The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup H3G4
Origins and Evolution
mtDNA haplogroup H3G4 sits as a downstream subclade of H3G, itself a daughter lineage of the wider haplogroup H3. The broader H3 clade is widely interpreted in population genetics as a post‑glacial expansion lineage that increased in frequency along the Atlantic fringe of Europe after the Last Glacial Maximum. Given the known age and geographic pattern of H3G (Early Holocene, ~9 kya, centered on Iberia/Atlantic Europe), H3G4 most likely arose locally on the Iberian/Atlantic margin during the Early to Mid Holocene (a plausible estimate ~7 kya), representing further diversification within the maternal pool of that region.
The internal phylogenetic position of H3G4 — currently resolved as a low‑diversity, low‑frequency terminal or near‑terminal branch — suggests a relatively recent origin after the main H3/H3G diversification. The limited number of observed modern and ancient sequences points to either a localized origin with constrained expansion or to subsequent drift and dilution by later demographic events.
Subclades (if applicable)
At present, H3G4 is best characterized as a narrow subclade with few well‑documented downstream branches; published and public mitogenome datasets report small numbers of H3G4 mitogenomes without extensive internal structure. This pattern can reflect true recent origin, undersampling, or population bottlenecks/founder effects. As more full mitogenomes (particularly from ancient contexts across Iberia and the Atlantic coast) are sequenced, substructure within H3G4 may become clearer and allow finer dating and phylogeographic reconstruction.
Geographical Distribution
H3G4 is concentrated on the Atlantic fringe of Western Europe with the highest relative occurrences in the Iberian Peninsula and detectable presence in adjacent Atlantic and Mediterranean regions. Observations across modern population surveys indicate low but persistent frequencies in:
- Iberian populations (Spain, Portugal, including Basques)
- Western Atlantic France and the British Isles (at low frequencies)
- Parts of southern Europe (isolated, lower‑frequency occurrences in Italy and Sardinia)
- Northwest Africa (Maghreb) at low levels, consistent with prehistoric/ historic Mediterranean and Atlantic exchange
- Very low frequencies in Anatolia and the Near East, reflecting broader dispersals of H lineages or later mobility
Only a very small number of ancient DNA hits (reported as one identified archaeological sample in the present database) have been associated confidently with H3G4 to date. That ancient occurrence supports continuity of this lineage in at least some parts of the Atlantic/Iberian region since the Holocene.
Historical and Cultural Significance
Because H3G4 likely originated on the Atlantic/Iberian fringe after the LGM, it is best interpreted in the context of post‑glacial re‑expansion and coastal population dynamics rather than as a primary marker of pan‑European Neolithic farmer movements or Bronze Age Steppe expansions. However, H3G4 carriers may have been absorbed into Neolithic coastal communities (e.g., Cardial/Impressed Ware), later regional cultures, and Atlantic maritime networks.
Archaeologically, H3 subclades (including H3G and its daughters) are frequently invoked when interpreting maternal continuity between late Mesolithic, Early Holocene, and subsequent Neolithic coastal populations of Iberia and western France. H3G4’s low frequency and patchy distribution make it less useful as a broad cultural marker, but it can be informative for fine‑scale maternal ancestry studies in Atlantic Europe and for tracing localized maternal lineages through time.
Conclusion
H3G4 is a geographically concentrated, low‑frequency mtDNA lineage that fits into the broader story of H3 diversification along the Atlantic fringe of Europe during the Early Holocene. Its presence in modern Iberian and adjacent populations, and its occasional detection in ancient samples, point to a localized origin followed by limited spread through coastal Neolithic interactions and later historical mobility. Expanded mitogenome sampling—especially of ancient remains from Iberia, Atlantic France, and northwest Africa—will be necessary to refine the internal phylogeny, age estimates, and precise migration history of H3G4.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades (if applicable)
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Conclusion