The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup H1AH
Origins and Evolution
mtDNA haplogroup H1AH is a downstream lineage of H1A, itself a branch of the broadly distributed Western European haplogroup H1. Based on the phylogenetic position within H1 and the geographical distribution of related lineages, H1AH most plausibly originated in the Iberian/Atlantic refuge region during the Late Glacial or early Holocene (roughly ~11 kya in our estimate). Its emergence fits the pattern of localized diversification within refugia after the Last Glacial Maximum, followed by limited coastal and Atlantic‑facade expansions as climates ameliorated.
Molecular divergence times for minor H1 subclades are inherently uncertain because of small sample sizes and limited ancient DNA recovery, but the relative placement of H1AH beneath H1A supports a post‑LGM origin younger than the parent H1A node while still reflecting an early Holocene antiquity.
Subclades
H1AH is itself a fine‑scale subdivision within H1A. Published large‑scale mtDNA phylogenies and population screens show many such terminal subclades that are geographically restricted and occur at low frequencies; H1AH appears to be one of these. As with other terminal H1 branches, further substructure may be revealed with increased complete mtGenome sampling from Iberian, Atlantic‑European and northwest African populations.
Geographical Distribution
The current distribution of H1AH is concentrated in Western Europe with the highest representation in the Iberian Peninsula (including Basque and Atlantic coastal populations). It also occurs at varying, generally lower frequencies across Western Europe (France, Britain, Ireland), southern Europe (Italy and Mediterranean islands), and in northwest Africa (Berber groups and coastal Moroccan/Algerian populations). Sporadic detections in Scandinavia and parts of Central and Eastern Europe likely reflect later mobility and expansions (e.g., Bronze Age and historic movements). Overall, the pattern mirrors that of many H1 subclades: an Iberian/Atlantic core with decreasing frequency away from that refuge.
Historical and Cultural Significance
H1AH is best interpreted in the context of post‑glacial re‑expansions from southwestern European refugia. Lineages like H1A and its subclades contributed to the recolonization of Atlantic Europe after the LGM. During the Neolithic and later the Bronze Age, maternal lineages including H1 subclades were assimilated into farming and steppe‑related demographic processes in Western Europe; H1AH may therefore be present in archaeological contexts associated with coastal Mesolithic and early Neolithic sites and was likely part of the maternal pool that persisted into later cultural horizons.
Although not a marker of any single archaeological culture, H1AH may show associations with Atlantic‑facing archaeological trajectories (coastal Mesolithic persistence, Cardial/Impressed Ware‑linked early farmers along shores, and later Bell Beaker movements along the Atlantic façade). Its presence in northwest Africa also reflects prehistoric and historical gene flow across the western Mediterranean.
Conclusion
H1AH illustrates how the H1 phylogeny diversified within refugial populations of southwestern Europe and how those localized maternal lineages participated in broader demographic processes across the Atlantic and Mediterranean regions. It is a relatively uncommon, regionally informative lineage whose full phylogeographic story will become clearer as more whole‑mitogenome sequences and ancient DNA samples are characterized.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Conclusion