MOESAN
Elite member
- Messages
- 5,893
- Reaction score
- 1,295
- Points
- 113
- Location
- Brittany
- Ethnic group
- more celtic
- Y-DNA haplogroup
- R1b - L21/S145*
- mtDNA haplogroup
- H3c
I didn't find Estonians for Dodecad K12b, but I found two Lithuanian samples there.
Here are the Dodecad K12b results, and also the Eurogenes K15 results.
I guess since more than 93% of the genes of these modern Balts comes from the first four categories in Eurogenes 15, maybe they are the most closely related to the ancient European hunter-gatherers.
Actually, the Caucasus component in the modern samples looks like the Gedrosia component in the 2,000-year-old sample.
Dodecad K12b Population Lithuanian_D Lithuanians RISE00 Source Dodecad Behar y-str.org N 9 9 1 Gedrosia 0 0 9.76% Siberian 0 0 0.27% Northwest_African 0 0 - Southeast_Asian 0 0 - Atlantic_Med 13.9 13.7 32.02% North_European 73.7 77.1 56.99% South_Asian 0.7 0.1 0.96% East_African 0 0 - Southwest_Asian 1.6 1 - East_Asian 0 0 - Caucasus 10.1 8 - Sub_Saharan 0 0 -
Eurogenes K15 Population RISE00 Estonian Lithuanian North_Sea 37.87% 26.23 20.15 Atlantic 30.48% 16.33 15.72 Baltic 18.50% 30.12 36.36 Eastern_Euro 13.16% 20.68 21.18 West_Med - 1.83 2.5 West_Asian - 0.56 1.63 East_Med - 0.01 0.61 Red_Sea - 0.00 0.34 South_Asian - 0.53 0.61 Southeast_Asian - 0.02 0.06 Siberian - 2.13 0.13 Amerindian - 1.09 0.36 Oceanian - 0.46 0.19 Northeast_African - 0.00 0.11 Sub-Saharan - 0.00 0.06
Thanks. It's interesting to notice all the Corded people seem richer for North Sea (element among the 'nordic' classic type I think) than today Balts and Estonians, spite being lower for other northern component ('baltic') and even 'east-euro'; higher for 'atlantic' - at the contrary, no 'caucasus' component in them in these calculations.
It could confirm the passage of Corded people throught South before reaching the northern lands of Europe and the origin somewhere around the North-East of Caspian Sea of some elements contributing ot the 'nordic' dolichocephalic phenotype ("nordic" today, geographically speaking); it could explain also the shorter distance between 'northwest-euro' and 'westasian' (without separating, helas, 'gedrosia' from 'caucasus') than between 'baltic' and 'westasian', in some poolings.... the %s dominating depigmentation among the 'nordic' phenotype nad the longiligne skeleton could have been picked in central Eurasia of ancient times, not in North Europe...