The genetic history of Scandinavia from the Roman Iron Age t
Ruotsista tuli eilen ulos uusi muinaisgenomitutkimus:
The genetic history of Scandinavia from the Roman Iron Age to the present
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/a ... 14684#mmc1
Sieltä löytyy paljon N-haploja ja muutakin mielenkiintoista.
Fulleröstä (ful001) löytyy Rurikidien esi-isä:
Rurik's grandpa from 314 AD Gamla Uppsala: N1a1a1a1a1a1a7a
"a Varangian prince whose descendants ruled the state of Kievan Rus', and who shows a subclade of N1a1a1a1a1a1a7a-Y4339"
"The burial from Fullerö is a richly furnished inhumation male chamber burial radiocarbon dated to the late Roman Iron Age, 242–385 CE 95.4% probability (1732±29BP, Ua-53935). Although the grave had been opened and robbed, it was still remarkably richly furnished and unique.57,72 The chamber burial was placed in a mound belonging to the first generation of mounds that started to be erected in the early Roman Iron age in the region north of lake Mälaren.73 The burial chamber is the largest c. 10 m2 (NNE–SSW) of all known in the lake Mälar region and northern Sweden from CE 200–700.57 The human skeletal parts that remained were a collar and a rib bone with healed trauma belonging to a middle-aged large, muscular male,74,75 emphasising the impression that the grave was built for a trained male warrior. The gold finger rings, one of them the largest gold finger ring ever found in Sweden, were probably military honours; the chain mail, belt and the boar-like tusks, and canines from pigs, probably for a horse fitting, may indicate that the man had been in Roman service. In the grave was a worn gold coin used as a pendant, struck for the Roman emperor Maximian Hercules 291CE.76,77 Bones from a dog and a goshawk were found in the chamber, as well as a phalanx from a bear, suggesting that bear skin was placed with the deceased. The goshawk represents the earliest evidence of hunting with birds of prey in the region, a tradition that otherwise belongs to the 6th century.78,79 The numerous (more than 20) domestic species in the mound filling are interpreted as animals used for the burial feast.75,78"
The genetic history of Scandinavia from the Roman Iron Age to the present
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/a ... 14684#mmc1
Sieltä löytyy paljon N-haploja ja muutakin mielenkiintoista.
Fulleröstä (ful001) löytyy Rurikidien esi-isä:
Rurik's grandpa from 314 AD Gamla Uppsala: N1a1a1a1a1a1a7a
"a Varangian prince whose descendants ruled the state of Kievan Rus', and who shows a subclade of N1a1a1a1a1a1a7a-Y4339"
"The burial from Fullerö is a richly furnished inhumation male chamber burial radiocarbon dated to the late Roman Iron Age, 242–385 CE 95.4% probability (1732±29BP, Ua-53935). Although the grave had been opened and robbed, it was still remarkably richly furnished and unique.57,72 The chamber burial was placed in a mound belonging to the first generation of mounds that started to be erected in the early Roman Iron age in the region north of lake Mälaren.73 The burial chamber is the largest c. 10 m2 (NNE–SSW) of all known in the lake Mälar region and northern Sweden from CE 200–700.57 The human skeletal parts that remained were a collar and a rib bone with healed trauma belonging to a middle-aged large, muscular male,74,75 emphasising the impression that the grave was built for a trained male warrior. The gold finger rings, one of them the largest gold finger ring ever found in Sweden, were probably military honours; the chain mail, belt and the boar-like tusks, and canines from pigs, probably for a horse fitting, may indicate that the man had been in Roman service. In the grave was a worn gold coin used as a pendant, struck for the Roman emperor Maximian Hercules 291CE.76,77 Bones from a dog and a goshawk were found in the chamber, as well as a phalanx from a bear, suggesting that bear skin was placed with the deceased. The goshawk represents the earliest evidence of hunting with birds of prey in the region, a tradition that otherwise belongs to the 6th century.78,79 The numerous (more than 20) domestic species in the mound filling are interpreted as animals used for the burial feast.75,78"