The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup H1AQ
Origins and Evolution
H1AQ is a downstream branch of mtDNA haplogroup H1A, itself a lineage stemming from the broadly distributed Western European haplogroup H1. Given the established origin of H1A in the Iberian/Atlantic refuge region during the Late Glacial to early Holocene, H1AQ most plausibly arose in the same general geographic region during the early Holocene (roughly the last 10,000 years), as local H1 diversity accumulated and differentiated following post‑glacial expansions. The timing provided here is an inference based on the phylogenetic position beneath H1A and the molecular clock calibrations commonly applied to control‑region and whole‑mitogenome variation in European mtDNA.
Subclades (if applicable)
As a relatively deep sublineage of H1A, H1AQ may have one or more downstream private subclades identifiable only with full mitogenome sequencing; at present, published ancient and modern mitogenomes indicate H1AQ is a rarer branch compared with some other H1 subclades. Where present, downstream variation tends to reflect localized founder effects or drift in small coastal or island populations along the Atlantic and western Mediterranean margins.
Geographical Distribution
H1AQ shows its highest relative incidence within populations of the Iberian Peninsula and adjacent Atlantic France, consistent with the wider H1A distribution tied to post‑glacial re‑expansion from southwestern refugia. It is found at lower frequencies across Western and Southern Europe (including parts of the Mediterranean), appears sporadically in northwest African groups (particularly Berber populations with historical gene flow across the Gibraltar/Alboran corridor), and is only rare or sporadic in northern and eastern Europe and the Near East. The pattern is congruent with maternal lineages that expanded along coastal and riverine corridors after the Last Glacial Maximum and were later redistributed during Neolithic and Bronze Age cultural movements.
Historical and Cultural Significance
Although H1AQ is not typically a marker of large-scale demic events by itself (because of its low frequency), it contributes to the genetic signal used to reconstruct post‑glacial expansions along the Atlantic façade and the formation of the Late Mesolithic/Neolithic maternal pool in Western Europe. Lineages like H1AQ can be informative in archaeology and ancient DNA when found in dated contexts: their presence in Mesolithic or early Neolithic remains supports continuity from pre‑farming coastal populations, while occurrences in later Bronze Age burials may reflect admixture and mobility across Western European cultural horizons (including Bell Beaker-associated groups in some regions).
Conclusion
H1AQ is best interpreted as a western European, likely Iberian‑derived subclade of H1A that emerged in the early Holocene and persisted at low to moderate frequencies through subsequent cultural transitions. Its distribution highlights the role of southwestern European refugia in shaping maternal diversity and provides a useful, though rare, marker for studies of regional continuity and migration in the Atlantic and western Mediterranean zones. Further whole mitogenome sampling, especially from archaeological contexts, will refine the chronology and micro‑geography of this subclade.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades (if applicable)
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Conclusion