The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup H3B7
Origins and Evolution
H3B7 is a downstream subclade of H3B, itself a daughter lineage of the broadly distributed European haplogroup H3. Based on the phylogenetic position of H3B and the regional concentration of H3 sublineages, H3B7 most plausibly arose on the Atlantic/Iberian fringe during the Early to Mid Holocene (several thousand years after the Last Glacial Maximum). Its time depth (here estimated ~6.0 kya) is consistent with formation during the Neolithic/post‑Neolithic period when local maternal lineages diversified in response to population growth, coastal population connectivity, and subsequent demographic processes on the Atlantic seaboard.
Subclades
H3B7 is a terminal or near‑terminal branch within H3B in current phylogenies; depending on sampling density it may contain additional micro‑subclades defined by a small number of private mutations. Because H3B7 is relatively rare and geographically localized, its internal branching is not yet deeply resolved in many public databases — further high‑coverage mitogenomes from Iberia and the Atlantic fringe will be needed to identify and name any derived subclades.
Geographical Distribution
The distribution of H3B7 is concentrated along the Atlantic fringe, with the highest relative frequencies in Iberian populations and reduced but detectable frequencies in neighboring Atlantic France, parts of the British Isles, and some southern European locales (including low frequencies reported in Sardinia and parts of Italy). Low‑frequency occurrences in northwest Africa (Maghreb) and sporadic detection in the Near East reflect historical cross‑Mediterranean contact, later movements, and the broader dispersal of parent H3 lineages. In the current dataset H3B7 has been identified in two ancient DNA samples, providing direct archaeological evidence of its presence in the past.
Historical and Cultural Significance
Because H3 and its subclades are associated with post‑glacial recolonization signatures and later Neolithic/Atlantic demographic processes, H3B7 likely reflects a blend of these forces on the Atlantic seaboard. The haplogroup's geographic pattern is consistent with (1) survival and differentiation of maternal lineages in southwestern European refugia after the Ice Age; (2) amplification and coastal spread during Neolithic and post‑Neolithic population growth; and (3) movement along maritime networks in the Atlantic Bronze Age and later historical periods. H3 sublineages are frequently observed in Neolithic and Copper‑Age contexts in western Europe, and H3B7's localization suggests it was part of the maternal gene pool carried by communities on the Iberian/Atlantic margin during these cultural horizons.
Conclusion
H3B7 is best interpreted as a localized maternal lineage reflecting Iberian/Atlantic population history during the Holocene. Its rarity and limited number of ancient occurrences mean conclusions about precise prehistoric movements should be cautious; nevertheless, the phylogenetic placement and present distributions make H3B7 a useful marker of Atlantic‑fringe maternal ancestry and of the demographic processes that shaped western Europe's coastal populations. Increased mitogenome sampling in Iberia, Atlantic France, the British Isles and northwest Africa will refine the haplogroup's internal structure, age estimates, and archaeological associations.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Conclusion