In Bell Beaker Iberia K1a1b1 (the ancestor of the most common Askenazi mitochondrial haplogroup) are 4/37 of the samples.
That's basically being part of the population.
While as we know, the Yamnaya replaced also the women in Britain. Leaving only 1/37 of the samples that managed to survive...
It makes a lot of sense to me, I don't imagine peasants and poor city dwellers finding a wife/settling with a husband.
I could imagine people that are poor by today's standards but have an stable source of income, having those 5,6 children people had on average.
And the Nordics didn't...
From Cristiano Viejo 🙄🙄🙄.
Well maybe it's because France comes from Frank.
And always seemed like a very unitarian nation.
Way before strong states existed in the rest of Europe, there was the French Monarchy.
High levels??? A country named after Germanic peoples should have way more U106.
That's superrare.
It's even more Hispanic than Frankish.
Only 16% in the northern regions and in the center drops to 10%.
What happened during the Middle Ages or the French Revolution??
May be the low birth rates...
Looks rural people have weapons.
While urbanized populations have way less.
In the South kind of half, and very few in big blue states but Texas.
By the way, do we know about illegal gun ownership.
That groove in the middle of France seems to be a continuation of Roman lands.
East to that there was more R1b, and inmediately afterthat there's more I1/R1a in Germany
With the coming of the CWC and Bell Beakers, Europe has got their current 1 population that comes in 3.
Basically because nobody from outside has come in since(you could argue that Yamnaya/EHG were in Russia, but not in the West).
Anyway, that population was (and still is) majority R1b in the...
https://www.google.com/amp/s/genomicatlas.org/2021/04/25/genetics-of-the-nordic-bronze-age/amp/
I was reading this blog post about the Nordic Bronze Age.
But this caught my attention.
It basically says that R1a conquered Scandinavia before than R1b, something that makes total sense, since...
https://haplotree.info/maps/ancient_dna/samples.php?searchcolumn=mtDNA_haplogroup&searchfor=K1a1b1&ybp=500000,0
The oldest samples of the precurssor haplogroup of Askhenazis are from Neolithic France and Bronze/Iron Ages Spain.
I hadn't pay attention to that, thanks to you and the previous poster.
But she has like 20% and that seems a lot, she says in the video that she isn't thought of as Peruvian.
Thanks for the reply, I don't know the exact maths by which how old, and how many branches you need to lower diversity then.
Mexico hardly has Italian, German or French surnames so it's Y-Chromosome must be mostly Spanish.
J2 has origins in Turkey, if it's European(Askenazi) Jewish it's very likely that they passed through the Roman Empire, they may even have converted there.
Jews are the result of Jewish makes and NW Mediterránean women. That match was made in the Roman Imperial era.
How do we not know it comes from Normans???
Romans would have it difficult to stay(I mean the possibility is there), but after the Anglosaxon conquest and having a weak foothold in Britons land...
I don't really like MyHeritage, the way they classify nationalities is weird and visibly incorrect.
Askenazi Jewish is something like europeanized Jewish, so being European and having some Jewish... Kind of make sense the Askenazi.
Then there's Baltic, there's a lot of Baltic, for some reason...
https://haplotree.info/maps/ancient_dna/index.php?searchcolumn=&searchfor=&ybp=500000,0
If you find the orange figure in the Russian far east, you can find a West Eurasian in the 7th century with mt haplogroup H2.
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