The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup H1CG
Origins and Evolution
H1CG is a downstream subclade of mtDNA haplogroup H1C, itself part of the widespread Western European H1 lineage. H1 expanded across Western Europe following the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), and H1C has been associated with Iberian/Atlantic refuge and post‑glacial re‑expansion. H1CG likely arose within that H1C context in the Iberian Peninsula or nearby Atlantic France during the early Holocene (several thousand years after the LGM), through one or more defining control‑region/coding‑region mutations that distinguish it from other H1C subclades. The estimated age (on the order of ~7 kya) places H1CG formation after the initial H1 re‑expansion but prior to or during the early Neolithic in Western Europe.
Subclades
As a named subclade of H1C, H1CG may itself contain minor downstream branches detectable only with full mitogenome sequencing; many H1C sublineages are rare and geographically structured. The diversity within H1CG appears limited in modern samples and in the small number of ancient DNA hits, indicating either a localized origin followed by limited expansion or loss of diversity through drift. Ongoing sequencing studies could split H1CG further if additional characteristic mutations are consistently observed.
Geographical Distribution
H1CG shows a Western European/Atlantic biased distribution with spillover into adjacent regions: higher relative frequencies in Iberian populations and parts of Atlantic France, moderate presence in other Western and Southern European populations (e.g., France, Britain, Italy and Mediterranean islands), and detectable but low frequencies in northwest Africa (Morocco, Algeria and some Berber groups). It is found sporadically in Northern Europe (Scandinavia) and in parts of Central and Eastern Europe at low frequencies, consistent with historical mobility and later demographic processes. The haplogroup has been identified in at least five ancient DNA samples in archaeological contexts, supporting its antiquity in the Atlantic/Western European region.
Historical and Cultural Significance
H1CG carries the legacy of post‑LGM re‑colonization of Western Europe and likely participated in both Mesolithic continuity and interactions with incoming Neolithic farmer communities. Because H1C‑derived lineages are common in Iberia and along Atlantic coasts, H1CG may reflect local maternal continuity in the Iberian Peninsula and north‑west Africa, and later movements such as coastal maritime contacts in the Neolithic and later prehistoric periods. In later prehistoric contexts (for example the Bell Beaker horizon), H1 subclades including H1C derivatives can appear in genomic datasets, although H1CG itself remains comparatively rare and therefore not a defining marker of any single widespread archaeological culture.
Conclusion
H1CG is a localized, historically informative mtDNA subclade that ties modern and ancient maternal lineages to the Iberian/Atlantic refugium and subsequent Western European demographic history. Its limited diversity and moderate geographic spread are consistent with a Holocene origin in Iberia followed by diffusion along Atlantic and Mediterranean coasts and occasional overland movement into neighboring regions. Further full mitogenome sampling, particularly from understudied Iberian and northwest African populations and additional ancient remains, would clarify its internal structure and precise chronology.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Conclusion