The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup V7B
Origins and Evolution
mtDNA haplogroup V7B is a subclade nested within haplogroup V7, itself part of the broader mtDNA haplogroup V. Haplogroup V is broadly linked to post-glacial recolonization of parts of Europe and has a strong association with western Iberia as a primary source region for several V lineages. Given its position as a downstream branch of V7 and the limited number of observed ancient instances, V7B most plausibly originated after the initial V7 diversification, during the later Neolithic to Bronze Age interval (on the order of ~4–5 kya), consistent with secondary expansion events or localized founder effects within southwestern Europe.
Subclades (if applicable)
At present, V7B is treated as a defined terminal or near-terminal subclade under V7 in many datasets. Because V7B is relatively rare in published and public databases, internal substructure within V7B is either minimal or under-sampled; additional subclades could be recognized as sequencing of more full mitochondrial genomes and ancient specimens increases. Its relation to sibling lineages under V7 can illuminate whether V7B represents a localized founder event (e.g., an island or coastal expansion) or part of broader maternal gene-flow episodes.
Geographical Distribution
Modern and ancient occurrences of V7B are concentrated in western and northern Europe with sporadic presence in northwest Africa and adjacent regions. The distribution pattern is consistent with an origin in Iberia followed by limited dispersals northward into Scandinavia and westward across the North Atlantic fringe, and southward via Mediterranean contacts into North Africa. Overall frequencies are generally low to moderate, with the highest density of observations reported in Iberian and adjacent western European populations and rarer occurrences in northern Scandinavian groups (including Saami) and some Berber or North African groups. Four ancient DNA samples assigned to V7B in the cited database suggest the lineage was present in archaeological contexts and not solely a feature of recent historic gene flow.
Historical and Cultural Significance
The presence of V7B across Iberia and into northern Europe suggests it could have spread through a combination of Neolithic farmer expansions, coastal forager mobility, and later Bronze Age or Iron Age demographic processes. Haplogroup V lineages have been observed in contexts associated with Mesolithic/Neolithic continuity in Iberia and later with cultural phenomena that redistributed maternal lineages across Europe (for example, maritime networks in the Atlantic façade and Bronze Age mobility). Localized high frequencies in small or isolated groups can reflect founder effects or drift (for example, in some Saami or island populations). Its appearance in North African contexts can reflect prehistoric Mediterranean exchanges and historic gene flow across the Gibraltar/Alboran corridor.
Conclusion
V7B represents a low-frequency, regionally informative maternal lineage derived from the post-glacial European mtDNA pool. Its Iberian origin followed by patchy dispersal into northern Europe and North Africa fits a model of localized origin plus episodic migration and drift. Continued mitogenome sequencing and improved ancient DNA sampling, especially from Iberia, Atlantic coastal sites, and North African littoral contexts, will refine the chronology and migratory pathways of V7B and clarify its substructure and demographic impact.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades (if applicable)
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Conclusion