Re: Celtic Origins
- From: "Peter Alaca" <P.Alaca@xxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 24 Jan 2006 14:30:12 +0100
Doug Weller wrote: 0e8ct1tmel4qpumolrutpkq26e96ordaq8@xxxxxxx,
Peter Alaca wrote:
Brian McEvoy, B, M. Richards, P. Forster
& DG. Bradley (2004)
"The Longue Durée of Genetic Ancestry: Multiple
Genetic Marker Systems and Celtic Origins on
the Atlantic Facade of Europe"
Am J Hum Genet. October 2004; 75(4): 693-702.
" Celtic languages are now spoken only on the
Atlantic facade of Europe, mainly in Britain and
Ireland, but were spoken more widely in western
and central Europe until the collapse of the
Roman Empire in the first millennium a.d.
It has been common to couple archaeological
evidence for the expansion of Iron Age elites in
central Europe with the dispersal of these
languages and of Celtic ethnicity and to posit a
central European "homeland" for the Celtic
peoples. More recently, however, archaeologists
have questioned this "migrationist" view of Celtic
ethnogenesis. "
[...].
" What seems clear is that neither the mtDNA
pattern nor that of the Y-chromosome markers
supports a substantially central European Iron
Age origin for most Celtic speakers-or former
Celtic speakers-of the Atlantic facade. The
affinities of the areas where Celtic languages are
spoken, or were formerly spoken, are generally
with other regions in the Atlantic zone, from
northern Spain to northern Britain. Although
some level of Iron Age immigration into Britain
and Ireland could probably never be ruled out by
the use of modern genetic data, these results
point toward a distinctive Atlantic genetic
heritage with roots in the processes at the end
of the last Ice Age. "
For the full, long, abstract with maps and full refs,
see on PubMed http://tinyurl.com/8sxpe
I know Barry Cunliffe suggests the possibility that
Celtic originated in what is described above as the
Atlantic zone.
I am not sure if he makes that connection, but this
genetic result fits well with the Facing the ocean/
Atlantic Fringe concept, and it makes it possible
that this "system" is much older.
--
º°º°º°º < Peter Alaca > º°º°º°º°º°º°º°º°º°º°º°º°º°º°º°º°º°º°
.
Relevant Pages
- Re: Celtic Origins
... >Genetic Marker Systems and Celtic Origins on ... >the Atlantic Facade of Europe" ... > some level of Iron Age immigration into Britain ... (sci.archaeology) - Celtic Origins
... Bradley "The Longue Durée of Genetic Ancestry: Multiple Genetic Marker Systems and Celtic Origins on the Atlantic Facade of Europe" ... Atlantic facade of Europe, mainly in Britain and Ireland, but were spoken more widely in western and central Europe until the collapse of the Roman Empire in the first millennium a.d. ... (sci.archaeology) - Re: Celtic Origins
... >>Genetic Marker Systems and Celtic Origins on ... >>the Atlantic Facade of Europe" ... >> affinities of the areas where Celtic languages are ... (sci.archaeology) - Re: Celtic Origins
... >>>Genetic Marker Systems and Celtic Origins on ... >>> and central Europe until the collapse of the ... >>> affinities of the areas where Celtic languages are ... (sci.archaeology) - Re: Celtic Origins
... >>Genetic Marker Systems and Celtic Origins on ... >>the Atlantic Facade of Europe" ... >> and central Europe until the collapse of the ... >> some level of Iron Age immigration into Britain ... (sci.archaeology) |
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