paul333
Banned
- Messages
- 221
- Reaction score
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- Y-DNA haplogroup
- H2a1 M9313
- mtDNA haplogroup
- H1c3
Is there any news regarding the archaeological investigation of this Battlefield, 1300-1200BC, regarding Isotope and Y DNA results. I understand there were many male victims, remains found.
The reason I ask, is that in using a new tool a SNP Tracker, it indicates that there were possibly subclades of 'Y H2' DNA, (Y21630 +2), showing very near to the area of the Tollense site, in modern Northern Germany during the Bronze age, and that they had arrived from, and were ancestral to Neolithic Sweden since at least around 3,500-3000 BC.
Did they use an old Amber trade path/route into Sweden,and then back to North Germany and beyond, thousands of years ago, I'm sure Isotope and DNA analysis would help, but I cannot find much about it.
Descendants of these Y H2 Bronze age people are later located in the UK, one referenced during the Roman period and another during the medieval periods. The path they took is showing from the same area of Northern Germany,and very close to the Tollense Battle site, during the Bronze age and later.
The Roman period entry,( SNP- FGC31857 ), appears to have entered Britain as a possible Later Germanic mercanary or feoderati. The other medieval ( SNP-BY37188 ) possibly a descendant or invader during the migration period or later, both show a Path of ancestry from a location in Sweden, during the Neolithic period.
The medieval is dated 1,500 years before the present meaning,he possibly lived around AD 500 the period of late fifth, and early sixth century, the very time of 'Beowulf ', and during the early Anglo Saxon migrations from the continent, He may even be linked to the Anglo-Saxon, Sutton Hoo, people,he certainly has the right ancestor path.
Is there any papers, or information publicly available, or scheduled to be released soon ?. The Tollense Valley site, should be producing a large amount of information by now, as its been known from 1997, and excavated from 2007 onwards, yet very little public information is available.??
The reason I ask, is that in using a new tool a SNP Tracker, it indicates that there were possibly subclades of 'Y H2' DNA, (Y21630 +2), showing very near to the area of the Tollense site, in modern Northern Germany during the Bronze age, and that they had arrived from, and were ancestral to Neolithic Sweden since at least around 3,500-3000 BC.
Did they use an old Amber trade path/route into Sweden,and then back to North Germany and beyond, thousands of years ago, I'm sure Isotope and DNA analysis would help, but I cannot find much about it.
Descendants of these Y H2 Bronze age people are later located in the UK, one referenced during the Roman period and another during the medieval periods. The path they took is showing from the same area of Northern Germany,and very close to the Tollense Battle site, during the Bronze age and later.
The Roman period entry,( SNP- FGC31857 ), appears to have entered Britain as a possible Later Germanic mercanary or feoderati. The other medieval ( SNP-BY37188 ) possibly a descendant or invader during the migration period or later, both show a Path of ancestry from a location in Sweden, during the Neolithic period.
The medieval is dated 1,500 years before the present meaning,he possibly lived around AD 500 the period of late fifth, and early sixth century, the very time of 'Beowulf ', and during the early Anglo Saxon migrations from the continent, He may even be linked to the Anglo-Saxon, Sutton Hoo, people,he certainly has the right ancestor path.
Is there any papers, or information publicly available, or scheduled to be released soon ?. The Tollense Valley site, should be producing a large amount of information by now, as its been known from 1997, and excavated from 2007 onwards, yet very little public information is available.??
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