Vestiges of an ancient border in the contemporary genetic diversity of North-Eastern Europe

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Abstract

It has previously been demonstrated that the advance of the Neolithic Revolution from the Near East through Europe was decelerated in the northernmost confines of the continent, possibly as a result of space and resource competition with lingering Mesolithic populations. Finland was among the last domains to adopt a farming lifestyle, and is characterized by substructuring in the form of a distinct genetic border dividing the northeastern and southwestern regions of the country. To explore the origins of this divergence, the geographical patterns of mitochondrial and Y-chromosomal haplogroups of Neolithic and Mesolithic ancestry were assessed in Finnish populations. The distribution of these uniparental markers revealed a northeastern bias for hunter-gatherer haplogroups, while haplogroups associated with the farming lifestyle clustered in the southwest. In addition, a correlation could be observed between more ancient mitochondrial haplogroup age and eastern concentration. These results coupled with prior archeological evidence suggest the genetic northeast/ southwest division observed in contemporary Finland represents an ancient vestigial border between Mesolithic and Neolithic populations undetectable in most other regions of Europe.

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Neuvonen, A. M., Putkonen, M., Översti, S., Sundell, T., Onkamo, P., Sajantila, A., & Palo, J. U. (2015). Vestiges of an ancient border in the contemporary genetic diversity of North-Eastern Europe. PLoS ONE, 10(7). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0130331

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