The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup H3AU
Origins and Evolution
H3AU is a downstream subclade of mtDNA haplogroup H3A, itself an Early Holocene lineage that expanded along the Atlantic fringe. Based on the phylogenetic position under H3A and the observed geographic pattern in modern and ancient samples, H3AU most likely arose in the Atlantic‑facing parts of Iberia or adjacent Atlantic Europe during the later Holocene (post‑Neolithic to Bronze Age). The subclade is defined by one or a few private mutations on the H3A backbone and shows a restricted distribution consistent with regionally localized maternal drift and periodic maritime‑linked gene flow.
Subclades (if applicable)
At present H3AU appears to be a relatively shallow clade with limited internal branching reported in public datasets; if additional downstream mutations are discovered in larger sequencing datasets, those would be catalogued as named subclades. Current evidence points to small lineages within H3AU rather than a large diversified tree, reflecting either a recent origin or long‑term low effective population size for carriers.
Geographical Distribution
H3AU is most frequent in western Iberia and the Atlantic coastal regions of western Europe and occurs at lower frequencies elsewhere. The pattern mirrors the broader H3/H3A distribution but is more geographically confined: higher representation in Portugal, northwestern Spain and parts of Atlantic France, detectable at modest frequencies in the British Isles (western and Atlantic corridors), and as rare occurrences in northwest Africa and the western Mediterranean. Scant occurrences in Anatolia or the Near East likely reflect later mobility and low‑level gene flow rather than primary origin.
Historical and Cultural Significance
Although H3A as a parent clade is associated with post‑glacial recolonization and later Neolithic/Chalcolithic dynamics, H3AU's narrower temporal estimate and coastal distribution suggest links to later Holocene demographic processes — including Bronze Age coastal networks, Atlantic maritime contacts, and localized continuity in coastal communities. It may be observed in contexts related to Bell Beaker interactions along the Atlantic façade and the later Atlantic Bronze Age, where maternal continuity and localized founder effects produced detectable subclades.
From a genetic genealogy perspective, H3AU can help resolve maternal ancestries within Atlantic Iberia and adjacent regions and can be useful for distinguishing fine‑scale maternal structure that broader H3/H3A calls do not capture.
Conclusion
H3AU is a low‑frequency, regionally concentrated mtDNA subclade of H3A that most plausibly arose on the Iberian/Atlantic European margin in the later Holocene. Its restricted distribution and limited diversity make it a useful marker for studies of Atlantic coastal maternal lineages, demographic continuity in Iberia, and later Holocene maritime‑linked population processes. Increased whole‑mitogenome sequencing and additional ancient DNA samples will clarify the precise age, branching structure, and archaeological associations of H3AU.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades (if applicable)
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Conclusion