The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup V11
Origins and Evolution
Haplogroup V11 is a downstream lineage of mtDNA haplogroup V1, which itself appears to have arisen soon after the Last Glacial Maximum in the Franco‑Cantabrian/Iberian refugium. Based on its phylogenetic position as a subclade of V1 and the temporal framework for other V sublineages, V11 plausibly diverged during the early post‑glacial to Mesolithic interval (on the order of ~9 kya). This timing places V11 among maternal lineages that contributed to the recolonization of Western Europe as ice sheets retreated and hunter‑gatherer groups expanded northward and westward.
Subclades (if applicable)
At present V11 appears to be a relatively rare and understudied subclade with few deeply resolved downstream branches in published datasets. A small number of private or geographically localized branches (often reported as V11a/* or V11b/* in targeted studies) have been suggested by high‑resolution mitogenomes, but the clade is not yet widely represented in public phylogenies. Continued full mitochondrial sequencing of both modern and ancient samples is likely to reveal additional internal structure.
Geographical Distribution
V11 shows a concentration in the western parts of Europe consistent with its V1 parentage, with highest relative representation in Iberia and Atlantic France and sporadic occurrences elsewhere. Modern detections are typically low frequency but geographically focused, while ancient DNA finds (where present) tend to come from Mesolithic and later archaeological contexts in western Europe. Occasional occurrences in North African coastal populations and in northern Europe (including isolated instances among Scandinavian or Saami samples) are consistent with maritime contacts, later population movements, or long‑term regional gene flow.
Historical and Cultural Significance
Because of its derivation from V1, V11 can be interpreted as part of the maternal legacy of post‑glacial hunter‑gatherer populations that repopulated large swathes of western Europe. Where found in archaeological contexts, V11 supports continuity between Mesolithic maternal lineages and later populations in parts of Western Europe. Its low modern frequency suggests either demographic dilution through subsequent Neolithic and Bronze Age expansions (bringing other maternal lineages) or survival in localized refugia and coastal communities. Associations with later archaeological cultures are generally indirect; V11 more strongly highlights deep regional continuity than broad, culture‑defining movements.
Conclusion
mtDNA V11 is a geographically focused, low‑frequency descendant of V1 that likely arose in Western Europe during the Mesolithic and survived into later periods in localized populations. It is valuable for studies of maternal continuity and the fine‑scale post‑glacial population structure of western and northern Europe, but broader conclusions await more comprehensive mitogenome sampling from both modern populations and ancient remains.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades (if applicable)
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Conclusion