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Atlantic Continuum: A Look at DNA & Ancient Human Migration Patterns - by Karl Hoenke for AAPS 6 th Annual International Conference on Ancient America 4/28/22 1 A C D B X B X B B B X X
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Page 1: Atlantic continuum   final

Atlantic Continuum: A Look at DNA & Ancient Human Migration Patterns - by Karl Hoenke for

AAPS 6th Annual International Conference on Ancient America

April 12, 2023 1

A C D

B

X

B

X

B

BBX

X

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Atlantic Continuum

Presented by Karl Hoenketo Ancient Artifact Preservation Society

17 September 2010Marquette, Michigan

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Overview

• High-level observations about DNA• Revisit Haplogroup X• Assemble some interesting scraps• Suggest hypothesis to fit these together

• Duck

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Usefulness of DNA

• Determine relationships• Estimate timing of divergences• Estimate locations of divergences

• mtDNA = Mitochondrial DNA follows female line• Y chromosome DNA = follows male line

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DNA Assumptions when Estimating Time

• Size of founding group• Mutation rates: Constant, Only once, not

reversed• Degree of isolation• Degree of inbreeding/outbreeding• Shared ancestry• Sampling is “random”, not “convenience”• Sampling “within-local-population”

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Generally Accepted DNA “Tree”

April 12, 2023 6

A C D

B

X

B

X

B

BBX

X

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Haplogroup X -- Updated

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Haplogroup XGeographic Appearance Frequency, %

Siberia, NW North America 0%Europe, North Africa, Middle East 2%Georgia (Caucasus) 8%Orkney Islands (off NE coast of Scotland) 7%Israeli Druze (ancient refugium) 28%Ojibway, other Algonquin Tribes 25%Micmac (NE US and Eastern Canada) 50%

Note 1: Inland “footprints” of X absent in both Asia and Europe. It is present in populations associated with coastal regions and history

Note 2: Haplotype X occurs as X1 and X2. X1 only in North Africa. X2 dispersed ~20,000 ybp. X2 not in Asia. X2a & X2g in North America, not Central America. X2 in Sioux (15%), Navajo (7%), Yakima (5%), Nuu-Chah-Nulth (12%)

Note 3: Haplotype X is 12-36,000 years old, must be among founding populations of North America

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Outlier Haplotypes in Cherokees52-member study group

Haplotype

Comments

J Origin Levant, 10,000 ybp—infrequent among native Americans

T Originated in Mediterranean 10,000 ybp (i.e. Egypt ~25%), 26% in study group

U Oldest Europeans, original settlers, ~50,000 ybp– 25% of study group

H Dominant in Western Europe (near 50%), only 7.7% hereX Originated in Mediterranean 30,000 ybp ; 13.5% in study

group

Sampling of Central Band of Cherokees; published in Ancient American

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European Pattern of SpreadingGenetics & Farming

~6,000 BC

~5,000 BC

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BASQUE mtDNA FREQUENCIES

today ancient0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

XKJVotherH

mtDNA “J” originated in Mid-EastmtdDNA “K” originated in Levant ~10,000 ybpmtDNA “V” believed to be recent SW Europe development

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Maritime Cultures

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Phoenicians

• Known to have circled Africa• Dominated Mediterranean commerce• Characterized by Haplogroup T• Called themselves Cana'ni or KHNAI • Many American towns & Conoy Indians considered

cognates • William Penn around 1700 described Conoy Indians as

resembling Italians, Jews and Greeks• Phoenicians visited England• And are rumored to have visited ………

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Pyramids and Henges

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Thornborough Henge dates from 3,500 to 2,500 BC

Poverty Point mounds date from 1.650 to 700 BC

Coincidence?

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Summary of Bits Presented

• Haplogroup X distribution consistent with maritime trading culture

• Pattern of continuous Atlantic rim coastal culture

• Delayed spread of farming & genetics support identity of separate coastal culture

• Orion’s belt pattern appears in diverse locations

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Hypothesis Red Paint Culture of Maritime Atlantic in Europe

• Was in routine contact with North America

• Passed megalithic tradition to Mediterranean

• Evolved into traders of Mediterranean (who visited North America for 5,000 years)

• Left genetic remnants in refugia (i.e. Basques, Caucasus, Druze, Micmacs, et alia)

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QUESTIONS ????