Silesian;653216]I'm only interested in R1b in Corded Ware. So far there are L51+ , Z2109+, V1636+(single grave).
No Dom2 horses have been found in Corded Ware.
However we can list the ancient R1b cultural samples.
Yamnaya- Z2109+ and L23+
https://amtdb.org/sample/I0443
Wagons, Copper smelting, copper metallurgy(
https://www.researchgate.net/public...ogenesis_of_'Dniester_CopperBronze_Metallurgy'), tanged copper daggers Dom2 horses-Turganik, Elshanka pottery, Kurgans and Kurgan-Stele
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kernosovskiy_idol
We're discussing COPPER metallurgy, Silesian, and not of the Corded Ware or Bell Beaker steppe admixed people wo entered Central Europe. Please pay particular attention to the date:
"This ought to be related to alater chronology, to that of a‘late pit grave’ phase, which in the middle drainage basin of the Dniester is dated to
2650-2500 BC."
Also, there is this:
"The objects from the Ivonivka Hoard (Fig. 1: 2) are one of akind; it is the rst
discovery of such and of ametal tool from the early Bronze Age in the north-
ern Black Sea Region. The artefacts from the hoard (Fig. 1: 3, 4)
have asimilar
form to that of Eneolithic ‘Usatovo’ and ‘
Maykop’ at axe-adzes in the Anatolia
tradition, though diering signicantly in their smaller dimensions, though among
‘Maykop’ samples there also occur similarly small products."
This is not original work, but rather copies, and the rest of the paper suggests to me they were made either in Maykop or in Cucuteni/Tripolye or were copies of work produced in those areas.
"Similar, at axe-adzes are also known in
Maykop culture in the northern
Caucasus [Chernykh 1966] (Fig. 8). Usatovo products fashioned out of arsenic
bronze, Anatolia type, are considered to be the oldest products fashioned out of
bronze in the northern Black Sea area [Ryndina, Konkova 1982]. The hoard from
the Loshniv site,
which in all probability belongs to the Gordineşti group, late Tri-
polye culture, demonstrates that arsenic bronzes of the Anatolia type are becoming
widespread from the second half of the 4th mill. BC in the entire Dniester drainage
basin as far as its northern course."
"The tradition of processing arsenic bronze during the decline Tripolye culture
(Usatovo arsenic bronzes and those from the site of the ‘Loshniv Hoard’) is also
continued in the Dniester Region during the early Bronze Age. This is testied to
not only by the adze from the ‘Ivonivka Hoard’ (Fig. 1, 3; an. nr 1329), but also
‘guards’ serving as reinforcers in the wooden handle of the stone mace from the
inhumation grave of the Catacomb culture, Prydnistryanske.
Surely you see that you've made my points for me? The steppe people of the Pontic steppe were either trading for these goods, or allowing "foreign" craftsmen to mine and shape their ores, or they were copying from a tradition not their own, one which didn't develop organically on the steppe.
For some of this material there is no date, no description, no citation, so I won't comment.
Bell Beakers-Z2109+L51 Tanged copper daggers, possible connection to horses. Possible red hair- Blogger-Genetiker [FONT=var(--main-font)]I7044-[/FONT]
Beaker[FONT=var(--main-font)], 2500-2200 BCE R1b-Z2109+ Blond/ D-blond- Blue eyes I2787-[/FONT]
Bell Beaker[FONT=var(--main-font)]-Hungary,2457-2201-Light skin, [/FONT]
Red hair.
Szigetszentmiklós Cemetery (Santa's Six Foot Elves)
https://bellbeakerblogger.blogspot.com/2017/07/szigetszentmiklos-cemetery-santas-six.html
For the umpteenth time, Silesian, the steppe couldn't have given the Bell Beakers blonde hair, red hair, light skin or blue eyes, because first you have to possess the alleles. They didn't have them. They were darker than any modern Europeans.
Only after mixing with Central European farmers did these traits appear among them.
As to your link to the Bell Beaker burial site, it also supports what I said about the culture and technology of the steppe people who entered Central Europe: no or exceedingly few metals, no or very few horses and not of the type expected, and altogether very poor graves indeed.