African admixture in Europe
African admixture in Europe refers to the presence of human genotypes attributable to periods of human population dispersals out of Africa in the genetic history of Europe.
More recent African admixture – primarily Berber admixture from North Africa – is associated with historic migrations through the Mediterranean Sea and the Muslim conquests of the Early Middle Ages. This admixture can be found primarily in the Iberian Peninsula (modern day Spain and Portugal), with higher levels in the West and the South[1][2][3] and Southern Italy, with higher levels in Sardinia and Sicily.[4]
Neolithic
editThe change from hunting and gathering to agriculture during the Neolithic Revolution was a watershed in world history. The societies that first made the change to agriculture are believed to have lived in Western Asia and Asia Minor around 10,000 BCE. Agriculture was introduced into Europe and North Africa by migrating farmers from West Asia, around Anatolia.[5] According to the demic diffusion model, these Middle Eastern farmers either replaced or interbred with the local European hunter-gather populations that had been living in Europe since the early Out of Africa migrations.[6]
It has been suggested that the first Middle Eastern farmers reflected North African influences or vice versa.[7] There have been suggestions that some genetic lineages found in the Middle East arrived there during this period.[8] The first agricultural societies in the Middle East are generally thought to have emerged after, and perhaps from, the Natufian culture between 12,000 and 10,000 BCE. The latter group was widely semi-sedentary even before the introduction of agriculture. An important migration from North Africa across the Sinai also appears to have occurred before the formation of the Natufian.[citation needed]
Historical period
editIn historical times, there has been a period of north African influence in southern Europe, especially in Iberia and parts of southern Italy (namely Sicily), during various Muslim conquests. The genetic effect of this period on modern European populations is the subject of discussion (see below). In more recent history, the peoples of Europe and Africa came into contact during the exploration and colonization of Africa and as a consequence of the Atlantic slave trade.[9]
Admixture Analysis of Modern Day Populations
edit- Hernandez et al. (2020) identified 11.17 ± 1.87% North African ancestry in southern Portuguese samples (from a population similar to modern northern Moroccans and Algerians), 9.28 ± 1.79% of such ancestry in western Andalusians, and an average of 1.41 ± 0.72% sub-Saharan ancestry in southern Iberians (using Yoruba as a proxy source). Substantially lower levels of North African admixture were further detected in Northern Italians (0.77%) and Tuscans (1%).[10]
- Bycroft et al. (2019) identified regionally varying fractions of Northwest African ancestry in modern Iberians, ranging from 0–12%. This ancestry was found to be from a source population similar to modern Northwest Africans. The admixture was dated to 860–1120 CE, associated with the Muslim conquest and subsequent Reconquista. The highest levels of Northwest African admixture were identified in western Iberia whilst the lowest levels were found in the Basque region and an area in the North East roughly corresponding to the 14th-century Crown of Aragon. They also found some evidence for a second admixture event in Portuguese and Southern Spanish groups involving a second North African population within which a small sub-Saharan African component was detected. This admixture event was dated to approximately 1300 CE.[3]
- Botigué et al. (2013) analysed genome-wide SNP data from over 2,000 modern individuals from Iberia. They estimated an average of 4% to 12% Northwest African admixture in modern Iberians (with low or zero levels in Basques), whereas populations in southeastern Europe had less than 2% of such admixture. Sub-Saharan African ancestry was detected at less than 1% in Europe, with the exception of the Canary Islands.[11][12]
- Moorjani et al. (2011) estimated that some Southern Europeans have inherited 1%–3% sub-Saharan ancestry (approximately 3.2% in Portugal, 2.9% in Sardinia, 2.7% in southern Italy, 2.4% in Spain and 1.1% in northern Italy), although the percentages were lower (ranging from 0.2% in Sardinia and northern Italy to 2.1% in Portugal) when reanalyzed with the 'STRUCTURE' statistical model. An average mixture date of around 55 generations/1100 years ago was given, "consistent with North African gene flow at the end of the Roman Empire and subsequent Arab migrations". This admixture was not identified in Northern Europeans.[13]
- Pino-Yanes et al. (2011) found that from an autosomal analysis, the average Northwest African influence is about 17% in Canary Islanders, with a wide interindividual variation ranging from 0% to 96%. The substantial Northwest African ancestry found for Canary Islanders supports the idea that, despite the aggressive conquest by the Spanish in the 15th century and the subsequent immigration, genetic footprints of the first settlers of the Canary Islands persist in the current inhabitants. Paralleling mtDNA findings, the largest average Northwest African contribution was found for the samples from La Gomera.[14]
Admixture Analysis of Historic Populations
edit- Ricardo Rodríguez-Varela et al. (2024), studied 37 individuals from the 7th to 11th Century in Las Gobas, a necropolis in northern Spain. They found there was no significant increase of North African (Berber) or Middle East ancestries over time, before and after the Umayyad expansion. The authors proposed it may have been due to the communities isolation. However, North African admixture was detected in Visigothic individuals from southern Spain, hypothesized to be due to Punic movement into Iberia or pre-Islamic contact between southern Spain and North Africa.[15]
- MacRoberts, Rebecca Anne et al. (2024) studied remains of the 8th-10th century AD in Portugal. Ancient DNA analysis conducted on three individuals revealed maternal (mtDNA) and paternal (Y-chromosome) lineages showing possible North African origin for some of the individuals. The mobility of females in this population was said to be higher than males, possibly because of the patriarchal structures practiced by Berber and Arab communities.[16]
- Silva, M. et al. (2021), analyzed the genome for an individual who was buried in an Islamic necropolis at Segorbe, Spain. The sample's uniparentals pointed to North African origin, but on the autosomal level he displays both European and Northern African-related ancestries.[17]
- Olalde et al. (2019) found evidence for 'sporadic contacts' between Iberia and North Africa in the Copper Age and Bronze Age. A male sample from central Iberia, dating from 2473–2030 cal BCE, was found to cluster with modern and ancient North Africans, characterised by ancestry from both Late Pleistocene North Africans and Early Neolithic Europeans. Another Bronze Age sample had 25% such North African ancestry. However, North African ancestry only became widespread in Iberia in the past ~2000 years, associated with the Roman Empire or earlier Punic presence and the later period of Muslim rule. The study analysed 45 samples from southeastern Spain dating from the 3rd-16th centuries CE, all of which fell outside the genetic variation of preceding Iberian Iron Age populations, harbouring ancestry from both southern European and North African populations, as well as additional Levantine-related ancestry. 2 samples out of 23 dating from the 10th to 16th centuries were also found to have partial sub-Saharan ancestry, which was not identified in earlier samples. Present-day southern Iberians harbour less African ancestry than Muslim period samples, likely due to subsequent population expulsions and repopulation from the north, as supported by historical sources and genetic analysis of present-day groups.[2]
- Gleize, Yves et al. (2016), discovered that the paternal lineages of Muslim cemeteries in France had 3 individuals with North African ancestry. The analyses was said to confirm the Berber origin of some of the first Islamic troops spreading through Europe, and also indicated the co-existence of communities practicing Christian and Muslim funerary customs.[18]
Sexual Chromosomes
editGenerally, markers and lineages used to characterize African admixture are those that are believed to be specific to Africa. There are also DNA polymorphisms that are shared between populations native to Europe, West Asia, North Africa and the Horn of Africa, such as the Y-chromosomal haplogroup E1b1b and the mitochondrial haplogroup M1.[9]
With regard to the paternal haplogroup E1b1b and maternal haplogroup M1, derivatives of these clades have been observed in prehistoric human fossils excavated at the Ifri n'Amr or Moussa site in Morocco, which have been radiocarbon-dated to the Early Neolithic period (ca. 5,000 BC). Ancient DNA analysis of these specimens indicates that they carried paternal haplotypes related to the E1b1b1b1a (E-M81) subclade and the maternal haplogroups U6a and M1, all of which are frequent among present-day communities in the Maghreb. These ancient individuals also bore an autochthonous Maghrebi genomic component that peaks among modern Berbers, indicating that they were ancestral to populations in the area. Additionally, fossils excavated at the Kelif el Boroud site near Rabat, were found to carry the broadly-distributed paternal haplogroup T-M184 as well as the maternal haplogroups K1, T2 and X2, the latter of which were common mtDNA lineages in Neolithic Europe and Anatolia. These ancient individuals likewise bore the Berber-associated Maghrebi genomic component, as well as Early European Farmer ancestry. This altogether indicates that the Late Neolithic Kelif el Boroud inhabitants were ancestral to contemporary populations in the area, but also experienced substantial gene flow from Europe.[19]
Other lineages that are now found in Africa and Europe may have a common origin in Asia (e.g. Y haplogroups R1, and some paternal haplogroup T and U subclades). One subclade of haplogroup U, namely U6a1, is known to have expanded from northern and eastern Africa back into Europe[20][21] even though haplogroup U6 is considered to have originated in the Middle East. Other lineages are known to have moved from Europe directly into Africa, for example mitochondrial haplogroups H1 and H3.[22] Such bidirectional migrations between Africa and Eurasia complicate the task of defining admixture.
Y-DNA
editOne proposed example of Holocene gene flow from North Africa to Europe, via the Middle East, is thought to be E1b1b, which is considered to have emerged about 40,000 years ago in the Horn of Africa, and branches of it would have then migrated to the Middle East by 15,000 years ago during the late Pleistocene period.[23][8][24]
Entering the late mesolithic Natufian culture, the E1b1b1a2 (E-V13) subclade has been associated with the spread of farming from the Middle East into Europe either during or just before the Neolithic transition. E1b1b1 lineages are found throughout Europe but are distributed along a south-to-north cline, with an E1b1b1a mode in the Balkans.[25][26][27][a][b]
In separate migrations, E lineages in the form of the E1b1b1b subclade appear to have entered Europe from Northwest Africa into Iberia. In a sample of European males, haplogroup E was observed at a frequency of 7.2%.[25] The timing of this movement has been given widely varying estimates.[28] In much of Europe, frequencies of E lineages are very low, usually less than 1%. For example, the frequency of such lineages are at 2% in southern Portugal, 4% in northern Portugal, 2.9% in Istanbul, and 4.3% among Turkish Cypriots.[25] E1b1a is closely related to E1b1b, the most frequent clade in Northeast Africa, Northwest Africa and Europe. E lineages that are not E1b1a or E1b1b could therefore reflect either a recent expansion associated with E1b1a or ancient population movements associated with E1b1b. For example, haplogroup E1a lineages have been detected in Portugal (5/553 = 1%),[29] among Italians in Calabria (1/80=1.3%), and among Albanians in Calabria (2/68=2.9%).[26] The distribution of haplogroup E1a lineages in Portugal was independent of the distribution of the younger and more ubiquitous E1b1a.[29] This distribution is consistent with a prehistoric migration from Africa to Iberia, possibly alongside mtDNA haplogroup U6. In Majorcans, Sub-Saharan Y-DNA lineage E-V38 was found at a total of 3.2% (2/62).[30] Sub-Saharan Y-DNA lineages E3a, E1, BC*, (xE3), and E3* are found between 1 and 5% in Portugal, Valencia, Majorca, Cantabria, Málaga, Seville, and Galicia (Spain).[30][31] In Sardinians, Sub-Saharan Y-DNA lineages A1b1b2b and E1a1 were found at a total of 1.0% (A1b1b2b 0.5% / E1a1 0.5%).[32]
Haplogroups A and B are thought to have been the predominant haplogroups in central and southern Africa prior to the Bantu Expansion. Currently these haplogroups are less common than E lineages. In a sample of 5,000 African men, haplogroup A had a frequency of 5%. Haplogroup A has rare occurrences in Europe, but recently the haplogroup was detected in seven indigenous British males with the same Yorkshire surname.[33]
The subclade E3b1 (probably originating in northeastern Africa) has a wide distribution in North Africa, the Horn of Africa, the Middle East, and Europe. This haplogroup, in Italy, is represented by E-M78, E-M123 and E-M81 (Figure 3)[34] and reaches a frequency of 8% in northern and central Italy and slightly higher, 11%, in the south of that country.[34]
It has also been argued that the European distribution of E3b1 is compatible with the Neolithic demic diffusion of agriculture; thus, two subclades—E3b1a-M78 and E3b1c-M123—present a higher occurrence in Anatolia, the Balkans, and the Italian peninsula. Another subclade, E3b1b-M81 is associated with Berber populations and is commonly found in regions that have had historical gene flow with northern Africa, such as the Iberian Peninsula, the Canary Islands, and Sicily.[34]
North African Y-DNA E-M81 was found at a total of 41.1% among "pasiegos" from Cantabria, Spain. That is the highest frequency observed in Europe to date.[25][30][35] From an analysis of the Y-chromosome with 659 samples from Southern Portugal, 680 from Northern Spain, 37 samples from Andalusia, 915 samples from mainland Italy, and 93 samples from Sicily found significantly higher levels of North African male ancestry in Portugal, Spain and Sicily (7.1%, 7.7% and 7.5% respectively) than in peninsular Italy (1.7%).[36] Considering both some E-M78 subhaplogroups and the E-M81 haplogroup, the contribution of northern African lineages to the entire male gene pool of Iberia (barring Pasiegos), continental Italy, and Sicily can be estimated as 5.6%, 3.6%, and 6.6%, respectively.[37] Y-DNA lineages E-V12 and E-V22 have been associated with a Levantine source (represented by modern Lebanese), while North African haplogroup E-M81 shows an average frequency of 1.53% in the current Sicilian and Southern Italian genetic pool, but the typical Maghrebin core haplotype 13-14-30-24-9-11-13 has been found in only two out of the five E-M81 individuals.[38] These results, along with the negligible contribution from North-African populations revealed by the admixture-like plot analysis, suggest only a marginal impact of trans-Mediterranean gene flows on the current Sicilian and Southern Italian genetic pool.[38]
Auton et al. (2009) found that South West Europe had the highest proportion in Europe of haplotypes that are shared with sub-Saharan Africa (represented by Yoruba), and significantly more relative to South East Europe.[39]
mtDNA
editHaplogroup L lineages are relatively infrequent (1% or less) throughout Europe with the exception of Iberia (Spain and Portugal), where frequencies as high as 22% have been reported, and some regions of Southern Italy, where frequencies as high as 2% and 3% have been found. About 65% of the European L lineages most likely arrived in rather recent historical times (Romanization period, Arab conquest of the Iberian Peninsula and Sicily, Atlantic slave trade) and about 35% of L mtDNAs form European-specific subclades, revealing that there was gene flow from Sub-Saharan Africa toward Europe as early as 11,000 years ago.[40]
Map (in the link) showing the distribution of Sub-Saharan mtDNA (shown in red) in Europe Map is From Cerezo et al. 2012[40] Universidad de Santiago de Compostela Iberia (Spain & Portugal) having the highest amount and strongest concentration of Sub-Saharan mtDNA in Europe. |
In Iberia the mean frequency of haplogroup L lineages reaches 3.83%; the frequency is higher in Portugal (5.83%) than in Spain (2.9% average), and without parallel in the rest of Europe. In both countries, frequencies vary widely between regions, but with increased frequencies observed for Madeira (insular Portugal), southern Portugal, Córdoba (southern Spain), Huelva (southern Spain), Canary Islands (insular Spain), Extremadura (western Spain) and Leon (western Spain).[41] In the Autonomous regions of Portugal (i.e. Madeira and the Azores), L haplogroups constituted about 13% of the lineages in Madeira, significantly more than in the Azores.[42] In the Canary Islands, frequencies have been reported at 6.6%.[42] Regarding Iberia, current debates are concerned with whether these lineages are associated with prehistoric migrations, the Islamic occupation of Iberia, or the slave trade. African lineages in Iberia were predominantly the result of the Atlantic slave trade.[43] Most of the L lineages in Iberia matched Northwest African L lineages rather than contemporary Sub-Saharan L lineages.[44] This pattern indicates that most of the Sub-Saharan L lineages entered Iberia in prehistoric times rather than during the slave trade. According to Sub-Saharan lineages found in Iberia matched lineages from diverse regions in Africa.[41] This pattern is more compatible with a recent arrival of these lineages after slave trading began in the 15th century.[44] Alternative scenarios that invoke much older and demographically more significant introductions have been proposed[44] or a substantial role of the Roman and/or Islamic periods on the introduction of Sub-Saharan lineages seem unlikely. Extracted DNA from human remains that were exhumed from old burial sites in Al-Andalus, Spain, The remains date to between the 12th and 13th centuries.[45] The frequency of Sub-Saharan lineages detected in the medieval samples was 14.6% and 8.3% in the present population of Priego de Cordoba. The Muslim occupation and prehistoric migrations before the Muslim occupation would have been the source of these lineages. The highest frequencies of Sub-Saharan lineages found so far in Europe were observed in the comarca of Sayago (18.2%) which is "comparable to that described for the South of Portugal".[46]
In Italy, haplogroup L lineages are present at lower frequencies than in Iberia and are detected only in certain regions: Latium, Volterra,[47] Basilicata, and Sicily.[48]
In eastern Europe, haplogroup L lineages are present at very low frequencies. Though a high diversity of African mtDNA lineages have been detected, few lineages have accumulated enough mutations in Europe to form monophyletic clusters.[9] The monophyletic clusters L1b and L3b have an estimated age no greater than 6,500 years. African L1b, L2a, L3b, L3d and M1 clades in Slavic populations have been identified at low frequencies.[49] L1b, L3b and L3d had matches with West African populations, indicating that these lineages probably entered Europe through Iberia. One lineage, L2a1a, found in Czechs and Slovaks, appeared to be much older, indicating that it may have entered Europe in prehistoric times.[49] This clade is distinct from the branch of L2a1 called L2a1l2a that is found in individuals of Ashkenazi heritage from central and eastern Europe[50] and less frequently in non-Jewish Poles.[51] L2a lineages are widespread throughout Africa; as a result, the origins of this lineage are uncertain.[52]
Haplogroup M1 is also found in Europe at low frequencies. Haplogroup M1 had a frequency of 0.3%.[21] The origins of haplogroup M1 have yet to be conclusively established.
A prehistoric episode from the Early Holocene is likely to be a contributor to some of the U6 and L lingeages present in Mediterranean Europe.[53]
Frequencies of haplogroup L lineages
editCountry | Region | Number tested | Study | % |
---|---|---|---|---|
Europe | Continent-wide (excl. Tuscany) | 10,589 | Achilli et al. (2007)[47] | 0.79% |
South Iberia | Spain & Portugal | 310 | Casas et al. (2006)[45] | 7.40% |
Spain | Countrywide | 312 | Álvarez et al. (2007)[54] | 2.90% |
Spain | Central Spain | 50 | Plaza et al. (2003)[55] | 4.00% |
Spain | North-West Spain | 216 | Achilli et al. (2007)[47] | 3.70% |
Spain | Basque Country | 156 | Achilli et al. (2007)[47] | 0.64% |
Spain | Galicia | 92 | Pereira et al. (2005)[41] | 3.30% |
Spain | Zamora | 214 | Álvarez et al. (2010)[46] | 4.70% |
Spain | Sayago | 33 | Álvarez et al. (2010)[46] | 18.18% |
Spain | Cordoba | 108 | Casas et al. (2006)[45] | 8.30% |
Spain | Huelva | 135 | Hernandez et al. (2014) | 5.70% |
Spain | Catalonia | 101 | Álvarez-Iglesias et al. (2009) | 2.97% |
Spain | Balearic Islands | 231 | Picornell et al. (2005)[56] | 2.20% |
Spain | Canary Islands | 300 | Brehm et al. (2003)[42] | 6.60% |
Portugal | Countrywide | 594 | Achilli et al. (2007)[47] | 6.90% |
Portugal | Countrywide | 1429 | Barral-Arca et al. (2016)[57] | 6.16% |
Portugal | Countrywide | 549 | Pereira et al. (2005)[41] | 5.83% |
Portugal | North | 100 | Pereira et al. (2010)[58] | 5.00% |
Portugal | Center | 82 | Pereira et al. (2010)[58] | 9.70% |
Portugal | Center | 82 | Plaza et al. (2003)[55] | 6.10% |
Portugal | South | 195 | Brehm et al. (2003)[42] | 11.30% |
Portugal | South | 303 | Achilli et al. (2007)[47] | 10.80% |
Portugal | Coruche | 160 | Pereira et al. (2010)[58] | 8.70% |
Portugal | Pias | 75 | Pereira et al. (2010)[58] | 3.90% |
Portugal | Alcácer do Sal | 50 | Pereira et al. (2010)[58] | 22.00% |
Portugal | Azores | 179 | Brehm et al. (2003)[42] | 3.40% |
Portugal | Madeira | 155 | Brehm et al. (2003)[42] | 12.90% |
Portugal | Madeira | 153 | Fernandes et al. (2006)[59] | 12.40% |
Italy | Countrywide | 583 | Brisighelli et al. (2012)[34] | 1.20% |
Italy | Countrywide | 865 | Boattini et al. (2013)[60] | 0.00% |
Italy | Countrywide | 240 | Babalini et al. (2005)[61] | 0.40% |
Italy | Tuscany | 322 | Achilli et al. (2007)[47] | 1.86% |
Italy | Tuscany | 49 | Plaza et al. (2003)[55] | 2.00% |
Italy | Volterra | 114 | Achilli et al. (2007)[47] | 2.63% |
Italy | Latium | 138 | Achilli et al. (2007)[47] | 2.90% |
Italy | Marche | 813 | Achilli et al. (2007)[47] | 0.98% |
Italy | Central Italy | 83 | Plaza et al. (2003)[55] | 1.20% |
Italy | Lombardy | 177 | Achilli et al. (2007)[47] | 0.00% |
Italy | Piedmont | 169 | Achilli et al. (2007)[47] | 0.00% |
Italy | Sardinia | 258 | Pardo et al. (2012)[62] | 0.40% |
Italy | Sardinia | 73 | Plaza et al. (2003)[55] | 2.80% |
Italy | Sardinia | 85 | Sanna et al. (2011)[63] | 0.00% |
Italy | Sardinia (Ogliastra) | 475 | Fraumene C et al. (2003)[64] | 0.00% |
Italy | Sardinia | 96 | Morelli et al. (1999) | 0.00% |
Italy | Campania (South Italy) | 313 | Achilli et al. (2007)[47] | 0.32% |
Italy | Basilicata (South Italy) | 92 | Ottoni et al. (2009)[48] | 2.20% |
Italy | Apulia & Calabria (South Italy) | 226 | Achilli et al. (2007)[47] | 0.00% |
Italy | Southern Italy | 115 | Sarno et al. (2014)[38] | 0.00% |
Italy | Southern Italy | 37 | Plaza et al. (2003)[55] | 8.10%[failed verification] |
Italy | Sicily | 106 | Cali et al. (2003) | 0.94% |
Italy | Sicily | 105 | Achilli et al. (2007)[47] | 1.90% |
Italy | Sicily | 169 | Plaza et al. (2003)[55] | 0.60% |
Italy | Sicily | 198 | Sarno et al. (2014)[38] | 1.01% |
Italy | Sicily | 465 | Romano et al. (2003)[65] | 0.65% |
Greece | Crete | 202 | Achilli et al. (2007)[47] | 0.99% |
Greece | Crete | 283 | Martinez et al. (2008)[66] | 0.00% |
Greece | Macedonia | 125 | Richards et al. (2000)[67] | 0.00% |
Greece | Countrywide | 155 | Achilli et al. (2007)[47] | 0.00% |
Cyprus | Cyprus | 91 | Irwin et al. (2008)[68] | 3.30%[failed verification] |
United Kingdom | England | 335 | Achilli et al. (2007)[47] | 0.60% |
United Kingdom | Wales | 92 | Achilli et al. (2007)[47] | 0.00% |
Finland | Countrywide | 121 | Achilli et al. (2007)[47] | 0.82% |
Germany | Countrywide | 335 | Achilli et al. (2007)[47] | 0.30% |
Ireland | Countrywide | 300 | Achilli et al. (2007)[47] | 0.00% |
France | Countrywide | 332 | Achilli et al. (2007)[47] | 0.30% |
Bulgaria | Countrywide | 141 | Achilli et al. (2007)[47] | 0.71% |
Bosnia and Herzegovina | Countrywide | 144 | Achilli et al. (2007)[47] | 0.69% |
In an analysis which also contains an admixture data but no cluster membership coefficients, shows little to no Sub-Saharan African influence in a wide array of European samples, i.e. Albanians, Austrians, Belgians, Bosnians, Bulgarians, Croatians, Cypriots, Czechs, Danes, Finns, Frenchmen, Germans, Greeks, Hungarians, Irish, Italians, Kosovars, Lithuanians, Latvians, Macedonians, Netherlanders, Norwegians, Poles, Portuguese, Romanians, Russians, Scots, Serbians, Slovaks, Slovenians, Spaniards, Swedes, Swiss (German, French and Italian), Ukrainians, subjects of the United Kingdom, and Yugoslavians.[39]
Haplogroup U6, to which a North African origin has been attributed, is largely distributed among Mozabites (28.2%) and Mauritanians (20%).[69] In other northwest Africans, the frequency of U6 ranges from 4.2% in Tunisians to 8% in Moroccan Arabs.[55] In Europe, U6 is most common in Spain and Portugal.[70][55]
Frequencies of haplogroup U6 lineages
editCountry | Region | Number tested | Study | % |
---|---|---|---|---|
Italy | Countrywide | 583 | Brisighelli et al. (2012)[34] | 0.8% |
Italy | Mainland | 411 | Plaza et al. (2003)[55] | 0.0% |
Italy | Countrywide | 865 | Boattini et al. (2013)[60] | 0.35% |
Italy | Sicily | 169 | Plaza et al. (2003)[55] | 0.6% |
Italy | Sicily | 106 | Maca-Meyer et al. (2003).[70] | 0.94% |
Italy | Lazio | 52 | Babalini et al. (2005)[61] | 5.8% |
Italy | Abruzzo (Molise) | 73 | Babalini et al. (2005)[61] | 0% |
Italy | Campania | 48 | Babalini et al. (2005)[61] | 0% |
Italy | Volterra (Tuscany) | 114 | Achilli et al. (2007)[47] | 0.00% |
Italy | Murlo (Tuscany) | 86 | Achilli et al. (2007)[47] | 1.20% |
Italy | Casentino (Tuscany) | 122 | Achilli et al. (2007)[47] | 0.80% |
Italy | Sicily | 105 | Achilli et al. (2007)[47] | 0.95% |
Italy | Latium | 138 | Achilli et al. (2007)[47] | 0.00% |
Italy | Lombardy | 177 | Achilli et al. (2007)[47] | 0.00% |
Italy | Piedmont | 169 | Achilli et al. (2007)[47] | 0.00% |
Italy | Marche | 813 | Achilli et al. (2007)[47] | 0.25% |
Italy | Campania | 313 | Achilli et al. (2007)[47] | 1.28% |
Italy | Apulia-Calabria | 226 | Achilli et al. (2007)[47] | 1.33% |
Italy | Sardinia | 370 | Achilli et al. (2007)[47] | 0.27% |
Spain | Central Spain | 50 | Plaza et al. (2003)[55] | 2.0% |
Spain | Galicia | 103 | Plaza et al. (2003)[55] | 1.9% |
Spain | Galicia | 135 | Maca-Meyer et al. (2003)[70] | 2.2% |
Spain | Catalonia | 118 | Maca-Meyer et al. (2003)[70] | 1.6% |
Spain | Huelva | 135 | Hernandez et al. (2014)[71] | 8.8% |
Spain | Maragatos | 49 | Maca-Meyer et al. (2003)[70] | 8.1% |
Spain | Canary Islands | 300 | Brehm et al. (2003)[42] | 14.0% |
Portugal | Countrywide | 54 | Plaza et al. (2003)[55] | 5.6% |
Portugal | North Portugal | 184 | Maca-Meyer et al. (2003)[70] | 4.3% |
Portugal | Central Portugal | 161 | Brehm et al. (2003)[42] | 1.9% |
Portugal | Madeira | 155 | Brehm et al. (2003)[42] | 3.9% |
Portugal | Madeira | 153 | Fernandes et al. (2006)[59] | 3.3% |
Iberia | Spain & Portugal | 887 | Plaza et al. (2003)[55] | 1.8% |
GM immunoglobulin allotypes
editFurther studies have shown that the presence of haplotype GM*1,17 23' 5* in southern Europe. This haplotype is considered a genetic marker of Sub-Saharan Africa, where it shows frequencies of about 80%.[72] Whereas, in non-Mediterranean European populations, that value is about 0.3%, in Spain the average figure for this African haplotype is nearly eight times greater (though still at a low level) at 2.4%, and it shows a peak at 4.5% in Galicia.[73] Values of around 4% have also been found in Huelva and in the Aran valley in the Pyrenees.[74] Although some researchers have associated African traces in Iberia to Islamic conquest, the presence of GM*1,17 23' 5* haplotype in Iberia may in fact be due to more ancient processes as well as more recent ones through the introduction of genes from slaves sold from Africa.[73]
In Sicily the North African haplotype Gm 5*;1;17; ranges from 1.56% at Valledolmo to 5.5% at Alia.[75] The hypothesis is that the presence of this haplotype suggests past contacts with people from North Africa. The introduction of African markers could be due to the Phoenician colonization at the end of the second millennium B.C. or to the more recent Arab conquest (8th–9th centuries A.D.).
Paleoanthropology
editThe migration of farmers from the Middle East into Europe is believed to have significantly influenced the genetic profile of present-day Europeans. Some recent studies have focused on corroborating current genetic data with the archeological evidence from Europe, the Middle East, and Africa.[28] The Natufian culture, which existed about 12,000 years ago or more, has been the subject of various archeological investigations, as it is generally believed to be the source of the European and North African Neolithic.
According to one hypothesis,[7] the Natufian culture emerged from the mixing of two Stone Age cultures: (1) the Kebaran, a culture indigenous to the Levant, and (2) the Mushabian, a culture introduced into the Levant from North Africa†. It is suggested that the Mushabian culture originated in Africa, given that archeological sites with Mushabian industries in the Nile Valley predate those in the Levant†. The Mushabians would have then moved into the Sinai from the Nile Delta bringing with them their technologies†. The overpopulation in Northeast Africa contributed to the development of the Natufian adaptation, which resulted in agriculture becoming a new way of sustenance.[7]
From an analysis of human remains from the Natufian culture, there is evidence of Sub-Saharan influences in the Natufian samples.[5] These influences would have been diluted by the interbreeding of the Neolithic farmers from the Near East are associated with the indigenous foragers in Europe. The Sub-Saharan influences detected in the Natufian samples with the migration of E1b1b lineages from Northeast Africa to the Levant and then into Europe.[76]
According to an ancient DNA analyses on Natufian skeletal remains from present-day northern Israel, the Natufians in fact shared no evident genetic affinity to sub-Saharan Africans.[24] It was not possible to test for affinity in the Natufians to early North African populations using present-day North Africans as a reference because present-day North Africans owe most of their ancestry to back-migration from Eurasia.[24][77] The Natufians carried the Y-DNA (paternal) haplogroups E1b1b1b2(xE1b1b1b2a,E1b1b1b2b) (2/5; 40%), CT (2/5; 40%), and E1b1(xE1b1a1,E1b1b1b1) (1/5; 20%).[24][78] In terms of autosomal DNA, these Natufians carried around 50% of the Basal Eurasian (BE) and 50% of Western Eurasian Unknown Hunter Gather (UHG) components. However, they were slightly distinct from the northern Anatolian populations that contributed to the peopling of Europe, who had higher Western Hunter-Gatherer (WHG) inferred ancestry. Natufians were strongly genetically differentiated[79] from Neolithic Iranian farmers from the Zagros Mountains, caring up to 62% of the Basal Eurasians and Ancient North Eurasians (ANE). This might suggest that different strains of Basal Eurasians contributed to Natufians and Zagros farmers,[80][81][82] as both Natufians and Zagros farmers descended from different populations of local hunter gatherers. Mating between Natufians, other Neolithic Levantines, Caucasus Hunter Gatherers (CHG), Anatolian and Iranian farmers is believed to have decreased genetic variability among later populations in the Middle East. The scientists suggest that the Levantine early farmers may have spread southward into East Africa, bringing along Western Eurasian and Basal Eurasian ancestral components separate from that which would arrive later in North Africa.
† The Mushabian industry is now known to have originated in the Levant from the previous lithic industries of the region of Lake Lisan.[83] The Mushabian industry was originally thought to have originated in Africa because the microburin technique was not yet known to be much older in the eastern Levant.[84] Currently there is no known industry to connect with the African migration that occurred 14,700 years ago,[25] but it no doubt caused a population expansion in the Negev and Sinai which would not have accommodated an increase in population with the meager resources of a steppe/desert climate.[7] Since all of the known cultures in the Levant at the time of the migration originated in the Levant and an archaeological culture cannot be associated with it, there must have been assimilation into a Levantine culture at the onset, most likely the Ramonian which was present in the Sinai 14,700 years ago.[85]
See also
editNotes
edit- ^ Recently, it has been proposed that E3b originated in eastern Africa and expanded into the Near East and northern Africa at the end of the Pleistocene. E3b lineages would have then been introduced from the Near East into southern Europe by migrant farmers, during the Neolithic expansion.[25]
- ^ A Mesolithic population carrying Group III lineages with the M35/M215 mutation expanded northwards from sub-Saharan to north Africa and the Levant. The Levantine population of farmers that dispersed into Europe during and after the Neolithic carried these African Group III M35/M215 lineages, together with a cluster of Group VI lineages characterized by M172 and M201 mutations.[27]
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As regards sub-Saharan Hgs (L1b, L2b, and L3b), the high frequency found in the southern regions of Zamora, 18.2% in Sayago and 8.1% in Bajo Duero, is comparable to that described for the South of Portugal
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Further reading
edit- Cavalli-Sforza LL (July 1997). "Genes, peoples, and languages". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 94 (15): 7719–24. Bibcode:1997PNAS...94.7719C. doi:10.1073/pnas.94.15.7719. PMC 33682. PMID 9223254.
- Cherni L, Fernandes V, Pereira JB, Costa MD, Goios A, Frigi S, Yacoubi-Loueslati B, Amor MB, Slama A, Amorim A, El Gaaied AB, Pereira L (June 2009). "Post-last glacial maximum expansion from Iberia to North Africa revealed by fine characterization of mtDNA H haplogroup in Tunisia". American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 139 (2): 253–60. doi:10.1002/ajpa.20979. PMID 19090581.