The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup H3G1B
Origins and Evolution
H3G1B is a downstream subclade of mtDNA haplogroup H3G1, itself part of the broader H3G/H3 family. Given the established position of H3G1 as an Early Holocene lineage concentrated along the Atlantic/Iberian fringe (roughly ~7.5 kya), H3G1B most plausibly arose locally in the same geographic setting at a later date (estimated here at ~5.5 kya). Its phylogenetic position and geographic pattern are consistent with a model of post-glacial re-expansion from southwestern European refugia followed by localized differentiation along Atlantic Europe.
Mitochondrial subclades like H3G1B typically form when small, semi-isolated maternal populations experience drift and founder effects; such processes are expected along peninsulas and coastal corridors where population continuity persisted from the Mesolithic into the Neolithic and later periods.
Subclades (if applicable)
H3G1B is a terminal or near-terminal branch beneath H3G1 in current phylogenies. At present it is treated as a discrete lineage (H3G1B) rather than a major node with many named downstream clades; future high-resolution sequencing from additional modern and ancient samples could reveal further internal structure. Its immediate relatives include other local H3-derived lineages (e.g., H3G1A/H3G1-other subbranches) that together reflect fine-scale maternal differentiation in Atlantic Europe.
Geographical Distribution
The distribution of H3G1B is restricted and focal. Highest relative frequencies are expected in the Iberian Peninsula—particularly Atlantic-facing regions—and in neighboring Atlantic France. Lower but detectable frequencies appear in the British Isles and, at reduced levels, in parts of northwest Africa (Maghreb) reflecting prehistoric and historic Atlantic connections. Occurrences in southern Europe (island Sardinia, parts of Italy) and the Near East are expected to be sporadic and low-frequency, reflecting broader mobility of H lineages.
Genetic surveys of H3-family mtDNA and available ancient DNA suggest H3G1 (and by extension rare daughter clades like H3G1B) are uncommon overall but maintain localized continuity, often showing up in modern population samples from Iberia and in a small number of archaeological contexts tied to Atlantic Europe.
Historical and Cultural Significance
Because of its geographic focus, H3G1B is informative for studies of regional maternal continuity on the Atlantic seaboard. It likely traces ancestry back to populations that repopulated northern and western Europe after the Last Glacial Maximum and that experienced subsequent interaction with incoming Neolithic farmers and later Bronze Age networks.
Archaeologically, while H3G1B does not define any major pan-European expansion on its own, its presence complements broader signals of continuity in Iberia across the Mesolithic–Neolithic transition and into later cultural horizons. It may be observed at low frequencies in contexts associated with Atlantic Neolithic communities and, secondarily, within populations influenced by maritime exchanges in the Copper–Bronze Age and historic periods (for example, resulting in limited gene flow to northwest Africa and the British Isles).
Conclusion
H3G1B represents a low-frequency, regionally concentrated maternal lineage that illustrates the micro-evolutionary processes—founder effects, drift, and localized continuity—that shaped post-glacial maternal diversity along the Atlantic/Iberian fringe. It is valuable for fine-scale phylogeographic reconstruction of Iberian and Atlantic European maternal ancestry, and additional sampling (especially ancient DNA) will better define its age, substructure, and historical movements.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades (if applicable)
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Conclusion