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Z49>Z142>Z150>FGC12381, Y3140 > FGC12378, Y3142
#14
It appears an ancient Z150, Z12222 sample,  (just above the FGC12378 branch of this thread title)

has turned up in Les_Moidons, Bourgogne_Franche_Compt, France

Sample CGG023693
Necropolis Les Moidons and Parançot, Bourgogne_Franche_Compt,   46.878971 5.842749, 610BCE-450BCE, midpoint 530 BCE. IronAge Hallstatt mtdna haplogroup J1c3e

https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/...y-material

From the supporting data file:///C:/Users/Owner/Downloads/media-2.pdf

Quote:The Jura Culture, Bourgogne Franche Comté
Bruno Chaume

The Tumulus of Moidons/Parançot belong to what Patrice Brun defined as the Culture from the
Jura. These necropolises were set up on the French Jura Plateau; They form a cultural group,
homogeneous all along the First Iron Age (Hallstatt) on their artefact production as well as on
their funerary practices. One of the important points would be to check if these populations
were linked genetically. A few burials from Early and Late First Iron Age should put some light
on the genetic traits of these populations. The hypothesis of sedentary clan families present
since the Bronze Age is suggested by archaeologists to explain the high number of tumulus
within a small space. It will be very informative to study kinship within a group of tumulus
sharing the same territory...

Necropolis Les Moidons and Parançot
Coordinates: 46.86 5.85 and 46.87 5.83

The necropolis of Les Moidons (groups of Les Moidons and Parançot) are located in the French
part of the Jura. Around 90 tumuli with 234 graves identified, the Moidons group is one of the
most important necropolis of the eastern part of France. In the object association matrix of all
the tombs, 4 groups were identified for a period extending from the Neolithic to the Second
Iron Age (La Tène). The majority of the graves belongs to the 1st Iron Age (800-450 BC).

This site (black star) is to the south of the formerly mentioned Z150>FGC12378> FGC47869 polygon.
[Image: cOITUMj.png]

This area would be roughly on the route the Celts took from Gaul to Northern Italy.
Quote:According to Livy (v. 34), the Bituriges, Arverni, Senones, Aedui[Haedui on map above], Ambarri, Carnutes, and Aulerci led by Bellovesus, arrived in northern Italy during the reign of Tarquinius Priscus (7th-6th century BC) and occupied the area between Milan and Cremona.
above tribes highlighted in yellow on map
Manofthehour and Webb like this post
U152>L2>Z49>Z142>Z150>FGC12381>FGC12378>FGC47869>FGC12401>FGC47875>FGC12384
50% English, 15% Welsh, 15% Scot/Ulster Scot, 5% Irish, 10% German, 2% Scandi, 2% French & Dutch), 1% India
Ancient ~40% Anglo-Saxon, ~40% Briton/Insular Celt, ~15% German, 4% Other Euro
600 AD: 55% Anglo-Saxon (CNE), 45% Pre-Anglo-Saxon Briton (WBI)
“Be more concerned with seeking the truth than winning an argument” 
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RE: Z49>Z142>Z150>FGC12381, Y3140 > FGC12378, Y3142 - by Mitchell-Atkins - 03-17-2024, 04:26 PM

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