Location:Carrowkeel, Sligo, Ireland There appears to have been a vibrant, diverse community, or communities, based on the burials and history revealed. This branch has several subclades as well as people from Ireland, Scotland, England, British Isles, Germany, France, Denmark, Northern Ireland and Norway. Ancient Mediterranean people would have carried mostly haplogroups such as E1b1b, J1, J2a, and to a lower extent also G2a and T. Nowadays, those haplogroups are considerably rarer among the Irish and Highland Scots, and inexistent in remote islands like Orkney or Shetland (except for haplogroup T). Location:Poulnabrone, Clare, Ireland mtDNA:X2b4. Age:Mesolithic 4793-4608 cal BC Age:Middle Neolithic 3632-3374 cal BC specific subgroup from the drop-down menu. branch (haplogroup) and ancestry information for the project member(s) associated Everyone in Europe came from those populations. There is another study not in front of me at the moment, but it is fascinating. Fortunately, the minimum coverage threshold for the Bradley lab was 30X, meaning 30 scanned reads. Sex:Male Location:Site Z, Newgrange, Meath, Ireland of the earliest known direct maternal ancestors for project members. Sex:Female Y-DNA:I-Y3709 There are a few pages of Spencer Wells book, "Deep Ancestry, Inside the Genographic Project," that include information about the mtDNA Haplogroup T2b. During the BBC One documentary Meet the Izzards, the actor and comedian Eddie Izzard learns that her mitochondrial DNA is of Haplogroup T, specifically the subclade T2f1a1.[15]. Age:Middle Neolithic 3495-3040 cal BC I have done the big Y on myFTDNA, MtDNA H13a1a1a and Y-DNA R-FTA31329, uploaded to gedmatch for kit # YC9806695, when I run the Archaic DNA matches I come up matching the Rathlin1, F999800, at the 7 cM level. If most of the hunter-gatherer disappeared what explains me an aberration? Distribution of mtDNA haplogroup T2 in Europe, North Africa and the Middle East. Age:Middle Neolithic 3638-3137 cal BC Language links are at the top of the page across from the title. The highest frequencies of mtDNA T1 are observed among the Udmurts (15%) of the Volga-Ural region of Russia, followed by Romania (6%) and the southern Balkans (Bulgaria, Macedonia, Albania, all 4.5%), the northern Fertile Crescent (Lebanon, Iraq, eastern Turkey, all around 5.5%), the South Caucasus (Armenia, Georgia, Azerbaijan, 4.5% to 5.5%), then Austria and the Czech Republic (3.5%). Can you email me or find me on facebook ? mtDNA:HV0-T195C! Y-DNA:I-Y3709 Also blue eyed and with the Celtic C282Y. Sex:Male Within subhaplogroup T2e, a very rare motif is identified among Sephardic Jews of Turkey and Bulgaria and suspected conversos from the New World (Bedford 2012). 2020) Thank you Roberta for your article on these ancient DNA studies. The events they witnessed were experienced by your ancestors too. 2), and J1c15 (Fig. Our answers about Irish settlers come from the skeletons of the people who lived in Ireland at one time and whose bones remain in various types of burials and tombs. 2020) This area was previously Saxon. Loschbour Man is from present-day Luxembourg, Motala is from Sweden and Steigen is from Norway. (1996) sequenced the mitochondrial DNA of Grand Duke of Russia Georgij Romanov in order to establish the authenticity of the remains of his brother, Tsar Nicholas II of Russia. (Sale started today. Y-DNA:I-FT354500 Location:Cohaw, Cavan, Ireland Woot! This includes a great number of European nobles, including George I of Great Britain and Frederick William I of Prussia (through the Electress Sophia of Hanover), Charles I of England, George III of the United Kingdom, George V of the United Kingdom, Charles X Gustav of Sweden, Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden, Maurice of Nassau, Prince of Orange, Olav V of Norway, and George I of Greece. ), Sample:Rathlin1 / RM127 (Cassidy et al. The second wave was known as Neolithic or the people who arrived as farmers. Have tracked back both male and female blood line to at least 1800 in Cork. My mother's haplogroup came back as L2a1c3, which is most heavily associated with the Atlantic American slave trade. 2020) The first remains to be processed with high coverage whole genome sequencing were those of 3 males whose remains were found in a cist burial on volcanic Rathlin Island, located in the channel between Ireland and Scotland. Apart from a peak in Cyprus, T2c1 is most common in the Persian Gulf region but is also found in the Levant and in Mediterranean Europe, with a more far-flung distribution at very low levels. Sex:Male Looking for anything on my paternal haplogroup I-Y4751 The language of the first inhabitants of the British isles undoubtably spoke proto Celtic languages. Y-DNA:I-FT344600 This particular haplogroup originates from West Asia between 3,150 and 8,400 years ago. These include those coding for lactase persistence, blue eye color, Y chromosome R1b haplotypes. Regarding T1, the only deep clade that could been linked to the Indo-European migrations is T1a1a and its subclade T1a1a1, which Pala et al estimate to be respectively 11,000 years old and 6,800 years old. I believe that is what the old Scottish genealogies, such as for Clan Campbell, claimed. Location:Killuragh, Limerick, Ireland Each line's present geography shows the path Jesse James's remains were compared against two maternal relatives and all were found to belong to mt-haplogroup T2. Within subhaplogroup T2e, a very rare motif is identified among Sephardic Jews of Turkey and Bulgaria and suspected conversos from the New World (Bedford 2012). 2020) Location:Parknabinnia, Clare, Ireland A study conducted by Castro et al. My maternal haplogroup, however, is T2b. Haplogroup I has been found in over 10% of the bodies in tested from Viking cemeteries. During this period, many societies began to invest heavily in building monuments, which suggests an increase in social organization. Location:Annagh, Limerick, Ireland Location:Parknabinnia, Clare, Ireland On the levant, Q was passed from the ottomans and selchuk turk. I would encourage you to read the two papers, linked below, along with supplemental information. It was discovered that the lines in the US are closely related but the line in the UK are of a considerable distance to the common male ancestor. Rathlin Island is but a spit of land, with a total population of about 150 people, 4 miles east to west and 2.5 miles north to south. Oh, yes i do connect. Here is a summary of all European kings and queens (and crown princes) whose haplogroup can be deduced from the testing of a relative. The complete lack of T2b, or any T2 but one T2c, in the Fertile Crescent during the Early Neolithic period supports Pala et al. 's hypothesis that several T2 lineages would have occupied western Anatolia and south-east Europe during the Mesolithic, and would have consequently have been assimilated by the wave of Neolithic farmers before spreading all over Europe. see similarities and differences in migration patterns. Everyone wants to know who they are and what their origins are, so I researched T2b. 2016) The original language of Rathlin was Gaelic. Conflict on the island didnt stop there, with the Campbell and McDonald clan, among others, having bloody clashes on this tiny piece of land, with losers being tossed from the cliffs. At your recommendation, I slogged all the way through the 60 dense pages of one of the articles. There is further evidence that SBj, Ajv58 and Ajv52 might form an additional branch, sibling to I-FT344600 Sex:Male Are we really claiming King Arthur now? very interesting I have the same DNA as the Rathlin male R.L21 u51, I-Y4751 Paternal haplogroup mtDNA:T2c1d-T152C! Only after the Norman conquest was Caledonia renamed Scotland, in honor of the Irish who assimilated the Caledonians, Picts and Vikings and imparted their rich culture and learning to them. In fact, the only thing missing in the perfect match is a mutation that defines haplogroup T. So, there are two explanations for this difference in the match: A) You don't belong to haplogroup T2b, in fact you don't belong to haplogroup T at all. Age:Middle Neolithic 3338-3028 cal BC Sex:Male H-SK1182 (Shared YDNA) (2012). Without their generosity, we would never know that an ancient sample actually split branches of the tree, nor could we see if we match. Thank you for the article. Yes,matching on the Rathlin group (R-L21 and R-DF21) on cousins yDNA and BigY. Other relevant ancient samples are Carsington_Pasture_1, I3134, I7638 at I-BY166411, and Coldrum_1 and I2660 at I-BY168618. mtDNA:K1a-T195C! Y-DNA:I-Y3709 Age:Middle Neolithic 3617-3138 cal BC 2020) Y-DNA:I-L1498 Age:Mesolithic 4226-3963 cal BC These markers define the mtDNA haplogroup currently designated T2, a subgroup of Haplogroup T. Haplogroup T has an estimated age of about 10,000 to 12,000 years. Sex:Male By region: As well as dozens of German princely and ducal houses that could not all be listed here. Click to view original post in dataset or 'Obejct ID - Location' to show object on the map. H-BY37186 (Smith UK) with the latest FTDNA feature my closest Old is the Glennamong 1007 (GNM1007)- It is the best evidence so far that haplogroup T was present in Europe before the continent was recolonised by Neolithic farmers. Sex:Male There are 4 mtDNA haplogroups found exclusively in Jewish populations and who are referred to as the "four founding mothers." Three of those mtDNA haplogroups are K1a1b1a, K2a2, and K1a9. mtDNA:T2b, Sample:Poulnabrone02 / PN02 (Cassidy et al. FTDNA Comment:One of 6 ancient samples currently on this branch How many times was Ireland settled, and did the new settlers simply mingle with those already in residence, or did they displace the original settlers? Age:Late Neolithic 2883-2634 cal BC 2020) Y-DNA:I-Y3712 2016) They would later have been diffused around Europe by Neolithic agriculturalists after intermingling with the inhabitants of Southeast Europe. For brevity, only the first three levels of subclades (branches) are shown. Branch has 42 subbranches and men from Ireland, England, Scotland, France, and Germany. This phylogenetic tree of haplogroup I subclades is based on the paper (van Oven 2008) harv error: no target: CITEREFvan_Oven2008 (help) and subsequent published research (Behar 2012b). Alexander Jagiellon of Poland & Lithuania, T1a1 : found throughout Europe and the Middle East / found in EBA Moldova (Cucuteni-Trypillia culture), in Chalcolithic Poland (Corded Ware culture), in Bronze Age Russia (Fatnyanovo culture), in the Unetice culture, and in MLBA Jordan, T1a1a1: Indo-European subclade found in Europe, the Caucasus, the Near East, Central Asia and South Asia, T1a1b: found in Europe (Germany, Finland, Lithuania, Ukraine), the South Caucasus, the Near East, Iran and the Indian subcontinent, T1a1c: found in Mesopotamia, Armenia, Ukraine, Germany, the Netherlands, France, Britain, Ireland, Italy, Portugal and the Canaries, T1a1f: found in the Near East and North Africa, T1a1i: found in Russia, Estonia, Norway, Ireland and Czechia, T1a1j: found in Sweden, Belarus and Turkey, T1a1k: found in Russia, Ukraine, Romania, Finland, Sweden, Germany, Austria, and Britain, T1a1l: found in Bulgaria, Serbia, Albania and Italy, T1a1q: found in Finland, Sweden and Norway, T1a3: found in England, Scandinavia, Germany, Lithuania, Algeria, Greece and India, T1a2: found in Egypt, Israel, Iraq, Turkey, Cyprus, Italy, Germany and France / found in Bronze Age Israel and Iron Age Lebanon, T1a4: found in Britain, Ireland, Spain, Italy, Slovakia, Mesopotamia, Azerbaijan and Iran, T1a5: found in Russia, Scandinavia, Britain and Portugal, T1a7: found in Sweden, Germany, Cyprus and Sudan, T1a8: found in Russia, Ukraine, Italy, Spain, Iraq and Saudi Arabia, T1b1: found in Jordan, Georgia and Sweden, T1b3: found in Ukraine, Poland, Turkey, Iran and the North Caucasus, T1b4: found in Mesopotamia, Turkey and Greece, T2a1a: found in Europe, the Near East, Central Asia and India / found in Late Neolithic England (Bell Beaker) and EBA England, T2a1b (formerly T4): found especially in Scandinavia, Illyria, Russia, the Caucasus, Central Asia, Iran and Egypt / found in Neolithic Orkney, in Bronze Age Russia, Poland and Scotland, and in Iron Age Lebanon, T2b2: found mostly in western Europe, but also in Iran and India, T2b3: found in mostly in western Europe (especially Sardinia), but also in eastern Europe, Azerbaijan and the Maghreb / found in Neolithic Alsace and Late Neolithic Italy, Spain and France (Bell Beaker), T2b4: found mostly in Europe, but also in Azerbaijan, Mesopotamia, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan and Nepal, T2b4a: found in western Europe and Russia (Volga Tatars), T2b7: found in Finland, Sweden, the Netherlands, France, Switzerland and Italy, T2b7a : found in MLBA Israel (Tell Megiddo), T2b11: found in Europe (incl. of this journey. ), Down, Ireland FTDNA Comment:One of 15 ancient samples currently on this branch Y-DNA:I-Y3712 2020) Being Finnish, they seem intriguing. Britain & Scandinavia FTDNA Comment:One of 15 ancient samples currently on this branch 2020) My maternal haplogroup is U8a and my husbands is J3c. Location:Glebe, Rathlin Island, Northern Ireland Sex:Male mtDNA:J1c3, Sample:Carrowkeel534 / CAK534 (Cassidy et al. In Britain, it has been linked to Scandinavian immigration during periods of Viking settlement. Based on a sample of over 400 modern day Iranians (Kivisild and Metspalu 2003) harv error: no target: CITEREFKivisild_and_Metspalu2003 (help), the T haplogroup represents roughly 8.3% of the population (about 1 out of 12 individuals), with the more specific T1 subtype constituting roughly half of those. 2020) (2012) suggested that some J and T lineages recolonised Europe from the Near Eastern refugia during the Epipaleolithic, following the end of the last glaciation and the melting of the icecaps covering central and northern Europe. Marriage records from the 1600s would indicate related families of Haviland and Cockram in and around Corfe Castle. Sex:Male This page displays a map I am haplo Cts4922 a subclade of the male found in Newgrange. The frequency of T1a and T2 in Yamna samples were each 14.5%, a percentage higher than in any country today and only found in similarly high frequencies among the Udmurts of the Volga-Ural region. One individual had the T2b haplogroup and differed from the TRB T2b that had a back mutation at np 16 296. Sex:Male The mutation defining haplogroup T happened some time around 29,000 years ago, probably in the East Mediterranean region. Sex:Female Sex:Female Although co-operative ideology has often been emphasized as a driver of megalith construction1, the human expenditure required to erect the largest monuments has led some researchers to emphasize hierarchy3of which the most extreme case is a small elite marshalling the labour of the masses. Haplogroups I and X are each found in only 1% of the modern European population. HVR2 Mutations. mtDNA:K1a4a1, Sample:Carrowkeel531 / CAK531 (Cassidy et al. 2020) Y-DNA:I-L1193 According to my DNA analysis I am 50% hunter-gatherer a cave man. FTDNA Comment:Split the I2-S2519 branch. No match for me, but my paternal grand-mother has a K1a4a1 cousin, even though her last known ancestress was for Normandy. T2* is essentially a West Eurasian haplogroup. The geographic distribution within subclade T2 varies greatly with the ratio of subhaplogroup T2e to T2b reported to vary 40-fold across examined populations from a low in Britain and Ireland, to a high in Saudi Arabia (Bedford 2012). Dr. Dan Bradley in his ancient DNA lab in Dublin. T2b is the most common T2 subgroup found in Europe today and it has been identified in ancient samples from the LBK in central Europe. Also rare are I2a (1%) and J2 (1%). Ancient YDNA H2 Shared by Boyts in the US and UK. Age:Late Neolithic 2881-2625 cal BC Of the 37 males sequenced, the lab was able to assign a Y DNA haplogroup to 36. Age:Middle Neolithic 3626-3196 cal BC; 3639-3384 cal BC Many ancient records from the 1300s and 1400s have been located in the Isle of Purbeck, Dorset along with ancient professions of Royal Marblers or Reeves that are associated with Boyt and Boyte. 2020) So cool! 2020) Ruiz-Pesini et al. Age:Middle Neolithic 3629-3371 cal BC Author: Maciamo Hay. We sampled remains from all of the major Irish Neolithic funerary traditions: court tombs, portal tombs, passage tombs, Linkardstown-type burials and natural sites (Fig. Mitochondrial clade T derives from the haplogroup JT, which also gave rise to the mtDNA haplogroup J. Anyone who sailed further west had better have weeks of food, water, and a great deal of good luck. Three PWC individuals shared the K1a1 haplogroup. The third wave heralded the arrival of the Bronze Age when humans began to work with metals. Y-DNA:I-FT354500 It is certain that haplogroup T played an important role in the diffusion of agriculture across Europe. Location:Poulnabrone, Clare, Ireland Sex:Male 4). Sample:Poulnabrone05 / PN05 (Cassidy et al. A Neolithic woman (3343-3030 BC) from Ballynahatty, County, Down, south of Belfast, found in an early megalithic passage-like grave. Sex:Male Haplogroup. Location:Parknabinnia, Clare, Ireland FTDNA Comment:One of 15 ancient samples currently on this branch Sample:Parknabinnia1327 / PB1327 (Cassidy et al. mtDNA:H1, Sample:Parknabinnia768 / PB768 (Cassidy et al. 253 belong to I-M223 . Nonetheless, the maternal lineages recovered in Germany and Switzerland display a strong continuity with Neolithic samples from the same region, and could have been absorbed by the Indo-European male invaders. Age:Early Neolithic 3940-3703 cal BC Sex:Male The last Russian Tsar, Nicholas II, has been shown to be of Haplogroup T, specifically subclade T2.This was established when genetic testing was done on his remains to authenticate his identity. They did find K1a4a1 in Ireland buried at a megalith, but the also showed a network of related people that ranged over to Sweden. LOL! 2016) Proto Celtic is Mesolithic and Gaelic is very similar. In 795, Rathlin had the dubious honor of being the first target of Viking raiding and pillaging. However, if two participants share exactly the same map coordinates, You can compare your DNA haplogroup to see if you are connected. My mtdna plotype is J1C2, and I notice two samples are J1C3. Age:Middle Neolithic 3631-3362 cal BC They also confirm previous reports7,8 that samples from the Early Neolithic of Spain are the best proxy source of their Early Farmer ancestry (Extended Data Fig. Are there descendants of the hunter gatherer population in Ireland today? mtDNA:U5b2a3, Sample:Poulnabrone10_113 / PN113 (Cassidy et al. with that marker. Age:Early-Middle Neolithic 3696-3535 cal BC This paper included the Ballynahatty female and the three Rathlin Island males. Sex:Male The DNA appears to support his views. FTDNA Comment:One of 12 ancient samples currently on this branch 2020) It is the best evidence so far that haplogroup T was present in Europe before the continent was recolonised by Neolithic farmers. mtDNA:J1c6, Sample:Parknabinnia357 / PB357 (Cassidy et al. After that T2 is most frequently encountered in the Netherlands (12%), Sardinia (10%), Iceland (10%), Switzerland (9.5%), Hungary (8.5%) and Ukraine (8.5%), as well as among many ethnic groups around the Caucasus such as the Kumyks (10%), Azeri (9.5%) and Georgians (9%). So for it to exist at such high levels within a single household almost certainly proves some kind of familial relationship between the inhabitants of this house. The Neolithic and Bronze Age transitions were profound cultural shifts catalyzed in parts of Europe by migrations, first of early farmers from the Near East and then Bronze Age herders from the Pontic Steppe. Cassidy et al report that the Y DNA results in several geographic locations, using the ISOGG tree (2018) for haplogroup assignment, although in some cases, I did find some inconsistencies in their haplogroup and SNP names. Interested to know either way . mtDNA:J1c3. We sampled 44whole genomes, among which we identify the adult son of a first-degree incestuous union from remains that were discovered within the most elaborate recess of the Newgrange passage tomb. There is an old tradition, both Gaelic and Galician (Spain), that Ireland was conquered by Celts from Galicia, the still-Celtic region of northwest Spain. Age:Early-Middle Neolithic 3640-3381 cal BC; 3774-3642 cal BC H-FT362000 (Two related Hap H2 male Sets of Ancient Remains, located about 50 miles apart, they had different mothers based on the mtDNA), Correction on the above, SK1182 should be SK1180. Age:Early-Middle Neolithic 3712-3539 cal BC [7], Haplogroup T has also been found among Iberomaurusian specimens dating from the Epipaleolithic at the Afalou prehistoric site in Algeria. Of course, we all want to know if our Y DNA or mitochondrial DNA haplogroups, or that of our family members matches any of these ancient samples. Thats mean im also had irish roots ? About 60% of the ODriscoll are I2a Isles-A (I-Y12072). Interestingly, T2a1b was also found at a Bronze Age site in the Harz mountains in central Germany, described by Brandt et al. Im Haplogroup H44a.My ancient ancestors have some interesting clusters and an alarming tendency to be headless. The mtDNA all matched and fitted into haplogroup T2 (with heteroplasmy at position 16169). Location:Parknabinnia, Clare, Ireland Age:Middle Neolithic 3364-2940 cal BC Sorry Roberta, could you expand a little on that? In 2020, Cassidy et al sequenced another 44 individuals from Irish passage grave burials ranging in age from 4793 to 2910 BC, or about 3000 to 7000 years ago. Actually Im the same haplogroup, rather than knowing if I match for sure, sorry I need to follow the link to see if I match! I would recommend reading the paper in full for the context, including the supplementary information, and not simply extracting the SNP information, because the context is robust as is their analysis. Catherine J de Vries, turnertorpedo@hotmail.com. My y haplotype is L21 (RZ253) R1b1a2a1a2c and mitochondrial is H4a1a1. The T maternal clade is thought to have emanated from the Near East (Bermisheva 2002) harv error: no target: CITEREFBermisheva2002 (help). I am the only one who was tested in my family. Other studies also found mtDNA haplogroup X in Anglo-Saxon skeletons, suggesting a possible Germanic origin. Note that the depth of the phylogenetic tree has been reduced to four subclades downstream of T* (except for T1a1a) to facilitate its reading. FTDNA Comment:See Ashleypark3 How much mutation can one expect in this many generations? T is found in approximately 10% of native Europeans. 2020) There are two kinds of haplogroups: the paternally inherited Y-chromosome DNA (Y-DNA) haplogroups, and the maternally inherited mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) haplogroups. [6], T2 is also found among the Soqotri (7.7%). The first ancient whole genomes from Ireland, including two at high coverage, demonstrate that large-scale genetic shifts accompanied both transitions. The people who lived in Ireland originally are classified as the Mesolithic people, generally referred to as hunter-gatherers. I1 is the second most common with 6%, followed by I2b at 5%, R1a at 2.5%, and E1b1b at 2%. 1, 2). mtDNA:U5b1-T16189C!-T16192C! Im wondering what this means in terms of my ancestry? Location:Poulnabrone, Clare, Ireland Centered around Near Eastern, European and Caucasian maternal lineages. /30.3.2022 mtDNA:K2a9, Sample:Baunogenasraid72 / BG72 (Cassidy et al. Did you all happen to see Robertas article on the Lombard DNA samples? We will never know who he really was. The threshold between the Neolithic and Bronze Age fell at about 3750 BC in western Europe and Ireland, right between these two burials. 2020) mtDNA:U5b1c1, Sample:Poulnabrone03 / PN03 (Cassidy et al. Thank you for posting the Ancient DNA of Ireland. I share a single 8.1 cM segment on C22 with Ballynahatty woman. Location:Ashleypark, Tipperary, Ireland Location:Parknabinnia, Clare, Ireland Age:Middle Neolithic 3694-3369 cal BC Certain medical studies had shown mitochondrial Haplogroup T to be associated with reduced sperm motility in males, although these results have been challenged (Mishmar 2002) harv error: no target: CITEREFMishmar2002 (help). HV0-T195C! Sample:Annagh1 / ANN1 (Cassidy et al. 2020) These samples, along with SBj (Gunther 2018), I1763 (Mathieson 2018), Ajv54 (Malmstrm 2019) and Ajv52, Ajv58 and Ajv70 (Skoglund 2012) form the branch I-FT344596. HCM is a relatively common type of heart muscle disease that affects 1 in 500 people. Last update July 2020. Since Im a Campbell, I find this most interesting!! mtDNA:H1-T16189C! Sex:Male Thanks for boiling it all down. Largest segment 5.9. Sex:Male Y-DNA:I-M284 The sample is about 5,500 years old, the haplogroup should be about 9,500 years old, so there 4 millennia of time gap for the two branches to move around the continent. Highest frequencies more prevalent in North Italians from the looks of it. Note that T2b2 and T2b4 happen to be the same subclades as those recovered from Corded Ware remains. Age:Middle Neolithic 3641-3381 cal BC (2004) also found several T and T1 sequences in ancient burials, including Kurgans, in the Kazakh steppe between the 14th-10th centuries BC, as well as later into the 1st millennia BC. I hoped for a link but maybe my line comes Viking rulers from Middle Age, after all, I had matches among the Viking sample. Age:Middle Neolithic 3518-3355 cal BC my mtDNA Haplogroup the H1j1a-G3849A, is more Franco-Cantabrian can be related to the Basques of the end of the Neolithic. Belarus) and the North Caucasus / found in Chalcolithic Poland (Corded Ware culture) and in Bronze Age Serbia, T2b16: found in Estonia, Russia (Volga Tatars) and Kazakhstan, T2b19: found in Italy and England / found in EBA Alsace, T2c1: found in Iran, Iraq, the Arabian peninsula, Italy, Sardinia, Spain and Central Europe / found in Early Neolithic Italy, T2c1a: found in Portugal, France, Italy and among Iraqi Jews / found in MLBA Jordan and Israel (Tell Megiddo), T2c1d: found in Britain, Ireland, the Netherlands, Belgium, France, Italy (Sardina), Spain, Germany, Denmark, Norway, Finland and Iran (Qashqai) / found in Late Neolithic France, England and Orkney, in EBA Moldova (Cucuteni-Trypillia culture) and in EBA France, T2c1e: found in Britain, Germany, Poland, Hungary and Turkey, T2c1f: found in France, Italy, Germany, Turkey and Iran / found among Iron Age Latins, T2d1: found in India, Siberia, Mongolia and the Netherlands, T2d1b: found in Poland, Iran (Persians), Siberia and Mongolia, T2d2: found in Iran, Georgia, Russia, Spain and Italy, T2e1: found mostly in northern and Mediterranean Europe, Egypt and the Arabian peninsula, but also in Iran, Pakistan and Uzbekistan / found in Neolithic Scotland, in Bell Beaker Poland, and in Bronze Age Poland, T2e1a : found in Britain, the Netherlands and Spain / found in Late Neolithic England (Bell Beaker), T2e1b : found in Germany, Romania and Russia, T2e2a : found in Britain, Germany, Sweden and Finland / found in Bronze Age Bulgaria, T2f1: found in north-western, central and eastern Europe and in Central Asia (Turkmenistan), T2f1a: found in Britain, Ireland, France, Germany, Scandinavia and Finland, T2f2: found in Finland, Sweden, Germany, France, Italy, the Balkans, Anatolia, the South Caucasus and the north of the Black Sea, T2f4: found in Britain and France / found in Neolithic Scotland, T2f5: found in Norway, Britain and Ireland, T2f7: found in Germany, Scandinavia and Finland, T2g1: found in Italy, Britain, Sweden, Latvia, Lithuania, Hungary, Turkey, Egypt, Iran (Persians, Qashqai, Jews) and Siberia (Yakuts), T2g2: found in Hungary and Scotland / found in Bell Beaker Germany<, T2g2a (formerly T3): found in Austria, Britain and Sweden. st cletus fish fry 2021 menu, clovis funeral chapel obituaries, asos models names 2021,
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