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Wiley InterScience | ||
![]() Annals of Human GeneticsVolume 62 Issue 3, Pages 241 - 260 Published Online: 7 Mar 2003 Journal compilation © 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd/University College London
Abstract | Full Text: PDF (Size: 3303K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking Phylogeography of mitochondrial DNA in western Europe Copyright © 1998 University College London ABSTRACTFor most of the past century, prehistorians have had to rely on the fossil and archaeological records in order to reconstruct the past. In the last few decades, this evidence has been substantially supplemented from classical human genetics. More recently, phylogenetic analyses of DNA sequences that incorporate geographical information have provided a high-resolution tool for the investigation of prehistoric demographic events, such as founder effects and population expansions. These events can be dated using a molecular clock when the mutation rate and founder haplotypes are known. We have previously applied such methods to sequence data from the mitochondrial DNA control region, to suggest that most extant mitochondrial sequences in western Europe have a local ancestry in the Early Upper Palaeolithic, with a smaller proportion arriving from the Near East in the Neolithic. Here, we describe a cladistic notation for mitochondrial variation and expand upon our earlier analysis to present a more detailed portrait of the European mitochondrial record. Received: 16 January 1998; Accepted: 27 April 1998; |