The ancient Hungarians originated from the Ural region of Russia, and migrated through the Middle-Volga region and the Eastern European steppe into the Carpathian Basin during the 9th century AD. Their Homeland was probably in the southern Trans-Ural region, where the Kushnarenkovo culture disseminated. In the Cis-Ural region Lomovatovo and Nevolino cultures are archaeologically related to ancient Hungarians. In this study we describe maternal and paternal lineages of 36 individuals from these regions and nine Hungarian Conquest period individuals from today's Hungary, as well as shallow shotgun genome data from the Trans-Uralic Uyelgi cemetery. We point out the genetic continuity between the three chronological horizons of Uyelgi cemetery, which was a burial place of a rather endogamous population. Using phylogenetic and population genetic analyses we demonstrate the genetic connection between Trans-, Cis-Ural and the Carpathian Basin on various levels. The analyses of this new Uralic dataset fill a gap of population genetic research of Eurasia, and reshape the conclusions previously drawn from 10-11th century ancient mitogenomes and Y-chromosomes from Hungary. ... Majority of Uyelgi males belonged to Y chromosome haplogroup N, and according to combined STR, SNP and Network analyses they belong to the same subclade within N-M46 (also known as N-tat and N1a1-M46 in ISOGG 14.255). N-M46 nowadays is a geographically widely distributed paternal lineage from East of Siberia to Scandinavia 33 . One of its subclades is N-Z1936 (also known as N3a4 and N1a1a1a1a2 in ISOGG 14.255), which is prominent among Uralic speaking populations, probably originated from the Ural region as well and mainly distributed from the West of Ural Mountains to Scandinavia (Finland). Seven samples of Uyelgi site most probably belong to N-Y24365 (also known as N-B545 and N1a1a1a1a2a1c2 in ISOGG 14.255) under N-Z1936, a specific subclade that can be found almost exclusively in todays’ Tatarstan, Bashkortostan and Hungary 17 (ISOGG, Yfull).Csaky et al., Early Medieval Genetic Data from Ural Region Evaluated in the Light of Archaeological Evidence of Ancient Hungarians, bioRxiv, Posted July 13, 2020, doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.07.13.200154 See also... Hungarian Conquerors were rich in Y-haplogroup N On the association between Uralic expansions and Y-haplogroup N More on the association between Uralic expansions and Y-haplogroup N Ancient DNA confirms the link between Y-haplogroup N and Uralic expansions
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Showing posts with label Uyelgi cemetery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Uyelgi cemetery. Show all posts
Tuesday, July 14, 2020
First taste of Early Medieval DNA from the Ural region (Csaky et al. 2020 preprint)
Over at bioRxiv at this LINK. From the preprint:
Labels:
Carpathian Basin,
Central Europe,
Finno-Ugric,
Hungarian Conquerors,
Hungarian Plain,
Indo-European,
N-tat,
N1a1-M46,
N1a1-Y24365,
N1c,
N3a,
Proto-Uralic,
Ugric,
Ural Mountains,
Uralian,
Uralic,
Uyelgi cemetery
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