The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup V7
Origins and Evolution
mtDNA haplogroup V7 is a downstream lineage of haplogroup V, which is widely interpreted as a post‑Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) European maternal clade with a strong signal in the Iberian Peninsula and the Franco-Cantabrian refuge area. As a subclade, V7 likely arose after the initial diversification of V, during the early Holocene or late Mesolithic period as populations expanded and restructured following the retreat of Ice Age glaciers. Based on the phylogenetic position within V and comparative molecular clock estimates for similar subclades, an origin on the order of ~7 kya (thousand years ago) is a reasonable working estimate, reflecting continued lineage sorting and local differentiation in Western Europe.
Subclades
V7 itself may contain regional sublineages detectable only with high-resolution whole mitogenome sequencing; published studies and public databases show multiple distinct V subbranches (V1–Vx) with geographic structure. Because V7 has relatively low frequency and limited sampling in many regions, its internal structure is still incompletely resolved in the literature. As more ancient and modern full mitogenomes are produced, finer subclade resolution and coalescence estimates for V7 will become clearer.
Geographical Distribution
Modern and ancient occurrences of V7 are concentrated in Western Europe, with notable presence in the Iberian Peninsula and detectable occurrences in Northern Europe (including Saami and some Scandinavian groups), parts of the Caucasus, and in North Africa among some Berber populations. The distribution is compatible with a model in which V7 arose in a Western European refuge or nearby area and later dispersed via postglacial recolonization routes and subsequent demographic events (Neolithic movements, Bronze Age transformations), producing low-to-moderate frequencies across adjacent regions. Ancient DNA records (several published instances and seven entries in the referenced database) confirm V‑lineages including V7 in archaeological contexts spanning Mesolithic to historic periods, though V7-specific ancient find counts remain modest.
Historical and Cultural Significance
Haplogroup V and its subclades are often tied to the genetic signature of European postglacial hunter‑gatherers and to populations involved in early Holocene recolonization of northern latitudes. V7, given its inferred age and geography, likely contributed maternally to populations involved in Mesolithic coastal and inland recolonization of Western Europe. Over the Neolithic and later periods, V7-bearing maternal lines would have mixed with incoming farmer-associated lineages (e.g., early Neolithic Cardial/Impressed Ware) and later steppe‑derived populations, producing the modern patchy distribution. The presence of V7 in Saami samples reflects either ancient northern persistence or later admixture events that affected northern Europe specifically.
Conclusion
mtDNA V7 represents a localized branch of the broader haplogroup V story: a maternal lineage that most likely differentiated in Western Europe after the LGM and persisted through Mesolithic into the Neolithic and later periods, contributing to the maternal diversity of Western and parts of Northern Europe and marginally into North Africa and the Caucasus. Current knowledge is constrained by sampling and the limited number of full mitogenomes and ancient instances; targeted mitogenome sequencing and expanding ancient DNA datasets will refine the timing, phylogeny, and migratory history of V7.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Conclusion