The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup V2C
Origins and Evolution
mtDNA haplogroup V2C is a downstream lineage of haplogroup V2, itself a branch of haplogroup V associated with post‑Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) re-expansions from southwestern European refugia. Given the parent clade's estimated origin around the terminal Pleistocene/early Holocene, V2C is plausibly a Holocene (~9 kya) offshoot that diversified as human groups expanded within and out of Iberian and adjacent refugial areas. Its phylogenetic position within V2 indicates that V2C represents a later splitting event in the postglacial demographic processes that shaped western Eurasian maternal lineages.
Subclades
Current published and reference datasets treat V2C as a defined sublineage under V2; depending on sequence resolution, V2C may itself contain minor downstream branches observed at low frequencies in regional populations. Because the lineage is uncommon, many proposed internal branches remain sparsely sampled and would benefit from high-coverage mitogenome sequencing of targeted populations to resolve finer substructure.
Geographical Distribution
V2C shows a patchy, low-frequency distribution consistent with a lineage that expanded from western European refugia and subsequently experienced limited dispersals. Recorded modern occurrences and the small number of ancient occurrences place the haplogroup in:
- Iberia (Spain, Portugal) — reflecting refugial persistence and local continuity;
- Northern Europe (notably modern Saami and neighboring groups) — likely reflecting later northward dispersal and founder effects in peripheral populations;
- Caucasus (Armenia, Georgia and neighboring groups) — indicating eastward movement or gene flow between southern Europe and the Caucasus;
- North African Berber groups — consistent with cross‑Mediterranean contacts and low‑level maternal gene flow;
- Mediterranean islands (e.g., Sardinia and other island populations) — islands frequently retain rare lineages because of drift and isolation.
The lineage’s scarcity and scattered occurrences suggest limited demographic expansion compared with common European matrilines (e.g., H), and a history shaped by founder events, drift, and episodic gene flow.
Historical and Cultural Significance
Although V2C is not associated with any major demographic expansions detectable by high frequency, its presence in a range of regions informs on several archaeological and historical processes:
- It likely traces part of the postglacial Mesolithic re-expansion from southwestern European refugia into northern Europe and the circum‑Mediterranean.
- Neolithic farming expansions and later cultural movements (e.g., maritime contacts across the Mediterranean, Chalcolithic and Bronze Age long‑distance exchanges) could have transported low-frequency maternal lineages like V2C between Europe, North Africa and the Caucasus.
- Its occurrence among Saami and other northern groups may reflect later northward movements and founder events that amplified rare maternal lineages in small, isolated populations.
Because V2C is rare in ancient DNA datasets (reported in one ancient sample in the referenced database), concrete cultural attributions remain tentative; however, its geographic pattern is concordant with long-term continuity in some western European areas and episodic long-distance movements.
Conclusion
V2C is best interpreted as a minor maternal lineage deriving from the post‑LGM diversification of haplogroup V2 in western Europe. Its low and scattered modern distribution across Iberia, northern Europe, the Caucasus, North Africa and Mediterranean islands reflects a history of local continuity in refugial landscapes, occasional long‑distance dispersal, and pronounced effects of drift and founder events. Further high-resolution mitogenome sampling from undersampled regions and integrated ancient DNA analyses will clarify the timing, internal structure, and migratory episodes associated with V2C.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Conclusion