2






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No, only in basically Iranian/central Asian shifted Indians and Pakis from my understanding. h2 period is pretty much absence in gypsies but they have other H clades like h1 and h7. H2a1 is pretty rare in the Balkans, almost exclusively Slavic and Scandinavian in Europe. It's only found at significant numbers in Eastern Slavs and Caucasians outside Scandinavia. It is found natively in Anatolia though.
Those who want to live, let them fight, and those who do not want to fight in this world of eternal struggle do not deserve to live.
Even if this were hard--that is how it is ! Assuredly, however, by far the harder fate is that which strikes the man who thinks he can overcome Nature, but in the last analysis only mocks her. Distress, misfortune, and diseases are her answer.
Kekgenes K13
1 Swahili+ Jew + Kekistani + Trailerparkistan @ 6.9420
M.T.A
Celt + Frank (4.869)
Viking Icelandic + Frank (5.463)
Viking Icelandic + Celt (5.545)
Celt + Saxon (5.789)
Viking Danish + Celt (6.283)
Celt (6.539)
Frank (10.13)
Viking Icelandic (10.34)
Viking Danish (10.4)
Saxon (10.79)
kit 2
Celt + Belgae (4.016)
Viking Danish + Belgae (5.555)
Belgae + Frank (5.797)
Celt + Frank (6.031)
Celt (6.297)
Viking Danish + Celt (6.441)
Belgae (8.662)
Viking Danish (8.925)
Frank (9.409)
Saxon (10.83)


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https://www.eupedia.com/europe/Haplogroup_H_mtDNA.shtmlH39
H39: found in Ireland, Britain and Norway / found in the early Neolithic Sopot culture in Hungary


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It was an old Danish study including definitions "rich grave, likely from north etc", but I can't find it any more. I saw it about 10 years ago. During the Roman Iron Age there was a continuous war time between "Swedish" and "Danish" clans, lasting decades. Danes are interpteted to have been a victorious people who beat original clans there (Jutes? idk). Here is another study, keeping in mind that the mutation A16299G identifies H39.
https://www.researchgate.net/publica...ic_Populations
Edit.
Two interesting sentences, because U4 and U5 were notable in Iron Age Eura, but not in Middle Age Karelia.
And later in the same chapter again sbout U4, but I have problems to get c/p using phone's touch screen.The presence ofsolely Hg U4 and U5a in our Neolithic and Early Bronze age samples is noteworthy given that Hg U4 and U5 have frequenciesaround 1–5% and 5–7%, respectively, among Europeans today.
Last edited by Lemminkäinen; 03-21-2021 at 09:43 AM.


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Well, I do think my H2 is probably Caucasus related or something like this.


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I have H101 and I do not know where it is distributed





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