The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup H33B
Origins and Evolution
H33B is a downstream subclade of mtDNA haplogroup H33, itself nested within the broad and diverse H3/H clade that expanded across western Eurasia after the Last Glacial Maximum and into the Holocene. Based on the position of H33 within the phylogeny and the geographic concentration of H33 lineages, H33B most plausibly arose within the Iberian/Atlantic European region during the mid-to-late Holocene (several thousand years after the initial post-glacial re-expansion of H lineages). Its emergence likely reflects local differentiation of maternal lineages already present in Iberia following Neolithic and post-Neolithic population processes.
Subclades (if applicable)
H33B is a defined sublineage under H33. At present it is a relatively fine-scale branch with limited observed diversity and a sparse number of confirmed modern and ancient samples; as a result, internal subclades beneath H33B are either rare or not yet well resolved in publicly available phylogenies. Ongoing mitogenome sequencing in Atlantic and Iberian populations may reveal additional internal structure in the future.
Geographical Distribution
The modern distribution of H33B mirrors the broader trends for H33 but at lower absolute frequency: it is concentrated in the Iberian Peninsula and adjacent Atlantic-fringe regions, with sporadic occurrences elsewhere in Western and Southern Europe and occasional detections in Northwest Africa and the Near East. The pattern is consistent with a regional origin followed by limited dispersal along coastal and maritime routes, as well as later low-level gene flow across the western Mediterranean.
Ancient DNA evidence for H33/H33B-level lineages is limited but supportive of continuity: several H33-classified mitogenomes appear in Holocene contexts in Iberia and nearby Atlantic regions, indicating that these lineages were present in local populations from the Neolithic/Chalcolithic onwards.
Historical and Cultural Significance
H33B should be interpreted primarily as a regional maternal marker rather than as a signal of large-scale demographic replacement. Its presence is consistent with local continuity in Iberia from post-glacial and early-to-mid Holocene populations, and it may be found among communities associated with Atlantic Neolithic, Megalithic, and later Chalcolithic/Bronze Age cultural horizons. While haplogroup H in general is widespread and associated with both hunter-gatherer and farmer-derived maternal ancestry across Europe, the restricted geography of H33B makes it useful for studies of regional population structure, maternal continuity, and local migration events in western Europe.
Conclusion
H33B represents a low-frequency, regionally concentrated maternal lineage derived from H33, best understood as a marker of Iberian/Atlantic European maternal ancestry arising in the mid-to-late Holocene. Its rarity and limited internal diversity mean that dense mitogenome sampling and ancient DNA studies are valuable to refine its age, distribution, and substructure; current evidence supports continuity in Atlantic-Iberian populations with sporadic downstream spread to adjacent regions.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades (if applicable)
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Conclusion