Goga
Banned
- Messages
- 2,651
- Reaction score
- 152
- Points
- 0
- Y-DNA haplogroup
- R1a*
- mtDNA haplogroup
- HV1b2
I think I solved the riddle, by putting everything together from different sources. Everything comes together and all questions answered.
Y-DNA haplogorup R* could have been evolved somewhere in Central Asia.
After some time R* migrated into the Iranian Plateau and evolved into R1*, for about 30,000 years ago.
R1* became a ‘Caucasus’ component marker. After couple thousands of years when the ice age ended in Northern Eurasia, R1* migrated into Europe and back into the Central Asia as R1a.
One part of R1* that ended up in the Eastern Europe did that via Central Asia. R1a went to Central Asia, picked up some (2-3%) Siberian genes and became a Gedrosia component. After that it migrated into Europe from Central Asia. Gedrosia component diluted in Eastern Europe, but there's still 30% of Gedrosia component left in North_European component.
One part of R1* stayed for a little while on the Iranian plateau, evolved into R1b and then, went directly to Western Europe via Anatolian plains.
Y-DNA haplogorup R* could have been evolved somewhere in Central Asia.
After some time R* migrated into the Iranian Plateau and evolved into R1*, for about 30,000 years ago.
R1* became a ‘Caucasus’ component marker. After couple thousands of years when the ice age ended in Northern Eurasia, R1* migrated into Europe and back into the Central Asia as R1a.
One part of R1* that ended up in the Eastern Europe did that via Central Asia. R1a went to Central Asia, picked up some (2-3%) Siberian genes and became a Gedrosia component. After that it migrated into Europe from Central Asia. Gedrosia component diluted in Eastern Europe, but there's still 30% of Gedrosia component left in North_European component.
One part of R1* stayed for a little while on the Iranian plateau, evolved into R1b and then, went directly to Western Europe via Anatolian plains.