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					Ok, I changed a little my opinion on that matter, when I did see it by my own eyes.
It seems, that Hungraian settlement could have an impact in southern Poland anyway.
Interesting, that southern provinces had more Hungolians each one than Hungolia itself
Beneath, distribution of Ugrofinians 1) by % of population 2) by number of bearers of
N in thousands, 3) by % of N in a province to whole Ugrofinian population in Poland.
Ugrofinowie w Polsce.png
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					Most of Polish N1c are branches typical for East Balts and West Balts. The most common branches of N1c in Poland are "Latvian" Z16975, "West Baltic" (Prussian-Yotvingian) Z16981, and N1c-NY5580 (I'm not sure what exactly it is - I suppose that it is one of typically Lithuanian branches):
http://www.anthrogenica.com/showthre...661#post247661
Polish N1c branches:
Here are my own names of Baltic N1c sub-branches, based on frequencies in populations (Z16975 was the most common branch of N1c in pre-1945 East Prussia, based on FTDNA Projects):
East Prussian R1a subclades (from FTDNA Projects):
http://www.anthrogenica.com/showthre...l=1#post175421
East Prussian N1c-Z16975 (from FTDNA Projects):
http://www.anthrogenica.com/showthre...l=1#post176774
kit 193848 Jons Maczullatis born in 1745 in Skaisgirren (Skajzgiry)
kit E13080 Johannes Reihs born in 1800 in Bischofstein (Bisztynek)
kit E2482 Martin Ossowski, born in 1729 in Marienburg (Malbork)
kit N61024 Jurgis Lunczyns born in 1715 in Mosteiten (Slawjanskoje)
kit 343953 Pranciškus Lukoševičius, born in Wisztyniec (Vištytis)
kit B42972 Johann Kuschnereit born in 1800 in Eszerischken
kit N58382 Dargil, born ca. 1344 in Gut Dargels (Dargiele) near Migehnen (Mingajny)
Interestingly there is also one guy with N1b-L732:
kit 217892 Johann Groening born in 1800 in Horsterbusch (Krzewiny)
Here a map with locations of 2 other N1b carriers:
http://semargl.me/haplogroups/maps/171/
Last edited by Peterski; 07-03-2017 at 02:44 PM.
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					Some of them (especially Kow_45) could also be descended from local population.
GAC culture in Poland was a mix of EEF with WHG (no Steppe) and their Y-DNA was I2:
Globular Amphora Poland Kierzkowo I2440 I2
Globular Amphora Poland Kierzkowo I2403 I2a2
Globular Amphora Poland Kierzkowo I2405 I2a2
Globular Amphora Poland Kierzkowo I2441 I2a2a1b
Globular Amphora Ukraine Ilyatka ILK001 I2a2a1b
Globular Amphora Ukraine Ilyatka ILK002 I2a2a1b2
And individual Kow_45 from Wielbark culture also belonged to I2-L801 haplogroup.
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					Uh, that sample is a closest match to Finno-Ugrics in NW Russia, not Balts, likely meaning it had Mongoloid admixture. Balts(Lithuanians, Latvians) don't have Mongoloid admixture. Niemcza is also in southern Poland, if it was a group like Curonians(who are said to be Estonians rather than Latvians), how did they get so far south? Balts didn't exactly conquer a lot unlike Slavs or Germanics during that period.
More likely Magyars.
The Guanche skulls as a whole are unlike those of modern European Mediterraneans, and resemble northern European series most closely, especially those in which a brachycephalic element is present, as in Burgundian and Alemanni series.divided them into clearly differentiated types, which include a Mediterranean, a Nordic, a "Guanche," and an Alpine. The "Guanche" accounts for 50 per cent of the whole on the four islands of Teneriffe, Gomera, Gran Canaria, and Hierro; the Nordic for 31 per cent, the Mediterranean for 13 per cent, and the Alpineoldschool anthropology
					
						
					
						
					
						
					
						
					
						
					
						
					
						
					
						
					
						
					
						
					
				
			
			
			
				

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You're not entirely correct, this dendogramm is based on Eurogenes K36, in which Niemcza gets high Fennoscandian, due to which it clusters with North-Russians.
While Fennoscandian is almost pure Finnish component North Euros without any mongoloid admix get it in high amounts like Dutch, North-Germans, Danes get 10%+.
Also should be noted that this are very early results distanses to closest populations are 30+ and result are very wild, they do barely deffirinate in terms of big races, hardly any usefull for regional sub-divisions.
Tl;DR - result are shit right now, we should wait for better read genomes.


					
						
					
						
					
						
					
						
					
						
					
						
					
						
					
						
					
						
					
						
					
				
			
			 
			
				

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					K36 "Fennoscandian" component is also present among Balts:
http://k36.physical-anthropology.inf...rogenesk36.jpg
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					Yes, Fennosciandian isn't Mongoloid at all. In K36 Siberian is North Mongoloid and Niemcza didn't have any.
K36 Genetic Similarity Report & K36 Advanced Chromosomal Analysis (Automated)
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					Sample Niemcza_13 from Early Medieval Poland belongs to I2a-Din:
http://www.anthrogenica.com/showthre...l=1#post255823
So far none of Iron Age Polish samples belongs to I2a-Din or R1a.
This is now one of the oldest I2a-Din samples in ancient DNA, right?:
Niemcza_13 (900-1000 AD), I2a1b2-L621+, mtDNA J1c3e1
Location of Niemcza (to the west of Krosno):
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siege_of_Niemcza
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					niem18 J-Z6055: Z27899/Y7016+ or J-SK1323: FGC58046- FGC58078+ (low probability)
http://www.eupedia.com/europe/Haplogroup_J2_Y-DNA.shtml
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haplogroup_J-M172
It is J2a > m410 > L26 > z6064 > z6055
or J2a > m410 > L26 > PF5087 > PF5160 > PF5197 > SK1323
M410 is Georgia, Ossetia subclade. So considering Osetia another Sarmatian trace.
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