Comb Ceramic or Pit-Comb Ware (in Europe ), Jeulmun pottery or Jeulmun vessel (in Korea ) is a type of pottery subjected to geometric patterns from a comb-like tool. This type of pottery was widely distributed in the Baltic , Finland , the Volga upstream flow, south Siberia , Lake Baikal , Mongolian Plateau , the Liaodong Peninsula and the Korean Peninsula .
60-456: The oldest Comb Ceramic is found in the remains of Liao civilization : Xinglongwa culture (6200 BC - 5400 BC). The Neolithic Age in Korea began around 8,000 BC. People began farming, planting millet and other grains, and gradually began to settle down, forming a clan society. They ground the stone into various grinding tools for use. Among them, the most representative of the characteristics of
120-584: A Northeast Asian population, because the oldest ancient samples comply with this genetic profile. N has experienced serial bottlenecks in Siberia and secondary expansions in eastern Europe. Haplogroup N-M46 is approximately 14,000 years old. In Siberia, haplogroup N-M46 reaches a maximum frequency of approximately 90% among the Yakuts , a Turkic people who live mainly in the Sakha (Yakutia) Republic . However, N-M46
180-623: A few British individuals, and an Altaian . Y-chromosomes that display the M231 mutation that defines Haplogroup N-M231, but do not display the CTS11499, L735, M2291 mutations that define Haplogroup N1 are said to belong to paragroup N-M231*. N-M231* has been found at low levels in China. Out of a sample of 165 Han males from China , two individuals (1.2%) were found to belong to N*. One originated from Guangzhou and one from Xi'an . Among
240-526: A fourth sample of Khants. In Europe, the N-P43 types have their highest frequency of 20% among Volga-Uralic populations. The extreme western border of the spread of N-P43 is Finland, where this haplogroup occurs only at marginal frequency – 0.4%. Yet N-P43 is quite frequent among Vepsas (17.9%), a small Finnic population living in immediate proximity to Finns, Karelians and Estonians. Haplogroup N-P43 also has been observed with very high frequency (26/29 = 89.7% of
300-707: A frequency of up to 30% (13/43) among the Yi people of Butuo County , Sichuan in Southwest China . It is also found in 34.6% of Lhoba people. N1-LLY22g* has been found in samples of Han Chinese , but with widely varying frequency: Other populations in which representatives of N1*-LLY22g have been found include: N1(xN1a,N1c) was found in ancient bones of Liao civilization : N-CTS4309: two people identified with this subgroup in Iraq. Very rare. The N1a2-F1008/L666 clade and N1a1-M46/Page70/Tat are estimated to share
360-615: A later descendant of the yDNA N-M128 clade, belonging to mtDNA R11’B6>R11b, was reported from the ancient DNA of the Western Zhou Cemetery, tomb M18. Based on ancient DNA, the distribution of mtDNA B5b2 after 9500 years ago and prior to 4600 years ago in the direction of the Anhui and Jiangsu provinces from Shandong from the vicinity of the future Shandong Longshan Yinjiacheng site is shown in “Maternal genetic structure in ancient Shandong between 9500 and 1800 years ago”, while
420-549: A most recent common ancestor in N1a-F1206/M2013/S11466 approximately 15,900 [95% CI 13,900 <-> 17,900] years before present or 17,621 [95% CI 14,952 <-> 20,282] years before present. All M46 in Yfull database are M178 , being a quarter younger than separation from F1139. The mutations that define the subclade N-M46 are M46/Tat and P105. This is the most frequent subclade of N. It probably arose in
480-590: A most recent common ancestor in N1a2-F1008/L666 approximately 8,600 [95% CI 7,500 <-> 9,800] years before present, 9,200 years before present, or 9,314 [95% CI 7,419 <-> 11,264] years before present. At least three of six tested male specimens from the Early Neolithic (ceramic-using hunter-gatherer of approximately 7200–6200 years ago) layer at the Shamanka archaeological site near
540-432: A primary branch of haplogroup N-M231, is now represented mainly by a subclade, N-FGC28435, that has spread probably some time in the first half of the second millennium CE and that has been found in individuals from Serbia , Croatia , Bosnia and Herzegovina , Montenegro , and Turkey ( Istanbul ). N-Y7310 (or N-F14667) subsumes N-FGC28435 and likewise probably descends from a common ancestor who has lived some time in
600-402: A sample from Gotland, 9.5% (4/42) of a sample from Värmland, 7.3% (3/41) of a sample from Östergötland/Jönköping, 2.4% (1/41) of a sample from Blekinge/Kristianstad, and 2.2% (1/45) of a sample from Skaraborg. Lappalainen et al. (2008) found N-Tat in 14.4% (23/160) of a sample from Sweden. Lappalainen et al. (2009) found N-Tat in 15.4% (4/26) of a sample from Södermanland, 12.5% (3/24) of
660-409: A sample from Västmanland, 12.1% (4/33) of a sample from Uppsala, 7.8% (4/51) of a sample from Gothenburg, 7.0% (3/43) of a sample from Norrbotten, 6.8% (5/73) of a sample from Skåne, 6.6% (15/228) of a sample from Stockholm, 6.3% (3/48) of a sample from Sydnorrland, 6.3% (2/32) of a sample from Västerbotten, 6.3% (2/32) of a sample from Örebro, 5.9% (3/51) of a sample from Värmland/Dalarna, 5.4% (2/37) of
SECTION 10
#1732765052898720-1076: A sample from the settlement of Topanov and 19/22 = 86.4% of a sample from the settlement of Malyi Spirin) in samples of Kachins, a Turkic-speaking ethnic group or territorial subgroup of the Khakas people , from Shirinsky District of northern Khakassia . There appears to be a cline through the Sagai (another Turkic-speaking ethnic group that is now considered to be a constituent of the Khakas people), with 46.2% (55/119) of Sagai sampled from Ust'–Es', Esino, Ust'–Chul', and Kyzlas settlements of Askizsky District of central Khakassia belonging to haplogroup N-P43 vs. only 13.6% (11/81) of Sagai sampled from Matur, Anchul', Bol'shaya Seya, and Butrakhty settlements of Tashtypsky District of southern Khakassia belonging to this haplogroup. However, other researchers' samples of Khakas people have exhibited only moderate frequencies of N-P43 or potential N-P43. Derenko et al. (2006) examined
780-898: A sample from Östra Götaland, and 5.1% (2/39) of a sample from southeastern Sweden (Kalmar, Gotland, Kronoberg, and Blekinge). They did not find any instance of N-Tat in their samples from Jönköping (0/28), Malmö (0/29), Halland (0/34), or Västra Götaland (0/75). The subclade N-M178 is defined by the presence of markers M178 and P298. N-M178* has higher average frequency in Northern Europe than in Siberia, reaching frequencies of approximately 60% among Finns and approximately 40% among Latvians , Lithuanians & 35% among Estonians . Miroslava Derenko and her colleagues noted that there are two subclusters within this haplogroup, both present in Siberia and Northern Europe, with different histories. The one that they labelled N3a1 first expanded in south Siberia and spread into Northern Europe. Meanwhile,
840-412: A sample of Nganasan , 78% (7/9) in a sample of Enets , 78% (21/27) in a sample of Khants , 75% (44/59) in a sample of Tundra Nenets, 69% (29/42) in another sample of Nenets, 60% (15/25) in a sample of Mansi , 57% (64/112) in another sample of Khants, 54% (27/50) in another sample of Nganasan, 45% (40/89) in a sample of Forest Nenets, 38% (18/47) in a third sample of Khants , and 25% (7/28) in
900-715: A sample of Chuvash (1/114 = 0.88%). Karafet et al. (2018) have found N-P63, which appears to be roughly phylogenetically equivalent to N-B478, in 91.2% (31/34) Nganasan, 63.8% (30/47) Tundra Nenets, 42.7% (35/82) Forest Nenets, 14.0% (8/57) Dolgan, 7.0% (9/129) Selkup, 3.3% (3/91) Evenk, 2.7% (2/75) Mongol, 2.6% (2/78) Komi, 2.5% (2/80) Buryat, and 2.0% (2/98) Altai Kizhi. This haplogroup was not observed in samples of Yukaghir (0/10), Koryak (0/11), Teleut (0/40), Ket (0/44), Yakut (0/62), or Khanty (0/165) populations. Kharkov et al. (2023) have found N-B478 in greatly differing percentages of samples of Khanty from two different villages of Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug : 60.9% (39/64) of
960-409: A sample of Khakassians ( n =53) collected in the settlements of Askiz, Shirinsk, Beisk and Ordzhonikidzevsk districts of Khakass Republic and found that 15 of them (28.3%) belonged to N-LLY22g(xTat). Rootsi et al. (2007) examined a sample of Khakas ( n =181) and found that 31 of them (17.1%) belonged to N-P43; retested 174 of the individuals in this sample and found that 27 of them (15.5%) belonged to
1020-626: A sample of Khanty from the village of Russkinskaya, Surgut district and 14.8% (8/54) of a sample of Khanty from the village of Kazym, Beloyarsky district. Five of the eight members from the village of Kazym share a subclade marked by the B172 and Z35108 SNPs with all previously surveyed Nenets men from the Vanuito phratry belonging to the Vanuito, Puiko and Yaungat clans and the Purungui clan of Khanty origin. Haplogroup N1b has been predominantly found in
1080-469: A time to most recent common ancestor estimated to be greater than 10,000 years before present) to the aforementioned members of N-P189 have been found in an individual from the present-day Altai Republic and probably also in an archaeological specimen attributed to the Iron Age Mezőcsát culture of what is now Hungary (approx. 2,900 years before present) and in an archaeological specimen attributed to
1140-1012: A wide geographic distribution throughout northern Eurasia, and it also has been observed occasionally in other areas, including Central Asia and the Balkans. It has been found with greatest frequency among indigenous peoples of Russia , including Uralic peoples ( Mari , Udmurt , Komi , Khanty , Mansi , Nenets , Nganasans ), Turkic peoples (Yakuts, Dolgans, Khakasses, Tuvans, Tatars, Chuvashes, etc. ), Buryats , Tungusic peoples ( Evenks , Evens , Negidals , Nanais , etc. ), Yukaghirs , Luoravetlans (Chukchis, Koryaks), and Siberian Eskimos , but certain subclades are very common in Finland , Estonia , Latvia , and Lithuania , and other subclades are found at low frequency in China (Yi, Naxi, Lhoba, Han Chinese , etc. ). Especially in ethnic Finnic peoples and Baltic-speaking peoples of northern Europe,
1200-662: Is a Y-chromosome DNA haplogroup defined by the presence of the single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) marker M231. It is most commonly found in males originating from northern Eurasia . It also has been observed at lower frequencies in populations native to other regions, including parts of the Balkans , Central Asia , East Asia , and Southeast Asia . However, the basal paragroup N* has only been found in populations indigenous to China and Cambodia . Subclades of N-M231 have been found at low levels in Southeast Asia ,
1260-403: Is derived from N-L666/N-F2199 but basal to N-CTS6380, this latter being the most recent common ancestor of present-day N-P43 (found mainly among Maris, Udmurts, Komis, Chuvashes, Tatars, Nenets, Nganasans, Khanty, Mansi, Khakas, Tuvans, etc. ) and N-F1101 (found mainly among East Asians). Furthermore, N-FT210118 has not been found in any living individual who has had his Y-DNA tested to date, and
SECTION 20
#17327650528981320-794: Is one of the most prevalent Y-DNA haplogroups among indigenous populations of northwestern Siberia: 69.0% (29/42) Nenets, 50.0% (25/50) Nganasan, 22.2% (12/54) Dolgan from Taymyr, 7.0% (3/43) Selkup, 1.6% (1/63) Ob-Ugrian. It is also quite prevalent among populations of Central Siberia, Southern Siberia, and Mongolia: 17.9% (17/95) Tuvan, 15.5% (27/174) Khakas, 13.0% (6/46) Tozhu Tuvans , 8.7% (2/23) Shor, 8.3% (2/24) Even, 8.2% (5/61) Altaian, 5.3% (3/57) Evenk, 5.0% (19/381) Mongol, 4.9% (3/61) Sart-Kalmak (partial descendants of Oirat Mongols in Kyrgyzstan), 4.2% (9/216) Yakut, 2.1% (1/47) Torgut (Mongolia), 1.4% (1/69) Derbet (Kalmykia), 0.9% (1/111) Buryat. A geographically outlying member has been found in
1380-465: Is present with much lower frequency among many of the Yakuts' neighbors, such as Evenks and Evens . It also has been detected in 5.9% (3/51) of a sample of Hmong Daw from Laos, 2.4% (2/85) of a sample from Seoul, South Korea, and in 1.4% (1/70) of a sample from Tokushima, Japan. The haplogroup N-M46 has a low diversity among Yakuts suggestive of a population bottleneck or founder effect . This
1440-516: The Buzava tribe of Kalmyks , Khakas , and Komis . A number of a Han Chinese, an Ooled Mongol , a Qiang , and a Tibetan were found to belong to a sister branch (or branches) of N-M128 under paragroup N-F1154*. A neolithic sample brn002 (~5,940 BP) in Trans-Baikal was discovered to be an early offshoot upstream of N-M128. As a genetic testing result of Yelü clan, a royal family of
1500-647: The Erlitou culture . The people of the Dadianzi site of Inner Mongolia received the haplogroup O3 from the immigrants of the Central Plains, and a Lower Xiajiadian individual was identified to possess both the maternal lineage of D4 and paternal lineage of O3-M122. Due to a cooling climate, part of the Lower Xiajiadian culture population migrated to the south and influenced the Central Plains. Among
1560-617: The Jinggouzi site situated to the northwest of the Liao civilization were assigned to Haplogroup C-M217 . Northern nomads from Jinggouzi might have entered the West Liao River valley, but these Jinggouzi people (closely related to Xianbei and Oroqen ) were culturally and genetically distinct from the original people of the West Liao River valley, who carried the characteristic Haplogroup N-M231 lineage. The Haplogroup O-M122 that
1620-605: The Last Glacial Maximum . Males carrying the marker apparently moved northwards as the climate warmed in the Holocene , migrating in a counter-clockwise path, to eventually become concentrated in areas as far away as Fennoscandia and the Baltic . The apparent dearth of haplogroup N-M231 amongst Native American peoples indicates that it spread after Beringia was submerged, about 11,000 years ago. Haplogroup N has
1680-789: The Liao Dynasty and Khitan descents, it was found to belong to N-F1998, a downstream of N-M128. According to "The deep population history of northern East Asia from the Late Pleistocene to the Holocene", the basal yDNA N-M128/mtDNA B5b2 HGDP01293 individual occupied a position on the PCA between the Jiangsu Province’s and Anhui province’s specimens, but not far from the Shandong province’s mtDNA R11’B6>R11b specimen, while
1740-550: The Liao River , is an umbrella term for several ancient civilizations that originated in the Liao basin. It is thought to have first formed in 6,200 BC. This civilization was discovered when Ryuzo Torii , a Japanese archaeologist , discovered the Hongshan culture in 1908. Large-scale pit-type houses , graves and temples with altars were excavated. It is thought that the Liao civilization may have been "a country" of
1800-975: The Ob-Ugric-speaking and Northern Samoyed peoples of western Siberia, and Turkic-speaking peoples of Russia (especially Yakuts , ,but also Altaians , Shors , Khakas , Chuvashes , Tatars , and Bashkirs ). Nearly all members of haplogroup N among these populations of northern Eurasia belong to subclades of either haplogroup N-CTS6128/M2048 or haplogroup N-P43. Y-chromosomes belonging to N1b-F2930/M1881/V3743, or N1*-CTS11499/L735/M2291(xN1a-F1206/M2013/S11466), have been found in China (where they account for approximately 3.62% of all Y-DNA ) and sporadically throughout other parts of Eurasia. The N-CTS6128/M2048 and N-P43 subclades of N1a-F1206/M2013/S11466 are found in high numbers in Northern Eurasia; however, members of N1a-F1206(xCTS6128, P43) are currently found mainly in northern China and Korea. N2-Y6503,
1860-560: The Pacific Islands , Southwest Asia and the Balkans . These factors tend to suggest that it originated in East Asia or Southeast Asia. Haplogroup NO-M214 – its most recent common ancestor with its sibling, haplogroup O-M175 – is estimated to have existed about 36,800–44,700 years ago. It is generally considered that N-M231 arose in East Asia approximately 19,400 (±4,800) years ago and populated northern Eurasia after
Comb Ceramic - Misplaced Pages Continue
1920-472: The prehistoric age . A model of the feng shui were excavated from remains of the Hongshan culture . Ball products such as the jade which made the precursors of Chinese dragon were discovered in remains of Xinglongwa culture . In addition, the oldest pit-comb ware and Liaoning bronze dagger (biwa form bronze sword) were excavated. It was contemporaneous with the ancient Yellow River civilization and ancient Yangtze civilization . This region
1980-757: The 1980s. Unlike the pottery of The Three Kingdoms period, combed pottery was made by hand, rather than using a pottery wheel, and used various molding methods, rotating methods, etc., mainly using the rolling method of stacking circular clay belts. Pottery is generally fired in an open-air kiln without any special structure. However, kilns with certain structures have been found at the Podae site in Pyongyang, Jinjori site in Gimcheon, and Pyeongmi-dong site in Jinju, suggesting that more advanced kiln facilities were used since
2040-713: The Jiangsu Province’s and Anhui Province’s specimens, the basal yDNA N-M128/mtDNA B5b2 HGDP01293 individual became a participant of the uniform genetic cline, which spanned from Jiangsu and Anhui individuals to the Tai-speaking Dai people, and from Jiangsu and Anhui individuals to the ancient individual WGM20, belonging to mtDNA M11, of the Yangshao Wanggou site, dated to 5000-5500 years ago, and this ancient age also encompassed ancient yDNA pre-N-M128 Mazongshan individuals and modern yDNA N-M128-affiliated Gansu Province’s individuals, who appeared to be included on
2100-654: The Kitoi culture of ceramic-using foragers of the area around Lake Baikal (approx. 6,700 years before present). A sample excavated at the Houtaomuga site in the Yonghe neighborhood of Honggangzi Township, Da'an , Jilin , China dating back to 7430–7320 years ago (Phase II of the Early Neolithic) has been found to belong to Y-DNA haplogroup N and mtDNA haplogroup B4c1a2 . This sample is autosomally identical with
2160-594: The Liao civilization was occupied by a diverse sequence of human cultures that were originally distinct from both the farming populations of the Yellow River and the nomads of the Eurasian steppe . The formation and development of the Lower Xiajiadian culture population was likely a complex process affected by admixture of ethnically different people. The Lower Xiajiadian culture of the West Liao River included people carrying haplogroups from northern Asia, but there
2220-591: The N-B478 (Asian/northern Samoyedic) subclade of N-P43 and 2 of them (1.1%) belonged to the N-L1419 (European/Volga Finnic and Chuvash) subclade of N-P43 for a total of 29 (16.7%) N-P43. Haplogroup N-P43 forms two distinctive subclusters of STR haplotypes, Asian and European, the latter mostly distributed among Finno-Ugric-speaking peoples and related populations. The TMRCA of N-B478 has been estimated to be 3,007 [95% CI 2,171 <-> 3,970] years before present. It
2280-667: The Neolithic Age is the comb pottery, which is found all over the Korean Peninsula. Amsa-dong in Seoul, Nanjing in Pyongyang, and Ga-ri in Gimhae are representative sites of comb pottery. The first knowledge of comb pottery on the Korean Peninsula began with Stone Age sites and relics found in the areas of Pyongan, Hwanghae and Gyeonggi provinces during a survey conducted by Torii Ryuko in 1916. Later, Fujita Ryusaku proposed
2340-518: The Northern system theory, which linked the lineage of carpeted pottery culture on the Korean Peninsula with that of Neolithic pottery culture in northern Eurasia. His theory of Northern genealogy had a major impact on the epistemology of Neolithic pottery in the academic circles of North and South Korea after the August 15 liberation, but has been repudiated by excavations and research at new sites since
2400-643: The Yi people, a Tibeto-Burman speaking ethnic group in southwestern China who originated from ancient Qiang tribes in northwestern China. However, it also has been found in people all over China (where they account for approximately 3.62% of the country's male population and are mainly distributed in Shandong, Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Anhui, etc. ) and in some individuals from Spain, Ecuador, Poland, Belarus, Russia, Iraq, India, Kazakhstan, Korea, Japan, Bhutan, Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Thailand, Malaysia, and Singapore. N2 (Y6503/FGC28528; B482/FGC28394/Y6584) –
2460-569: The Yin Ruins relics of Shang Dynasty, artefacts with northern cultural influences have been identified. The Upper Xiajiadian culture and Bronze Age West Liao River farmers (WLR_BA) can be modeled as deriving their ancestry from both Amur hunter-gatherers and Yellow River farmers. This particular ancestral lineage has been associated with Proto-Korean-speakers , and the Upper Xiajiadian culture . They displayed primarily subclades of
Comb Ceramic - Misplaced Pages Continue
2520-476: The aforementioned extant N-P189 lineages has been estimated to be 4,900 (95% CI 5,700 <-> 4,100) years before present. An archaeological specimen attributed to the Botai culture of northern Kazakhstan and dated to the latter half of the fourth millennium BCE belongs to N-P189*, being basal to present-day European members of N-P189. Lineages that belong to N-Y6503(xP189) and are only distantly related (with
2580-548: The ancient samples from the Baikal Early Neolithic Kitoi culture, one of the Shamanka II samples (DA250), dated to c. 6500 BP, was analyzed as NO1-M214 in the original study. However, this same specimen (DA250 or Shamanka 250) has subsequently been found to belong to N-FT210118, the same clade as the other haplogroup N specimens from the same site (besides DA247, who belongs to N-Y147969). N-FT210118
2640-470: The estimated TMRCA of N-CTS6380 exceeds the estimated date of deposition of any of the specimens from the Shamanka site associated with the Kitoi culture, so it appears that the representatives of the Kitoi culture at Shamanka (or at least their Y-DNA) have gone extinct rather than being direct ancestors of any living people. In 2014, there was a major change in the definition of subclade N1, when LLY22g
2700-584: The existence of the local Paleolithic Northern East Asian substratum, represented by individuals of the basal died-out yDNA O-M164*, separating from the Southern East Asian yDNA O-M188 and contributing to yDNA C2-M217 ancestors of Altaic and Korean representatives, was shown in "Human genetic history on the Tibetan Plateau in the past 5100 years". Having occupied the position on the PCA between
2760-428: The first half of the last millennium. However, members of N-Y7310(xFGC28435) exhibit a greater geographic range, including an individual from Rostov Oblast of Russia and a Romanian Hungarian individual with ancestry from Suceava , Bukovina . Other branches of N-P189 include members from Turkey, Russia ( Moscow Oblast ), France ( Charente-Maritime ), and England ( Devon ). The most recent common ancestor of all
2820-1184: The mentioned genetic cline closer to the ancient Henan province’s specimens of the Longshan period ca. 4000 years ago, than to the more genetically basal ancient individual WGM20 of the Yangshao Wanggou site, dated to 5000-5500 years ago. Haplogroup N-P43 is defined by the presence of the marker P43. Additionally, haplogroup N-P43 is defined by a marker Y3214, which is shared with a younger yDNA O1b2-K14, distributed in Japan (YFull). It has been estimated to be approximately 4,000 to 5,500 years old (TMRCA 4,510 years, TMRCA 4,700 [95% CI 3,800 <-> 5,600] ybp, or 4,727 [95% CI 3,824 <-> 5,693] years before present). It has been found very frequently among Northern Samoyedic peoples , speakers of Ob-Ugric languages , and northern Khakassians , and it also has been observed with low to moderate frequency among speakers of some other Uralic languages , Turkic peoples , Mongolic peoples , Tungusic peoples , and Siberian Yupik people . The highest frequencies of N-P43 are observed among north-west Siberian populations: 92% (35/38) in
2880-407: The middle Neolithic Age. Comb pottery is fired at a temperature of about 600-700 °C in an oxidized salt state, which gives most pottery a reddish brown or brown color. This ceramic art and design -related article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Liao civilization The Liao Civilization or Liao River Civilization ( Chinese : 遼河文明 ), named after
2940-460: The other primary subclade of haplogroup N, is extremely rare and is mainly represented among extant humans by a recently formed subclade that is virtually restricted to the countries making up the former Yugoslavia (Bosnia-Herzegovina, Croatia, Serbia, and Montenegro), Hungary and Austria. Other members of N2-Y6503 include a Hungarian with recent ancestry from Suceava in Bukovina , a Slovakian,
3000-539: The paternal haplogroups O and C, with a smaller minority of N. Various Neolithic cultures have been identified in the Xiliao River region. Broomcorn millet and foxtail millet were the main cereal crops, while pigs and dogs were the main domesticated animals found at Neolithic archaeological sites. Bronze Age cultures of the Xiliao River region are: Haplogroup N-M231 Haplogroup N (M231)
3060-521: The predominant haplogroup in the region in the Neolithic period at 89%, its share gradually declining over time. Today, this haplogroup is most common in Finland , the Baltic states , and among northern Siberian ethnicities, such as the Yakuts . Individuals at the Liao civilization were assigned into five different Y sub-haplogroups using diagnostic single nucleotide polymorphisms, namely N1 (xN1a, N1c), N1c, C/C3e, O3a (O3a3) and O3a3c. Ancient samples of
SECTION 50
#17327650528983120-422: The rare N2-Y6503 (N2-B482) subclade. The TMRCA of N1 is estimated to be 18,000 years before present (16,300–19,700 BP; 95% CI). Since the revision of 2014, the position of many examples of "N1-LLY22g" within haplogroup N have become unclear. Therefore, it is better to check yfull and ISOGG 2019 in order to understand the updated structure of N-M231. However, in older studies, N-LLY22g has been reported to reach
3180-418: The south approximately 4,000 years ago and later influenced Chinese culture. The most ancient populations of the West Liao River valley exhibited a high frequency of Haplogroup N-M231 . A study by Yinqiu Cui et al. from 2013 found that 63% of the combined samples from various Hongshan archeological sites belonged to the subclade N1 (xN1a, N1c) of the paternal haplogroup N-M231 and calculated N to have been
3240-624: The southern end of Lake Baikal have been found to belong to N1a2-L666. This subclade is defined by the presence of the marker M128. N-M128 was first identified in a sample from Japan (1/23 = 4.3%) and in a sample from Central Asia and Siberia (1/184 = 0.5%) in a preliminary survey of worldwide Y-DNA variation. Subsequently, it has been found with low frequency in some samples of the Manchu people , Sibe people , Evenks , Koreans , Han Chinese , Hui , Tibetans , Vietnamese , Bouyei people , Kazakhs , Uzbeks , Uyghurs , Salars , Tu , Mongols ,
3300-956: The younger subcluster, which they labelled N3a2, originated in south Siberia (probably in the Baikal region). N-M178 was also found in two Na-Dené speaking Tłı̨chǫs in North America. Neolithic samples from Baikal area have yielded plenty of yDNA N specimens, and one sample from Fofonovo , Buryatia , 5000-4000 BC is among the first Tat samples in the ancient record. Earliest samples of N1a1a-L708 were found in Trans-Baikal (brn008, N1a1a1*-L708; brn003, N1a1a1a1*-M2126) between 8,000 and 6,000 YBP. Downstream samples were found in Yakutia (N4b2, N1a1a1a1a*-Z1979) and Krasnoyarsk Krai (kra001, N1a1a1a1a*-L392), between 5,000 and 4,000 YBP. N1a2a-M128 and N1a2b-B523/P43 are estimated to share
3360-493: Was confirmed by a study of ancient DNA which traced the origins of the male Yakut lineages to a small group of horse-riders from the Cis-Baikal area. N-Tat has been observed with greatly varying frequency in samples from Sweden . Karlsson et al. (2006) found N-Tat in 44.7% (17/38) of a sample of Saami nomads from Jokkmokk , 19.5% (8/41) of a sample from Västerbotten, 14.5% (8/55) of a sample from Uppsala, 10.0% (4/40) of
3420-536: Was genetic evidence of the migration of millet farming people from the Central Plains (Zhongyuan). The climate of the West Liao River valley was warmer at the beginning of the Early Bronze Age, which may be one of the driving forces for the northward migration of the Central Plains farming population. An archaeological study showed that the painted potteries of the Lower Xiajiadian were influenced by
3480-411: Was observed among Liao individuals is believed to have spread to the Liao civilization from the Yellow River civilization in the southwest. This lineage is most commonly associated with speakers of Sino-Tibetan languages (such as the Han Chinese ). However, its frequency only began to rise in the Bronze Age, and the ancient Liao River population was different from the Yellow River population. This means
3540-430: Was retired as the main defining SNP for N1 because of reports of LLY22g's unreliability. According to ISOGG , LLY22g is problematic because it is a "palindromic marker and can easily be misinterpreted." Since then, the name N1 has been applied to a clade marked by a great number of SNPs, including CTS11499, Z4762, and CTS3750. N1 is the most recent common ancestor of all extant members of Haplogroup N-M231 except members of
3600-401: Was thought to have been desert for the past 1 million years. However, a 2015 study found that the region once featured rich aquatic resources and deep lakes and forests that existed from 12,000 years ago to 4,000 years ago. It was changed into desert by climate change which began approximately 4,200 years ago. Therefore, people of the Hongshan culture may have emigrated to the Yellow River in
#897102