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Thanks for sharing. This paper does show the branching of HV0a in the graph, but nowhere does it indicate that HV0a was actually found in the population, nor at what frequency. It's of course possible that HV0a is found in Finland, since only a tiny percentage of the European population has had their mtDNA tested. However based on the data I have, if HV0a is found in Finland it is only at trace frequencies (<1%).
EDIT : I have checked the FTDNA Projects for HV0 and for V. They do have 4 HV0a members from Finland (and 30 V members). Considering that haplogroup HV0+V have a frequency of 7% in Finland, the frequency of HV0 itself is about 0.75%, which is what I expected (<1%).
Many studies report HV0 and V together, as they can only be distinguished from one another by testing the coding region (more expensive test). That is why I made a map of HV0+V as there just wasn't enough data only for V. The Uralic people of the Volga region share essentially the same subclades of V as the Finns. I have seen confirmed data at least for V1a1 and V7a.The frequency of HV0 (including V) in Volga-Ural is thefollowing: Mari 11, Chuvash 7.3, Karelians 6.5, Tatars 5.1/3.9, Russians 5.0, Mordvine4.9, Bashkirs 3.2.
By the way, preV seems to have been detected also in ancientHungarians with a frequency of 3.9%.
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That's for reminding me of that. I am getting doubts about mtDNA V being one of the original maternal lineages of R1b tribes. I came to this conclusion due to several elements:
- Haplogroup V is found alongside U5 in North Africa and in cattle herding communities of the Sahel, where haplogroup R1b-V88 is often quite common (Hausa, Fulani).
- Haplogroup V (V7 and V15) is one of the typical European lineages that has been found in Armenia and Azerbaijan, which is close to the Neolithic homeland of R1b cattle herders.
- No mtDNA V has been found among Mesolithic or Neolithic Europeans to date, which suggests a later diffusion.
However the modern data points at a Middle Eastern origin of haplogroup HV0 and a probable expansion of the V branch from Northwest Africa to Iberia then to the rest of Europe. It's hard to reconcile the two datasets. Actually the only way to reconcile the two is to assume that haplogroup HV0 and V both originated in the Middle East, and that V was indeed found at least (but perhaps not exclusively) among Neolithic R1b cattle herders, and that some V subclades spread to Iberia via North Africa with R1b-V88, while others spread across the Caucasus with R1b-M269 and later Indo-Europeans. So far haplogroup V hasn't been found in Yamna, but it was found in Corded Ware and Unetice.
Interestingly haplogroup V seems virtually absent from Central and South Asia, which at least means it wasn't linked to the Indo-Iranian branch (R1a-Z93) of the Indo-Europeans.
You're most welcome :)
Interesting, considering that the Maikop and South Yamna Cultures are made up of R1B and G2a clans predominately and that the Bud Dniester Culture; R1a is negatve of G2a men. I have a hunch that if haplogroup V might have been a native clan of the R1B Cattle Herders then mtdna V would have originated from the Caucasian Neolithic Culture; G2A clan although I could be wrong.
What peaks in Basques and Irish which might have spread from the Atlantic to the east?
This is most likely not true. R1b was born in Central Asia. Read Maciamo's article: http://www.eupedia.com/forum/threads...ues-become-R1b - How did the Basques become R1b?
I was thinking LP.
People from the east arrive in the Atlantic region - LP spreads because cattle are ideal for the Atlantic bio-region - LP spreads back east.
bio-regions:
http://www.eea.europa.eu/data-and-ma...image_original
LP:
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-k4oPZEUauf...equencies..png
If LP developed along the Atlantic coast then it wouldn't matter where the haplogroups originally came from. The dna of the people who developed LP could gradually spread eastwards.
Hi, I'm a newbie and very happy to have found this group.
I'm Welsh, with very many generations, on nearly all lines, coming from 2 Welsh counties, I would have expected a higher Atlantic admixture. It seems I do get higher numbers on other tools.
North Sea: 41.20%
Atlantic: 23.81%
Baltic: 9.69%
Eastern Euro: 8.93%
West Med: 11.59%
West Asian: 2.86%
South Asian: 0.73%
Siberian: 0.61%
Amerindian: 0.11%
Oceanian: 0.47%
Although, when I look at the other break outs using Eurogenes K15, I seem to be predominantly West Norwegian.
Welcome Llandeilo!
I think "Atlantic" in K15, is a mixture of two different components origin: North Atlantic (Origin WHG) + Iberian (EEF), which gives it a hardly understandable aspect in K15.
In clear, i think "Atlantic" did not exist!
You should try K36.
It is possible that you have a higher rate for North Atlantic and low for Iberian.
For comparison, in K36, British have about 17% for North Atlantic and 12% for Iberian
I'm HV0 and have Atlantic 31% on K15
I think "Atlantic" represents the expansion of LP people after the neolithic from a source in Cantabria/Brittany
http://cdn.eupedia.com/images/conten...-admixture.png
and "North Sea" represents the same thing but from a second source around the North Sea/Scandinavia
http://www.eupedia.com/europe/autoso...hwest_European
both were particular local mixtures of paleo HG/neolithic farmer/IE DNA imo so neither represent base populations but those particular local mixtures had an explosive expansion along the Atlantic coast at a particular moment in time as a result of LP and a slower eastward drift over time after that initial explosion.
If you add the two components together (Atlantic + NW Euro) the combined value more or less maps onto modern LP levels.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/B7VSAmkCAAMMS8c.png:large
it's difficult to compare 'atlantic' in different K's: K12, K15, K36 etc... it's confusing I think
for K15, if I'm right, 'atlantic' appears about more than 12% in Ust'Ishim and Kostenki-14 (>30000 BC and >20000 BC) and it disappears almost completley in HG Samara man. It regains some strength (about 5%) in later Yamnaya Samara. Question: is this the same 'atlantic'? did people from Finland or Karelia get southwards meanwhile without 'atlantic' or almost, and Central Asia 'atlantic' arrived or came back into Samara at Yamanaya times, or is it a West to East introgression of North Atlantic North Sea people in the Steppes???
according to periods, the moves changed direction. Archeology seems attesting migrations after LGM from France-Cantabria complex to NorthEast Europe and maybe very late even during Neolithic South the Baltic until North Russia. these last expansions could have leaven some spotty populations differing in big proportions from the previous ones. So a part of 'atlantic' DNA could have reached some tribes far in North-East Europe. But some of the MODERN 'atlantic' aDNA seems less WHG and more 'west-med': : could the megalithers (like the Long Barrows people having influenced Funnelbeaker C.) be responsible of an addition of aDNA (more of intruding 'west-med' + less of ancient WHG)? the question is not so ridiculous and archeology changes by time with new discoveries coming to complete the patchwork; the physical anthropology, so mocked by some people, doesn't contradict these facts concerning some places, even if I take it as a complement of knowledge, not as the main tool of it. Some of our old certitudes have bursted off. the East to West moves so typical of the I-Ean and others invasions can have dissimulated some opposite moves, less important. the ABO (O, rhesus -) distributions in Europe support partly the same scenario even if this tool is very unprecise sometimes. the m-tH distributions is interesting too.
I got 29.42% Atlantic.
# Population Percent
1 East_Med 23.55
2 Atlantic 19
3 West_Med 15.02
4 West_Asian 12.71
5 North_Sea 10.29
6 Eastern_Euro 7.04
7 Baltic 5.63
8 Red_Sea 4.42
9 South_Asian 1.49
10 Amerindian 0.55
11 Sub-Saharan 0.3