Re: Saag et al Extensive farming in Estonia started through.
Lähetetty: 03 Maalis 2017 23:08
Tällekin voisi avata oman ketjun, mutta olkoon nyt täällä kun sivuaa samaa asiaa:
Mittnik et al The Genetic History of Northern Europe
"In contrast, the statistic D(Estonian, BA_Baltic; X, Mbuti) gives the most significant
positive hits for East Asian and Siberian populations (Supplementary Information
Table S8) as previously suggested2. This might be connected to the introduction of the
Y-chromosomal haplogroup N that in Europe is found in highest frequencies in
Finland and the eastern Baltic states, and in similar high frequencies in the Uralic
speaking populations of the Volga-Ural region36. The spread of N into north-eastern
Europe was proposed to have happened with speakers of Uralic languages from the
east who contributed to the male gene pool of eastern Baltic populations and left
linguistic descendants in the Finno-Ugric languages Finnish and Estonian. As we
do not see Y-haplogroup N in any of the male samples from Lithuania and Latvia
dated as late as 230 calBCE we propose that this element was brought into the gene
pool of the more southern region of the Baltic coast after the Late Bronze Age."
http://biorxiv.org/content/biorxiv/earl ... 1.full.pdf
Mittnik et al The Genetic History of Northern Europe
"In contrast, the statistic D(Estonian, BA_Baltic; X, Mbuti) gives the most significant
positive hits for East Asian and Siberian populations (Supplementary Information
Table S8) as previously suggested2. This might be connected to the introduction of the
Y-chromosomal haplogroup N that in Europe is found in highest frequencies in
Finland and the eastern Baltic states, and in similar high frequencies in the Uralic
speaking populations of the Volga-Ural region36. The spread of N into north-eastern
Europe was proposed to have happened with speakers of Uralic languages from the
east who contributed to the male gene pool of eastern Baltic populations and left
linguistic descendants in the Finno-Ugric languages Finnish and Estonian. As we
do not see Y-haplogroup N in any of the male samples from Lithuania and Latvia
dated as late as 230 calBCE we propose that this element was brought into the gene
pool of the more southern region of the Baltic coast after the Late Bronze Age."
http://biorxiv.org/content/biorxiv/earl ... 1.full.pdf