The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup V71
Origins and Evolution
mtDNA haplogroup V71 is a derived subclade nested under haplogroup V7, itself a member of the broader haplogroup V family associated with post‑glacial re‑expansion from southwestern European refugia. Based on its phylogenetic position beneath V7 and the estimated coalescence time of V7 (~7 kya), V71 is reasonably inferred to have arisen later, on the order of a few thousand years ago (we estimate ~4.5 kya). This timing places its origin in the later Neolithic to early Bronze Age horizon in Western Europe, although uncertainty remains and direct whole‑mitogenome datings from multiple samples are required to refine this estimate.
V71 likely represents a localized maternal lineage that differentiated after the initial post‑glacial recolonization of Europe, carried within regional maternal gene pools of Iberia and neighboring regions. The lineage's rarity in modern and ancient sampled populations suggests limited demographic expansion after its origin and/or loss in many regions due to genetic drift and demographic shifts.
Subclades (if applicable)
At present V71 is treated as a relatively shallow/terminal branch beneath V7 with few well-documented internal subclades in the public literature and databases. Because many published datasets rely on partial control‑region sequencing or limited marker panels, small downstream branches can be missed. Full mitogenome sequencing of more individuals carrying V71 is needed to identify internal diversity, name further subclades, and clarify branching order within V7 → V71.
Geographical Distribution
Empirical and inferential evidence places V71 primarily in Western Europe (notably Iberia) with sporadic occurrences across northern and western Europe and occasional detections in North Africa and the Caucasus. This mirrors the broader distribution pattern of V7: concentrated in Iberia and present at low frequencies in the British Isles, France, Scandinavia (including Sami groups), and parts of Northwest Africa (Berber populations).
Because V71 is uncommon, reported occurrences are typically low frequency and often identified in population surveys or targeted regional studies. Its presence in northern populations (e.g., Scandinavia/Sami) may reflect ancient northward gene flow during the post‑glacial period or later movements and admixture events that redistributed maternal lineages across Europe.
Historical and Cultural Significance
Haplogroup V and many of its subclades are classically associated with post‑glacial re‑expansion from Franco‑Cantabrian/Iberian refugia after the Last Glacial Maximum. V71, arising later, may have persisted within regional maternal pools and been carried—at low levels—into later cultural horizons. Potential cultural associations are indirect and include:
- Franco‑Cantabrian/post‑glacial Mesolithic contexts as the deep backdrop for V lineages.
- Neolithic and Bronze Age movements such as the spread of farming and later cultural complexes (e.g., Bell Beaker horizon) which redistributed maternal lineages across Europe; given V71's inferred age, it could have been moved or maintained during these periods, although it is not a signature lineage of migrating steppe groups.
Overall, V71 is best seen as part of the mosaic of maternal diversity that documents continuity and localized demographic histories within Western Europe rather than as a marker of a single sweeping migration.
Conclusion
mtDNA V71 is a low‑frequency, regionally informative descendant of V7 reflecting localized maternal diversification in Western Europe after the initial post‑glacial recolonization. Its scarcity in available datasets limits strong conclusions; increased sampling and complete mitogenome sequencing from Iberia, northern Europe, North Africa, and the Caucasus will clarify its substructure, precise age, and historical movements. In population genetics terms, V71 illustrates how many fine‑scale maternal branches persist at low frequency and can illuminate micro‑regional demographic history when adequately sampled.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades (if applicable)
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Conclusion