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Last edited by J. Ketch; 04-21-2020 at 03:20 PM.


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I don't believe that Celts were 45-50% Steppe, rather I imagine they were exactly midway between Italics/Iberians and pre-Celtic Britons and Scandinavians, that is around 40% Steppe, if that were the case the homeland model for Celtic expansion would work better, although obviously there is no inherent reason why it should.
The "favoring" Italic bit was referring to all the models, despite you using Italic and Celtic sample very close to one another you ended up with Central and Southern French scoring 30+% Italic, that's what I mean by "favoring", for some reason the model prefers Etruscans to the Swiss/Lech samples.
Empuries is basically on the French-Spanish border, if the locals were not Celts I think they can say something about how Southern French Celts looked and to me it would be surprising if Celts/Celtized southern France ended up looking more Southern than those N-E Iberians.You make good points about the other Empuires samples, but what are the chances of them sampling all 5 Celtic migrants?
I'll try to look more into the archeology of early Hallstatt to understand better how it expanded, at least we can agree that the early Celtic expansion must have involved a fair amount of assimilation to preserve at least partially the northerness of Northern France and the British isles and to even spread it to Southern France.Here's the problem with this point, even though it's a decent one, we have no idea if the Celts in Iberia are from the actual Celtic homeland of the Alps and Hallstatt/La Tene. Celts in Iberia could've came from literally anywhere and acquired more admixture in France, how likely is it they went straight from Switzerland to Iberia? If they came from or passed through W France and then just followed the coast, it makes sense they'd be more northern because coastal central/NW France did have large Bell Beaker replacements because of low population density, the Bell Beakers from Britanny are more northern shifted than the only other BB samples from Central and southern France. Again, fine enough point but it's just silly to use samples from Iberia to use as Celts when you literally have samples from the Celtic homeland, and they aren't that old, some are mid-1000s BC, lots of ethnicity specific genetic drift already present in populations of that age.
Did you consider any other theory on how Celts spread outside the classical Hallstatt-La Tene theory?
My model was just to compare using northern and non-northern samples for Celts, I just wanted to show that both concepts fail at explaining both Northern France and the Alpine region in one single swoop.As for your point on Germanic ancestry in the French, yes I agree, I was only trying to not stray too far away from your original model. I said as much myself, French(especially Britanny, but all of them do) need LBA/MBA insular Briton(French Beaker works as well) to remove inflated Germanic, that still has nothing to do with what I'm originally arguing about: Roman admixture in Swiss people(of whom Germanic admixture was also inflated in your models).
I based my claim on ancient components based model, when you use later ones for some reason the non-European adxmiture becomes more evident. I noticed it some time ago with Iberian models already but I'm not sure why G25 works like this.and yes, we do see Near Eastern/North African components north of Provence, why would there be more Republican era migrants than Imperial outside of Italy when Republican Rome held Gaulish/Celtic lands for what, 100-50 years,
You are not wrong but the problem with Rome_Imperial it's that it's a bit of an abstract proxy, because we can safely say that within Italy it was an extreme outlier that in effect didn't directly influence all of the territories you showed(especially not Northern Italy) while on the other hand more MENA populations directly influenced the gene pool of northern Roman territories somewhat, I'm not sure how the models would look if we adjust for using iron age North Africans and Anatolians/Levantines.while Imperial Rome held them for what, nearly 400-500? While the Imperial Rome sample is just a mishmash of native Romans, immigrants, and their mixes, there is substantial evidence the average Roman(not dwellant of the city of Rome but inhabitant of Italy) was South Italian-Greek Islander like because of the impact said Imperial immigrants, as one Roman colonist in Iberia shows, and the Collegno outliers in Northern Italy and Pannonia/Hungary(the outliers to the Scandinavian-like Germanic migrants, not Republican Roman-like other Italians).
I don't know much about Y-DNA, but didn't we find E around Bronze age Europe?and that's not even getting into Y-DNA, most of the exotic Y-DNA found in Europe today(your Es, Js, Ts, what have you) is nearly completely absent from neolithic farmers, especially in western European farmers.
I mean how do we explain Empuries1? The 3 non northern samples and BylanyI guarantee you when Hallstatt/La Tene samples finally get released(I agree with you they need to stop fucking studying neolithic and bronze age populations whom we know everything about already) and they show up as N. Iberian/SW French or even Central French people are going to be saying "hue hue Rhaetians" when similar samples already exist 1k years before then as far north as fucking Mecklenburg.A111 are already 34-38% Steppe and given how modern France looks, having early Celts be 30-35% Steppe implies that there was little replacement insofar as Northern France goes, or maybe Celtic was spread into southern France after the mixing and Celtization of Northern France(EDIT:like you said, I reply non-chronologically, don't mind this entire part).
BTW this leads me to question, were Basque at time basque-like themselves? All Iberian samples are quite a bit less Steppe, although not especially so.
Last edited by SharpFork; 04-21-2020 at 03:48 PM.





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At the same time the theory that Bell Bearized- Celts expanded into Iberia and Britain would also explain that...
I guess at this point we need more on either the Middle German region or the Eastern Celtic region to see if we see any difference. So far HRV_IA and the Western Bylany are in the 35-40% range, maybe the reality is that somehow Celts ended up expanding from a core region that was relatively southern but ended up being middle of the road by assimilating their direct neighbours in all directions. Bizzarre but not really impossible or impossible to believe given the evidence we have.





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you guys are wrong in assuming celts were all the same. the celts that got into britain and iberia were already mixed with French_BA, they didn't just jumped over france and settled these places. xenophobicprussian is prob. referring to celts from the core celtic area, which is a direct continuation of hallstatt culture. these would be sw european-like.


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Here's a summary showing all iron age samples surrounding Celts during this period plus some Bronze age ones and also including the Lech samples and recent Iron age Celtic samples + presumed Celts from earlier samples, I didn't include Bronze age Swiss samples:
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This is false modern propaganda, traces of Hallstatt related DNA can be found in modern Welsh, and Scottish and to a lesser extant Irish, it does make up a small percent, probably 10-15% but if that and their languages doesn’t make them Celtic, then what does that make the Turks? Or the northwestern English?
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