If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
Here's a GIF-animation of the spread of settlement in Finland during the Iron Age according to archeology. The first frame is from the early Iron Age, the second from the middle Iron Age and the last from the late Iron Age:
The I1a main concentration is around upper Oslo-fjord in southern Norway.
I honestly think there hasn't been an in-depth enough population study to say for sure, I mean, until you Y-haploid test >50% of the males in Scandinavia, which certainly hasn't been done, it's going to be very difficult to say where I1a is most dense/prevalent.
I personally would be very interested to know, but every map I've seen says something different. One map is darkest for I1a around Trondheim, you say upper Oslo fjord, and other maps show Gotland Sweden as having the most I1a; but this is percentage wise, the numeric superiority might even lay in north Germany.
I personally would be very interested to know, but every map I've seen says something different. One map is darkest for I1a around Trondheim, you say upper Oslo fjord, and other maps show Gotland Sweden as having the most I1a; but this is percentage wise, the numeric superiority might even lay in north Germany.
The skolt-sami between the norwegian, finnish and russian border have I1a over 50%.
I agree, these maps only show concentrations in the given random sample. Oslo is given for I1a(N) density. The I1a(AS) density spot, by the AS definition, would be expected in Germany.
One day we can see the places with the greatest % of total pop. present.
Then we can debate what social or environmental factors favored I1a (subgroups) growth in those settings!
I have been communicating lately with my cousin who is in the I1a-NuN14 sub clade of I1a. He has been communicating with Ken Nordtvedt and Ken says that I1a-Nun14 is certainly part of Norse I1a but does not know when it split off from the main Norse I1a line yet.
I am thinking that it probably split off from the original Norse type when they were both in Scandinavia. Ken does mention that it seems to be common in southern Scandinavia today.
Does anyone have any idea on how long I1a has been in Finland? Did it come with Nordic settlers possibly during the Bronze age to the west of Finland or was it there earlier?
I wonder if it is older or younger than N3 in Finland?
Does anyone have any idea on how long I1a has been in Finland? Did it come with Nordic settlers possibly during the Bronze age to the west of Finland or was it there earlier?
I wonder if it is older or younger than N3 in Finland?
Comment: Did you pick up this link? I don't know if it fully answers your question though.
Very interesting thanks for the replies and the link guys. I was wondering about this because my paternal grandmother's father's line tested out to be N3 and the origin of this part of my family is in western Finland.
So I1a in Finland seems to be quite different and independant from I1a in the rest of Scandinavia. That might mean that Finnish I1a has been in Finland for a long time.
Based on DNATribes, I'm from Nepal, Tibet or Northern India. I'm I1a just like you and can trace back virtually all of my ancestors for hundreds of years to The Netherlands. I have been in touch with a few flemish people who have had similar anomalous results. I think that it is just a problem with DNATribes database, which does not have a sufficient sample of coastal northern europeans.
The only explanation I have been given is that my results might reflect the ancient migration from Asia up to 50,000 years ago. Perhaps we are of relatively pure cro-magnon stock.
Based on DNATribes, I'm from Nepal, Tibet or Northern India. I'm I1a just like you and can trace back virtually all of my ancestors for hundreds of years to The Netherlands. I have been in touch with a few flemish people who have had similar anomalous results. I think that it is just a problem with DNATribes database, which does not have a sufficient sample of coastal northern europeans.
The only explanation I have been given is that my results might reflect the ancient migration from Asia up to 50,000 years ago. Perhaps we are of relatively pure cro-magnon stock.
John
Well, that pretty much sums up, at least in part, why I have never tossed any coin in the direction of autosomal testing.
Based on DNATribes, I'm from Nepal, Tibet or Northern India. I'm I1a just like you and can trace back virtually all of my ancestors for hundreds of years to The Netherlands. I have been in touch with a few flemish people who have had similar anomalous results. I think that it is just a problem with DNATribes database, which does not have a sufficient sample of coastal northern europeans.
Thanks John for the information. I didn't know the flemish had similar results. I had some Belgian flemish among my DNA-tribes matches.
Originally posted by Johnserrat
The only explanation I have been given is that my results might reflect the ancient migration from Asia up to 50,000 years ago. Perhaps we are of relatively pure cro-magnon stock.
John
According to Niskanen, of all modern people the bones of the Cro-Magnon resemble the most of the ones of modern Finns and Swedes:
Comment