berun
Regular Member
- Messages
- 1,084
- Reaction score
- 183
- Points
- 0
If not posted before or if they are barely known:
Díaz N., Solórzano E., Montiel, R., García, C., Yañez C., Malgosa, A., 2004, Determination genétique de l’individu
Néolithique de Segudet (Ordino), les restes humains les plus anciens d’Andorre. Antropo, 7, 39-44.
www.didac.ehu.es/antropo
Woman buried inside a cist in Ordino (Andorra), Epicardial culture and dated by 4200 BC; the region had a traditional economy of cattle herding (wintering in the valley and herding in the grasslands that are above the 2300m in summer), in the pots found in the cist it was found already residue of milk and grains. mtDNA K.
...........
LA NECRÓPOLIS DE ÉPOCA TARTÉSICA DE LA ANGORRILLA (Alcalá del Río, Sevilla)
https://www.researchgate.net/public...IENTO_DE_LA_ANGORRILLA_ALCALA_DEL_RIO_SEVILLA
Two women and two men buried in the VII BC were tested for mtDNA with online databases, the results taken from not optimal samples were obtained for three individuals which PhyloTree classified as H - HV, H1, and H1a1.
I would expect some Phoenician mtDNA as the "Orietalizing Period" is the label for a real colonization.
...........
not ancient DNA but dealing with dates...:
DNA Polymorphisms in Human Populations
8, 9, 10 December 2016, Musée de l’Homme, Paris, France
http://ecoanthropologie.mnhn.fr/DPHP2016/DPHP2016_plenary.htm
A Bronze Age lineage dominates the Y-chromosome landscape in the Iberian Peninsula
The young age for DF27 is not to correlate goodly with the Raithlin results as the sample more old is of around 2000 BC and had already two mutuations below L21, providing so a date that fits better with YFull of around 2500 BC and the time that Bell Beakers entered the British Isles... so let's check if at least they know such discrepancy.
Díaz N., Solórzano E., Montiel, R., García, C., Yañez C., Malgosa, A., 2004, Determination genétique de l’individu
Néolithique de Segudet (Ordino), les restes humains les plus anciens d’Andorre. Antropo, 7, 39-44.
www.didac.ehu.es/antropo
Woman buried inside a cist in Ordino (Andorra), Epicardial culture and dated by 4200 BC; the region had a traditional economy of cattle herding (wintering in the valley and herding in the grasslands that are above the 2300m in summer), in the pots found in the cist it was found already residue of milk and grains. mtDNA K.
...........
LA NECRÓPOLIS DE ÉPOCA TARTÉSICA DE LA ANGORRILLA (Alcalá del Río, Sevilla)
https://www.researchgate.net/public...IENTO_DE_LA_ANGORRILLA_ALCALA_DEL_RIO_SEVILLA
Two women and two men buried in the VII BC were tested for mtDNA with online databases, the results taken from not optimal samples were obtained for three individuals which PhyloTree classified as H - HV, H1, and H1a1.
I would expect some Phoenician mtDNA as the "Orietalizing Period" is the label for a real colonization.
...........
not ancient DNA but dealing with dates...:
DNA Polymorphisms in Human Populations
8, 9, 10 December 2016, Musée de l’Homme, Paris, France
http://ecoanthropologie.mnhn.fr/DPHP2016/DPHP2016_plenary.htm
A Bronze Age lineage dominates the Y-chromosome landscape in the Iberian Peninsula
The genetic landscape of the Iberian Peninsula is dominated (as in the rest of Western Europe) by haplogroup R1b, which comprises two thirds of the Y chromosomes; the rest is divided roughly equally between E-M35, G, I, and J. Within R1b, R1b-S116 (also known as P312 dominates, with ~60% in Spain;it further trifurcates into three major branches having distinct geographical distributions: M529 (L21 radiating from the British Isles, U152 in France, Switzerland and N. Italy, and DF27 in the Iberian Peninsula. DF27 is poorly known, and we have sought to characterize its distribution and diversity, with the aim of reconstructing its history. We have typed DF27 and six of its derived SNPs, as well as 16 Y-STRs in 2,993 males from 32 populations located in Spain, Portugal, France and Ireland; SNP allele frequencies were also gathered from the reference populations in the 1000 Genomes Project. We confirmed that DF27 is the most frequent haplogroup in Iberia, with an average frequency ~45%, while it dropped to <15% right across the Pyrenees. Within Iberia, it ranged from 40% in most populations to ~75% in Basques. Elsewhere, it showed high frequencies in Colombia and Puerto Rico, which implies it can be used to trace Iberian male migrations into the Americas. However, our most striking result is how young DF27 is. We estimated from STR variation that DF27 originated 4,000±150 years ago (ya); it took it just 120 generations to grow to ~12 million carriers in Iberia and ~75 million in Central and South America (assuming just 1/3 paternal Iberian ancestry). This places the origin of DF27 in the early Bronze Age, and at least 2,000 years after the arrival of the Neolithic, which was supposed to be the last major event that shaped the European genetic landscape. The DF27 expansion may be part of a global trend, in which bursts of male lineages have been observed at different periods, and in different geographical regions (Poznik et al. 2016.
The young age for DF27 is not to correlate goodly with the Raithlin results as the sample more old is of around 2000 BC and had already two mutuations below L21, providing so a date that fits better with YFull of around 2500 BC and the time that Bell Beakers entered the British Isles... so let's check if at least they know such discrepancy.