe people and areas with a lot of R1a. The Pasiegos obviously have steppe ancestors, who mixed with Paleolithic people from the Maghreb (E-M81 combined with U6, L2 and M1). A very unique blend indeed.

Flores gives 58% R1b for Cantabria, and Adams 50% for Asturias. I put both regions in between 50 and 60% on the map.

Galicia is borderline 60%. Adams gives 58%, Flores 63%, and Balaresque's brand new study of R1b also gives 58%. Based on this new study from yesterday I think I should place Galicia in 50 to 60% like Asturias and Cantabria.

I have just verified data for North Portugal and found 53.5% (Flores), 55% (Gonçalves et al.) and 58% (Adams). I will modify the map accordingly.
Interesting to see also the mtDNA V in Cantabria is 14.8%
The 64.28% of R1b for Cantabria in this source :
http://iberianroots.com/statistics/iberian_peninsula.html
 
How come there is so much R1a in Pasiegos?

Valle de Pasiegos is a very isolated Valley in south-eastern Cantabria, next to the Basque Country.


300px-Vega_de_Pas_%28Cantabria%29_Mapa.svg.png


Its habitants have a very characteristic culture and traditions. Their language has some resemblances with asturianu and some words from euskera (basque) also.

pasiegos.jpg

1_3FOTO1_F_Sanchoyarto_FFRF_33.jpeg

pasiegos.jpg


Great part of their haplogroups are believed to come from the times of the Megalitic culture. They are a "rarity" into Spain.

Greetings.
 
In any case, E-M81 is pre-Neolithic and Eurasian and needs to be separated from Near-Eastern E, commonly found in the Eastern Mediterranean, NE Africa and the Middle East. The great percentage of E in Iberia is M81. Non M81 E probably amounts to no more than 2-3% in both Spain and Portugal, from what I have been able to research.
 
Actually , the mtDNA of Pasiegos is more related to Northern Europeans than to non-Pasiego Cantabrians
(mtDNA V, I , U5) :

"Congruent with this second hypothesis is a study on MHC class II polymorphisms
that closely relate Pasiegos to Danes, Poles
and Germans rather than to non-Pasiego Cantabrians
(Sánchez-Velasco et al. 1999, 2003)."

"Pasiegos are peculiar for their high frequencies of Y chromosomal markers
(E-M81) with North African assignation, and Y chromosomal (R-SRY2627) and mtDNA (V, I, U5) markers related
to northern European populations.
http://grupos.unican.es/acanto/aep/BolPas/Ann-Hum-Genet.pdf"
 
Maybe Pasiegos are related to Baltic Veneti/Venedi people. Genetically these two peoples might be the close match. They were excellent seamen, could have colonies or easily migrate if in danger.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vistula_Veneti
 
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Here are all the the studies I have found about Cantabrians and the E-M81 percentage

1) Scozzari 2001

Pasiegos 7/19 = 37% E-M81

2) Maca-Meyer 2003

Pasiegos 8/45 = 18% E-M81
Lebaniegos 0/37 = 0% E-M81
Other Cantabrians 6/36 = 17% E-M81

Total in Cantabria : 14/118 =12% E-M81

3) Capelli 2009 (161 samples from Brion 2003). Unfortunately no details per region.

Pasiegos ?/50
Lebaniegos ?/51
Santander ?/60

Total in Cantabria ( no details per region) : 21/161 =13% E-M81

4) Cruciani 2004, "Phylogeographic Analysis of Haplogroup E3b (E-M215) Y Chromosomes Reveals Multiple Migratory Events Within and Out Of Africa". Only pasiegos were tested

Pasiegos 23/56 = 41% E-M81

5) Total Cantabria for all studies (including 170 Pasiegos) : 65/354 = 18.36% E-M81

If we exclude Capelli 2009/Brion 2003 studies as there is no details per region, for Pasiegos only (Scozzari 2001, Maca-Meyer 2003, Cruciani 2004) we get :

Total Pasiegos : 38/120 = 32% E-M81


6) I am not a specialist but do you think it is possible that E-M81 (estimated 5 600 yeard old) , arose in Cantabria and then spread into North Africa and not the opposite ? I remember I read in a recent book by geneticist David B. Goldstein (Jacob's Legacy ) that Berbers may have came to North Africa from Iberia 1 000 BC
 
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If this is a very long history going to be all even today in the same town, with the moves that have been in Spain since then until today?

If they are so located at a point, I think that its origin should be in a nearest time.
 
Actually , the mtDNA of Pasiegos is more related to Northern Europeans than to non-Pasiego Cantabrians
(mtDNA V, I , U5) :

"Congruent with this second hypothesis is a study on MHC class II polymorphisms
that closely relate Pasiegos to Danes, Poles
and Germans rather than to non-Pasiego Cantabrians
(Sánchez-Velasco et al. 1999, 2003)."

"Pasiegos are peculiar for their high frequencies of Y chromosomal markers
(E-M81) with North African assignation, and Y chromosomal (R-SRY2627) and mtDNA (V, I, U5) markers related
to northern European populations.
http://grupos.unican.es/acanto/aep/BolPas/Ann-Hum-Genet.pdf"[/QUOTE]


Once again the obsession of my compatriots with the Nordics and dreaming of being like them. Science has already shown that the Pas Valley population (Pasiegos) are of Berber origin, possibly Muslim refugees in the sixteenth century, but they do not accept it, still dreaming that they are descendants of Nordic People. To demonstrate this he talks about a report in 1999!
How pathetic!!!
 
But did you not say you not interested in the Y-DNA?
Up to 40% of the inhabitants of the valley of Pas are Haplogroup E-M81 subclade E. A high frequency so is only found in the Sahara.
It's not 40% it's 19% in the more recent and bigger sample. Plus they also have 18% of R1a, a typical Eastern-European haplogroup, that is extremely high for Western Europe, and they have as well typical North-East European mtDNA. Autosomally (full ancestry) they cluster close to Basques.
 
It's almost sure they cluster next to Basques. However, ¿is there any study showing this? or ¿other kind of genetic studies showing some of their peculiarities? I think there's probably lack of this interesting samples.

And about haplogroup E, even if it's 40%, it doesn't mean they must have a lot of African. Galicians have quite haplogroup E (more than 20%), and autosomally they are typically Western European. Some people is very confused with haplogroups, or they just want to cause confusion like the guy who wrote such things about the Sahara. Totally crazy.
 
It's almost sure they cluster next to Basques. However, ¿is there any study showing this? or ¿other kind of genetic studies showing some of their peculiarities? I think there's probably lack of this interesting samples.

And about haplogroup E, even if it's 40%, it doesn't mean they must have a lot of African. Galicians have quite haplogroup E (more than 20%), and autosomally they are typically Western European. Some people is very confused with haplogroups, or they just want to cause confusion like the guy who wrote such things about the Sahara. Totally crazy.

I agree we should not classify HG with a race
 
It's almost sure they cluster next to Basques. However, ¿is there any study showing this? or ¿other kind of genetic studies showing some of their peculiarities? I think there's probably lack of this interesting samples.

And about haplogroup E, even if it's 40%, it doesn't mean they must have a lot of African. Galicians have quite haplogroup E (more than 20%), and autosomally they are typically Western European. Some people is very confused with haplogroups, or they just want to cause confusion like the guy who wrote such things about the Sahara. Totally crazy.

As genetic science advances, these hateful, delusional charlatans will find their way to the dust-bin of history.
 
It's almost sure they cluster next to Basques. However, ¿is there any study showing this? or ¿other kind of genetic studies showing some of their peculiarities? I think there's probably lack of this interesting samples.

And about haplogroup E, even if it's 40%, it doesn't mean they must have a lot of African. Galicians have quite haplogroup E (more than 20%), and autosomally they are typically Western European. Some people is very confused with haplogroups, or they just want to cause confusion like the guy who wrote such things about the Sahara. Totally crazy.
Yes, there is a study showing Pasiegos clustering closer to Basques than to other spaniards. As for the haplogroups, yes there are dishonest people out there who manipulate others with no knowledge of genetics, making them believe that frequency of haplogroups is equivalent to admixture levels. But it's not gonna happen in this forum.
 

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