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November 2, 2015

Algerian complex genetics


This is a rather interesting study that deals with the genetics of the Republic of Algeria, with several new samples.


Asmahan Bekada, Lara R. Arauna et al. Genetic Heterogeneity in Algerian Human Populations. PLoS ONE 2015. Open accessLINK [doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0138453]

Abstract

The demographic history of human populations in North Africa has been characterized by complex processes of admixture and isolation that have modeled its current gene pool. Diverse genetic ancestral components with different origins (autochthonous, European, Middle Eastern, and sub-Saharan) and genetic heterogeneity in the region have been described. In this complex genetic landscape, Algeria, the largest country in Africa, has been poorly covered, with most of the studies using a single Algerian sample. In order to evaluate the genetic heterogeneity of Algeria, Y-chromosome, mtDNA and autosomal genome-wide makers have been analyzed in several Berber- and Arab-speaking groups. Our results show that the genetic heterogeneity found in Algeria is not correlated with geography or linguistics, challenging the idea of Berber groups being genetically isolated and Arab groups open to gene flow. In addition, we have found that external sources of gene flow into North Africa have been carried more often by females than males, while the North African autochthonous component is more frequent in paternally transmitted genome regions. Our results highlight the different demographic history revealed by different markers and urge to be cautious when deriving general conclusions from partial genomic information or from single samples as representatives of the total population of a region.


Y-DNA frequencies


Supplementary Table 2: Y chromosome haplogroup frequencies among the studied populations (% in parentheses)







Population Algiers1 Oran1 Reguibate1 Zenata1 Mozabite2 Oran3 Algiers4 Tizi Ouzou4
Abreviations ALG1 ORN1 RGB ZNT MZB ORN2 ALG2 TZO
Number of individuals 26 80 60 35 20 102 35 19
A -M91 (-) 1 (1.25) (-) (-) (-) (-) (-) (-)
C-M216 (-) 1 (1.25) (-) (-) (-) (-) (-) (-)
E1a-M33 1 (3.84) (-) (-) 1 (2.86) (-) (-) 1 (2.86) (-)
E1b1a-M2 (-) 8 (10) 2 (3.33) 8 (22.86) 2 (10) 8 (7.84) (-) (-)
E1b1b1a-M78 4 (15.38) 2 (2.50) (-) 1 (2.86) (-) 6 (5.88) 4 (11.43) (-)
E1b1b1b -M81 14 (53.85) 33 (41.25) 48 (80) 17 (48.57) 16 (80) 46 (45.10) 14 (40) 9 (47.37)
E1b1b1-M35 (-) 3 (3.75) 3 (5) (-) (-) (-) 1 (2.86) 2 (10.53)
E2 -M75 (-) 1 (1.25) (-) (-) (-) (-) (-) (-)
F -M89 (xJ, K, Q, R1) 2 (7.69) 4 (5) 1 (1.67) (-) (-) (-) 4 (11.43) 2 (10.53)
J -M304 (xJ2) 5 (19.23) 18 (22.50) 6 (10) 4 (11.43) (-) 23 (22.55) 8 (22.86) 3 (15.79)
J2 -M172 (-) 1 (1.25) (-) (-) (-) 5 (4.90) 2 (5.71) (-)
K -M9 (-) (-) (-) (-) (-) (-) 1 (2.86) (-)
Q -M242 (-) 2 (2.50) (-) 1 (2.86) (-) 1 (0.98) (-) (-)
R1 -M173 (-) 6 (7.50) (-) 3 (8.57) 2 (10) 13 (12.75) (-) 3 (15.79)









Y Haplogroup Diversity GD (h +/- sd) 0.6677 +/- 0.0806 0.7674 +/- 0.0356 0.3520 +/- 0.0757 0.7092 +/- 0.0625 0.3579 +/- 0.1266 0.7245 +/- 0.0325 0.7782 +/- 0.0499 0.7427 +/- 0.0831
1 Present study







2 Shi et al. 2010







3 Robino et al. 2008







4 Arredi et al. 2004










The most common lineage is E1b-M81, which is centered around Morocco and has a mostly NW African distribution. The Reguibate sample (Arabic speakers from near Southern Morocco and West Sahara) shows extremely high frequencies (80%) of it. This is also true of the Mozabites. Otherwise the frequencies range between 40% and 54%.

Tropical African lineages are mostly represented by E1b-M2, which peaks among the Zenata Berbers of the Southern Atlas and Northern Sahara but has also some notable presence in Oran, Mozabites (North Sahara) and Reguibate (West Sahara). However these lineages are nearly absent in the Northeast Kabyle Berbers (Tizi Ouzu) and only have a token presence in Algiers (E1a). 

E1b-M78, a lineage centered in NE Africa, seems to peak in Algiers, with low frequencies in Oran and effectively absent in other populations. 

J1, presumably the same as J(xJ2), is strongest in the coast (Algiers, Oran) but has significant frequencies in other populations (excepted Mozabites). 

J2, although quite rare, is worth mentioning because its presence may indicate areas of true Arabic settlement (of course J1 is more common in Arabia but it is unthinkable that one goes without the other in such a recent time frame). It seems that Oran has the strongest such settlement, although some is also apparent in Algiers.

R1 peaks among Kabyles (16%) and is also present in Oran and among the Mozabite and Zenata Berbers. Sadly it is not analyzed what fraction of it is R1b-M412 (Western European) or R1b-V88 (Afro-Mediterranean), as both lineages have been detected in North Africa in previous studies but almost certainly have different histories. 

Other F is quite intriguing. The few Q and K* individuals are within expectations (at least my expectations) but there are a lot of F* people, notably in Kabyle and Algiers that are most intriguing. Are they within haplogroup G or is it something else? G reaches almost 10% in Egypt but previous studies had not found more than 6% in NW Africa (Bouhria Berbers, see here).

Update (Nov 4): Chris makes a very interesting suggestion in the comments section about all this F*: what if it is (partly or in full) haplogroup I, a typical European Y-DNA lineage that is clearly rooted in the Paleolithic of the region? The lineage has been documented in ancient Berbers from Canary Islands and, for what Chris says, also in Sudan. It would make perfect sense if it was also present among modern NW Africans, being consistent with other genetics that seem to originate in Paleolithic Europe (~30% of mtDNA, a good share of autosomal DNA, maybe also part of the Y-DNA R).



Mozabites are close to "pure North Africans"

Autosomal analysis shows that this Berber population of the Algerian Atlas has the lowest range of admixture form any external source, be it Europe, West Asia or Tropical Africa. Some individuals appear extremely unadmixed.


Fig 3. Plots for the analysis of genome-wide SNPs.
PC analysis (upper figures) based on autosomal data, and X-chromosome SNPs. ADMIXTURE proportions (bottom figures) at k = 2,3, and 4 based on autosomal data and X-chromosome SNPs. Algeria, stands for general Algerian sample [3]; Mozabite, stands for the Algerian Berber Mozabites [32]; and Zenata, stands for Algerian Berber Zenata (present study).



X-chromosome conundrum

It is not common that genetic studies analyze the X-chromosome. A reason is probably that its interpretation can be confusing. Intuitively it seems true that the X chromosome is passed down by a mostly female line but this is not really correct, as (ignoring partial recombination) a man can have an X chromosome from either the maternal grandfather or grandmother, while a woman will have one from her father and another from the mother. Ironically only a woman's father-inherited X-chromosome can be automatically traced to a woman two generations back: that of the paternal grandmother. Complicated, right?

As probably apparent in fig. 3 above but made more clear in fig. 4 below, the study detected differences in autosomal (overall) ancestry and X-chromosome one.


Fig 4. Correlation plots of the ancestry proportions at k = 4 in the ADMIXTURE analysis comparing autosomes and X-chromosome SNPs.
North African, sub-Saharan, Middle Eastern, and European ancestry proportions are shown in different plots. Solid black lines represent linear correlations between autosomal and X-chromosome components.


The authors interpret these results as indicating female bias in the European and West Asian components. This may be true at least in the European case because it correlates well with the differential between European mtDNA (~30%) and Y-DNA (<10%), which suggests that European ancestry used to be more important in the past and that male-biased migrations (Capsian culture is probably one of the culprits) altered this. 

But is it also true for the West Asian ancestry? I can't say, really. I remember a study from a decade ago (don't have the reference right now, sorry) or so that showed that in a Colombian coastal town, X-chromosome ancestry was almost only European, while mtDNA was instead almost exclusively Native American, and that it should be interpreted as continuous influx of men from Europe, marrying local women, who managed to retain, generation after generation, the aboriginal mtDNA (which does never leave the strict maternal line) but not the X-chromosome line, once and again altered by male immigrants. 

I don't really dare to subscribe the authors' interpretation without a more nuanced analysis, analysis that I don't feel able to perform myself at the moment either. If they are correct, anyhow, it means that there were important male-biased demographic expansions of African specific origin, either in NW Africa itself (what could well be supported by the vigor of E1b-M81) or in NE Africa prior to migration to the West within Capsian. Or both. 


Mitochondrial DNA data

In case anyone wants to try their luck at this complicated analysis (North Africans are indeed a complex and most intriguing population), I'm adding here the raw mtDNA table:

Supplementary Table 5: mtDNA haplogroup frequencies (%) distribution among Algerian populations





Populations Algiers Oran Zenata Reguibate Oran (Bekada et al. 2013) Mozabite (Corte-Real et al. 1996)
Abbreviation ALG ORN1 ZNT RGB ORN2 MZB
Number of samples 62 93 73 108 240 85
H/HV 19.35 35.48 12.33 30.56 30.83 23.53
HV0 4.84 2.15 5.48 6.48 3.75 8.24
I 1.61 - 1.37 - 0.83 -
J (16069 16126) 14.52 3.23 2.74 0.93 3.33 3.53
K (16224 16311) - 4.30 4.11 3.70 1.67 -
L - - - 0.93 - -
L0 1.61 3.23 1.37 - 0.42 -
L1b 1.61 2.15 9.59 6.48 3.75 -
L1c - - 1.37 0.93 0.83 -
L2 - - 5.48 4.63 0.83 -
L2a 9.68 5.38 15.07 3.70 5.42 5.88
L2b 1.61 2.15 5.48 - 0.42 1.18
L2c1 - - 1.37 - 1.25 -
L2d - - - 1.85 - -
L2e - 1.08 - - - -
L3b 1.61 3.23 2.74 3.70 1.67 2.35
L3b/d - - 4.11 - - 1.18
L3d - - 4.11 - 1.25 -
L3e1 1.61 - - - 0.42 -
L3e2 4.84 - 5.48 - 0.83 2.35
L3e3 1.61 - - - - -
L3e5 11.29 - - - 0.42 -
L3f - 4.30 8.22 3.70 2.08 -
L3h1b1a 1.61 - 1.37 - - -
L4b2 - - - - 0.42 -
M1 3.23 5.38 - 1.85 7.08 4.71
N 1.61 1.08 - 0.93 0.42 -
R - - - 0.93 - -
R0a - - - 0.93 1.67 -
R0a1a - - - 8.33 - -
T* - - - 0.93 1.67 -
T1a 1.61 2.15 2.74 - 3.33 4.71
T2 - 1.08 - 0.93 0.42 -
T2b - - 2.74 - 2.92 -
T2c - - - - 0.83 -
U - 1.08 - 0.93 0.42 -
U1 - 1.08 - 0.93 0.83 -
U3 - 1.08 - - 1.25 10.59
U4 1.61 - - - 1.67 1.18
U5 - - - - 0.42 -
U5a 1.61 3.23 - - 1.67 -
U5b 1.61 1.08 - 2.78 0.42 -
U6a - 4.30 - 7.41 6.67 -
U6a1a - 1.08 - - - 12.94
U6a1a1 - 3.23 - 3.70 - 14.12
U6a1b - 1.08 - - - 1.18
U6a5 - - - - 0.83 -
U6c - - 1.37 - 0.83 -
U8b1 - 1.08 - - - 2.35
V - - - - 3.75 -
V7a - 1.08 - 1.85 - -
W 3.23 1.08 - - 1.25 -
X 8.06 2.15 - - - -
X2 - 1.08 1.37 - 1.25 -
mtDNA haplogroup diversity (h+-sd) 0.9175 +/- 0.0174 0.8630 +/- 0.0325 0.9376 +/- 0.0117 0.8823 +/- 0.0236 0.8853 +/- 0.0166 0.8891 +/- 0.0169
 


Good luck (and feed me back if you have some idea).

68 comments:

  1. Very interesting, thanks for sharing. C-M216 is a very strange one. The F-M89(xJ, K, Q, R1) could be G, however why not haplogroup I? [already found in modern-day Sudanese and in neolithic Guanche mummies]? Or even H - if something as unusual as C-M216 can turn up then why not? If the 'F' turned out to be 'I' then that would be interesting, given the presence of 'I' in Sardinia and Sudan..

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    1. Very good point re. K* being maybe I. I'll amend the text to include that possibility because it is a serious one and one that may relate to the European Paleolithic component, so obvious in mtDNA (and also in autosomal DNA).

      As for C, it's just n=1, i.e. an erratic, so it doesn't have the same weight. However it could well be C-V20, the same haplogroup of La Braña and the only European-specific (or West Eurasian) branch of C. However it's not impossible that it could have a more recent West or Central Asian origin related to relationships with Turkey and in general the Asian Muslim World, after all it's found in a coastal city.

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  2. This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

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    1. ^^ Banned long ago (go read some other blog).

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  3. can give us conclusion that who's the majority are the arabic or the beberes
    and where is the biggest arab's settelement in algeria

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    1. There's no apparent "Arab" genetic signature anywhere in North Africa: all are essentially Berbers, just that many have lost language and identity and, often, behave in a more cosmopolitan way therefore.

      However, if you want to threat in the blurry details, I said in the article: "J2, although quite rare, is worth mentioning because its presence may indicate areas of true Arabic settlement". Y-DNA J2 is only found in some samples (but not others) of Oran and Algiers, and at low frequencies in any cases.

      It does not need to mean "Arab" anyhow: Phoenicians particularly could have left a similar signature but in any case Y-DNA J2 is quite clearly in Africa, be it Algeria or Ethiopia, an unmistakable Semitic marker, while J1 almost certainly has older roots in Africa, probably from the Paleolithic in the Nile basin.

      "where is the biggest arab's settelement in algeria"

      It does not exist in any obvious way although some urban populations (Oran, Algiers) could well be somewhat admixed with Arabs (or Phoenicians, etc.), while Kabylia or the interior carry no such Semitic signature, not even at low frequencies (at least by this study, included the many earlier samples recycled in it). All North Africans are in essence pre-Semitic, i.e. "Berber" (or Ancient Egyptian in the case of Egypt, Nubian in Sudan, etc.)

      This is something we seem to find everywhere (also in Europe, Asia, etc.): that, while hunter-gatherers and farmers may have moved around quite a bit, replacing (never 100%) pre-existent populations, once warrior classes (aristocrats) came into the equation with the Metal Ages, the process of ethnogenesis becomes one of conquest and assimilation and only punctually of settlement. It is only in the Modern Age when colonization by settlement becomes again a major process, reflecting surely the loss of power of warrior aristocracies and the mass displacements caused by industrialization very particularly, accompanied by the crystallization of concepts that were much blurrier earlier like ethnic nationalism and quite notably racism.

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    2. PS- Maybe better than "industrialization" I should have said "capitalism", because prior to industrialization agrarian capitalism was already pushing many people to migrate, notably in Great Britain. Arguably just a detail but maybe worth considering anyhow, more so when we see many people that feel compelled to migrate today, not so much from industrial areas but rather the underdeveloped areas also subject to the tensions caused by capitalism, largely in agrarian form, which destroys jobs and subsistence opportunities in favor of profit.

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    3. thank you for the explanations

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    4. Libyans/Libycs, Libo-Phoenicians, Libo-Punics not "berbers", don't follow a french colonial slur blindly

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    5. Not really they aren't Arab but berber(haplogroup J is old in Algeria and not related to Arab)

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    6. Noctu: Berber is an Arab "colonial slur" if anything. It was the Arabs who began widely using "Berber" (from Greek Barbaros = foreigner, barbarian) to refer to the Amazigh. Earlier it was not or very rarely used. It was NOT the French who introduced it at all.

      When they conquered parts of Tamazgha (North Africa except Egypt) they surely made a distinction between the "civilized Romans" of Carthage (which they destroyed again) and other coastal cities where Latin was the main language (as attested for instance in the work of Augustine of Hippo) and the "barbarians" of the interior, i.e. the Amazigh tribes still largely self-organized and using their own languages primarily. The label stuck, especially when "Moor" (Maurus in Latin) became more generic for all North Africans, Arabized or not.

      "Libyan" is not a term easily understood today, because it means from the polity of Libya (Tripolitania, Cyrenaica and Fezzan). It's like using "Ethiopian" without qualification: most people thing that it means someone from the country named Ethiopia since many centuries ago, while in ancient times it meant "Black African" rather.

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    7. Unknown: we must make a distinction between J1 and J2, these two lineages diverged very long ago and have clearly different histories.

      J1 (listed as J(xJ2) in the paper) is almost as diverse in Northeast Africa (from Cyrenaica and Egypt to the Horn) as in West Asia (where it surely originated but in times Paleolithic). From Egypt and such it would later (Late Upper Paleolithic and Epipaleolithic) spread to NW Africa (West of Cyrenaica), being therefore less diverse (founder effects).

      J2 on the other hand seems to have spread more recently but quite vigorously from an Upper Mesopotamia center. Unlike J1, it's quite common in Europe, where it surely spread with the Halafian-derived Pelasgo-Tyrsenian peoples, which would later bring it to Italy, where the Roman Empire spread it westward (West of the Alps it's clearly strongly associated to Roman settlement and Italian autosomal genetics, most importantly in Southern Iberia).

      In West Asia we see both lineages but J2 is stronger towards the North or the Highlands and J1 is stronger towards the South or Arabia Peninsula.

      In North Africa (and also in the Horn), J2 is a marker of Semitic or Italian (Roman) influx, be it Arab, Phoenician or Jewish. It's not an "aboriginal" lineage in Africa, while J1 can be considered as such instead (certainly Paleolithic).

      Not all Y-DNA J is the same.

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  4. The interesting thing to me is that the indigenous Berber component appears to be around 25% Tropical African and 75 Eurasian. Formerly, it was assumes that the Tropical African ancestry in Berbers was solely due to Neolithic migrations or slavery, but that evidently can't be the case, right?

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    1. Also interesting is that the component is shared by Palestinians until it diverges into a presumably Middle Eastern and the North African one. Do you think its possible that there's an Arabian component of prominent Tropical origin that is ancestral to Arabs and Berbers? Or am I oversimplifying it?

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    2. Well, my best guess (since long ago) for the formation of the North Africa (Berber or also Arabo-Berber, which only has a very minor Arab element) is as follows:

      1. Aterian early component (a local branch of the migrations leading to the Out of Africa one). This seems very minimal at best but IMO can be still detected in South Moroccans (see: http://forwhattheywereweare.blogspot.com.es/2011/12/north-african-genetics-through-prism-of.html). Some African-specific lineages may originate in this layer, for example the very deep Y-DNA A0, present in Mozabites but otherwise only, also very rarely, in West Africa, or some NW Africa-centered L(xM,N) matrilineages like L3k (if my memory is correct).

      2. Upper Paleolithic component, which is probably from Europe ("Cro-Magnon") origin in full or at least in a very large fraction, corresponding to the Iberomaurusian or Oranian cultural layer, which seems quite clearly related to Iberian Solutrean. This would include mtDNA lineages H (H*, H1, H3, H4 and H7) and possibly also V and even U6. On the Y-DNA side the impact is very eroded and would correspond at least to Y-DNA I (now rare but relatively common among ancient Guanches).

      My greatest uncertainty here relates to mtDNA U6 and Y-DNA E1b-M81, which might have arrived via an archaeologically "invisible" layer from NE Africa. The problem is that we don't know of any archaeological culture between Aterian and Oranian, so very unclear, really.

      3. The Capsian layer which is Epipaleolithic/Mesolithic but also extends into Neolithic and should be proto-Berber. Its origins, like everything Afroasiatic, seem to be in the Nile basin, which was already a mix of Eurasian and African genetics by then. E1b-M78 almost certainly arrived in this period, as did many mtDNA L(xM,N) linages. Again it is not clear yet how E1b-M81 arrived and expanded in the region: one possibility is that it could have arrived in this age and expanded via founder effect.

      As for Palestinian affinities, what they do there is to act as "control" for "West Asianness", just like Basques act for "Europeanness" and Yorubas for "Tropical Africanness". Saudis or Syrians would have worked pretty much the same.

      This affinity can be attributed probably to Neolithic elements, as well as more recent flows like Phoenicians and Arabs. Alternatively it may well be an effect of confusing the Mozabite endogamic component with the true NW African one. It would need testing, really, but I generally prefer to exclude or at least reduce the weight (number of individuals in the sample) for small endogamous populations, else the algorithm may well pick the wrong signal.

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    3. I'm specifically referring to the indigenous Berber component, without any of the recent ancestry from Europe, the Middle East, or Tropical Africa. When looking at the k = 2 results, you notice that the North Africans and Palestinian have some fairly substanial Tropical African ancestry. However, in k = 3, the Tropical African component disappears in Mozabites - which was formerly around 25%. The former two components are completely replaced by the yellow component in Mozabites, and the Tropical African component seems to decrease in similar proportions for the other populations with the arrival of the yellow component. This implies that the yellow component appears to be around 25% Tropical and 75% West Eurasian genetically in composition, correct? Meaning much of the Tropical African ancestry in Berbers cannot be due to recent input.

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    4. You mean the Mozabite component. The problem is how good are Mozabites, a distinct and endogamous community, at representing "indigenous Berber-ness", particularly with so few NW African samples involved.

      In my previously mentioned exercise (http://forwhattheywereweare.blogspot.com/2011/12/north-african-genetics-through-prism-of.html), I did not detect such a clear-cut difference, probably because I used many more samples, both North African and external controls, and Mozabites did not resolve to genetic homogeneity but expressed more than one component from K=2 to K=11, much as other NW Africans (but somewhat different). In that case I had problems with Tunisian Berbers (label "Tunisia"), whose endogamy seems even more extreme. This anomaly has arisen in other studies such as that of Henn (http://forwhattheywereweare.blogspot.com/2012/01/north-african-autosomal-genetics-again.html), so the Tunisian-specific components should be disregarded as noise.

      I strongly suggest that you take a look at those other two more extensive analyses because it will give you a counterpoint on which to balance your understanding of the matter. Algorithms, even the best ones, are just equations and, when something odd is in the data, their results can be easily distorted. This is particularly true when oddball endogamous populations are over-represented, be them very isolated Berber tribes, bottlenecked Jewish branches, endogamous sects like Druzes or low density populations such as most Finnics. The way to correct this bias is to keep the samples of these distorting populations small or just out (not always desirable though).

      In my own analysis (link above, twice), probably K=6 is quite a good level of analysis, and there it is not Mozabites but Sahrawis who best represent "indigenous NW Africanness" (cyan component), with the rest being more admixed with the European ("Spain", magenta) and West African ("Mandenka", yellow) components. Libyans are apart in that they have more of the West Asian ("Saudi", green) component, which is minor in the other North African samples (except Egyptians, which are even more Arab-like for this analysis).

      Seriously, for what you're talking about, my own mini-study is more nuanced (even if the colors are uglier) and it converges pretty nicely with that of Henn, which also used larger samples than the very limited Admixture test here. Please take a look.

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    5. Okay, now I see what you're talking about. I definitely do remember when the Tunisian sample kept fucking up in those analyses, but I hadn't seen them in awhile.

      Still, in the Saharawi samples, I notice the same thing about the Tropical African component. Once the Tunisian starts doing it own thing and stops fucking with the other results, it becomes clear the the Tropical African component disappears with the "indigenous Berber component". In k = 2, the Saharawi component in around 20-30% Tropical African depending on the analysis. And when the indigenous Berber component shows up by k = 4 and k = 5 and k = 8 on the second analysis, the Tropical African component is around less than 5%. Implying that the Indigenous Berber component itself is still around 25% Tropical African.

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    6. One of the things that you can see in my Dec-2011 mini-study is a table of Fst distances between components. For a reason I'll mention later, I decided to use the K=11 but guess that a smaller K-value would work to, with only minor differences. In the table it's apparent that the Sahrawi (Sah), Moroccan (Mor) and Mozabite (Moz) components seem all West Eurasian (clearly lower Fst scores with other West Eurasian components such as Arab or Iberian than with Mandenka, although the admixed Ethiopian component also scores very low). Ignoring the Tunisian "noise" components and internal North African affinities:

      MOR is closest to Ethiopian (0.071), Iberian (0.074) and Arab (0.081), what seems to fit with Capsian+Oranian+Neolithic affinities in this order. This North African specific component is the most related to others from outside the region.

      SAH is closest to Iberian (0.100), Ethiopian (0.104) and Arab (0.107), so maybe more like Oranian+Capsian+Neolithic but not too different from MOR, just most distant from all in general, more "drifted away", less connected or cosmopolitan that MOR through the passage of time.

      MOZ is even more "drifted away", more isolated, but still roughly in the West Eurasian group, with greatest affinity outside the region with Iberian (0.116), then Ethiopian (0.120) and then Arab (0.128).

      Notice please that the ETHiopian component is clearly a local "homogenized" mixture of West Eurasian plus Tropical African. Closest outsiders are Iberian (0.099) and Arab (0.101) but Mandenka in this case is not too distant either (0.115). At lower K-values Ethiopians show double affinities with West Eurasia and West Africa (probably just a proxy for East African aborigines, not directly contrasted, Dinka or Maasai might do) but at deep K-values they show off their long lived process of unique homogenization, which may well date from the Upper Paleolithic/LSA era. In Y-DNA NW Africans show strong affinities with Ethiopia and archaeologically it seems that Capsian culture, and hence the Afroasiatic (proto-Berber) layer, originated near the Nile, in Nubia AFAIK, although the deeper roots may be farther South well inside Sudan, even in South Sudan and South Ethiopia maybe, judging on linguistics.

      This issue of Ethiopian affinity may explain the initial appearance of Tropical African affinities and later its relative vanishing: it mostly comes from NE Africa (but south of Egypt proper).

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    7. The reason why I decided to operate with K=11 was because of the sudden pop-up of a most intriguing SMor or South Moroccan minor component. In the Fst table it has extreme distances to every other component, even the closest one, which is ETH (0.196), followed by Mandenka (0.206).

      With due caution, my interpretation is that it may well be a remnant of the Aterian layer, which is nowadays very minor across the board (~1% or even less), excepted the South Moroccan sample, which sports 14.4% of it. Again, when not properly detached, this component will push toward Tropical Africa with at least 50% of its weight. South Moroccans still have some 14% of "Mandenka" but that's quite less than it appears at lower K-values distorted by (a) the Ethiopian element (3%), (b) the Ethiopian affinity of the Berber components themselves before they show as distinct and (c) the "Aterian" or SMor component, which is clearly a very different thing but also very hard to detect (and today I still don't know if it may be some sort of artifact but I suspect it's not).

      It's a quite complex genetic landscape to be honest, but also a very interesting one. Hope you're enjoying the discovery of this very rich complexity.

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    8. PS- On the "Aterian" component, we can well understand it as a different "race" altogether, although not anymore found in isolation and hence hard to characterize. However in some anthropometric discussions I've stumbled more than once on the claim of a pseudo-Khoisan (sometimes said pseudo-Mongol) look characteristic of some peoples of that area. I suspect that it can be attributed to that component, which at 14% still may have some influence in phenotype or "looks" on semi-random basis.

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  5. As an Algerian born in Oran, I was wondering if you could translate this to a more layman speak (for somebody who was little to no background studying genetics)? So for example, would it be fair to say that a majority of my ancestry is likely to be native berber? Would you be able to break up my genetic background into percentages of different ethnicities based on what is statistically likely? Thank you!

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    1. "I was wondering if you could translate this to a more layman speak"

      I cannot rewrite everything and I would't probably know how to, without betraying the truth, which is always complex. But feel free to ask and I'll try to clarify.

      "So for example, would it be fair to say that a majority of my ancestry is likely to be native berber?"

      Yes, absolutely.

      "So for example, would it be fair to say that a majority of my ancestry is likely to be native berber?"

      Take figure 3 above, focus on the bottom left graph, where it says K=4 ("autosomal", which refers to the nuclear chromosomes that do recombine, that are mixed every generation, the vast majority of the genome). That represents approximate ancestry in four colors:

      Yellow (Mozabite-like) is for sure Berber-specific, but probably not the only part.
      Green (Basque-like) is probably also Berber, from ancient interactions with SW Europe.
      Blue (Palestinian-like) can be both Arabic or Berber (due to ancient interactions via Egypt and Nubia)
      Gray (Yoruba-like) is confusing, the simplest interpretation is that it reflects recent trans-saharan inputs, maybe with the slave trade but in fact it can hide other stuff, such as more ancient proto-Berber (early North Afroasiatic) input from Nubia.

      This can be better seen maybe in the analysis I made back in 2011:
      → http://forwhattheywereweare.blogspot.com/2011/12/north-african-genetics-through-prism-of.html

      ... particularly this table

      There we see that, for example in Algeria (a non-specific sample), the main West African (Mandenka) component is only 7%, while the Ethiopian one is 6% and the Fula one is 2%. That's the ultra-saharan element I could detect in the generic Algeria sample. Total 14% (although the Ethiopian component is itself a 50/50 mix, part African, part West Asian, so if what you want to know how "black" the typical Algerian seems to be, the answer is 11%).

      Another interesting external fraction is the Arab one, which is only 10.6%. So the typical Algerian is about 11% Arab, all the rest must be attributed to local components (of West Eurasian affinity mostly), a 20% "Iberian", which should be also considered "Berber", as it must be quite old. Everything that is not Arab or West African is almost certainly "Berber" (or pre-Berber even).

      In brief, in my understanding, the typical Algerian is like:

      9% West African
      11% Arab
      80% Berber (at least, some of the other two components could also have been present among pre-Islamic Berbers)

      Notice that I include the Iberian component (probably Paleolithic in origin or at the very least pre-Islamic for the largest part) and the Ethiopian component within the Berber category because the Afroasiatic linguistic family (to which Berber belongs) and several associated genetic markers clearly expanded from the Nile Basin, probably in late Paleolithic times.

      Hope this helps.

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    2. There's a minor error above: the "ultra-saharan" component is 15% (not 14%) and therefore the strictly "black" element is rather 12% (not 11%).

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  6. @Maju: Are you kidding what you said that there is no presence of Arabs in the algerian societe.Are you from the area or you are just an intruder? Generally I do not like to read from individuals fake researchers because most of them are biaised for this reason I read only from laboratories as the pioneer of heredity and genealogy that I trust as familytreedna with whom I did my test y dna J-M267 and mtdna U5b . This laboratory mention in his studies that the J1 is present between 35-45% in Algeria,less in Morocco.You can .J2 is the less present.And if you read the data you can find a kit from Mr Ibeken from the clan of Ebeken of the tribe Ait Idir is in fact a J2 . if as you said there is no significant J1 in the Magreb then I conclude that the arabic language and the religion of Islam came down on the berber people as a rain from the sky.English also in the Americas came swiming cross the Atlantic.There no cultural change in any part of the world without immigration or invasion and the french colonisation is not that5 far.To finish My maternal grand father is a kabyle.

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    1. I'm not kidding but I did not say that either: one thing is "being Arab" ethno-linguistically ("in the soul" or especially in the language) and another different thing is having lots of "true Arab" genetics (from Arabia Peninsula). I'm 100% sure that, say, a Chinese kid adopted by an Arab family will grow to "be Arab" but not in the genes. This is not such an extreme case but similar enough.

      "if as you said there is no significant J1 in the Magreb"

      I said the opposite and you can check in any other source: J1 is very common in NW Africa, J2 is very rare instead. In an oversimplified approach the Y-DNA of NW Africa is made of E1b-M81 (typical of the region, distantly related to Nile lineages), E1b-V78 (clearly arrived from the Nile Area at some point) and J1 (same as E1b-V78 and similar distribution but with ultimate origin in West Asia). There are a few others but these three make more than 90% of everything.

      J2 is very rare but it is very common in Europe instead, where J1 is the rare one. But in West Asia every single population has both, at least every single Arab population. So we can use the balance or imbalance of both J sublineages to gauge how much is "recent West Asian" (Arab, Phoenician, etc.) and how much must be older, from times when the two J lineages were more strictly apart from each other. In the case of Europe that time is surely the Neolithic and in the case of NW Africa it's probably the Epipaleolithic or Mesolithic, when the Capsian culture arrived from Nubia/Egypt.

      "There no cultural change in any part of the world without immigration or invasion"...

      Invasion is not immigration at significant levels, that should be enough, more so when religion (and often politics too) backs the language and ethnic identity as "prestigious", disdaining other ethnicities as "barbaric" or "not as good". It's evident how in such situation an imposed foreign identity may be adopted by more and more people in search of individual/familial social improvement.

      Something I notice from the Metal Ages onwards (until the last few centuries) is that conquest was meant primarily to subjugate and assimilate, often enslave too: the oligarchs, the warlords wanted servant workforce, not more lands to work themselves but lands with people. This is different from the farmer colonizations of previous eras and also of the industrial era. Punctual colonizations (and democides) also happened in the Metal Eras but they were much more localized, with limited overall impact.

      A good example could be comparing the crusader state of Jerusalem and modern Israel: the crusaders did make some massacres, notably in the city of Jerusalem, whose inhabitants were massacred, but mostly they let the peasants and the inhabitants of other cities to go on with their lives (at their service of course). Instead Israel, as modern settler state, has little use for native Palestinians and would like to expel or exterminate them all, replacing them with foreign settlers.

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    2. Could another explanation be that some tribes in Levant/Arabia have not mixed for a while, meaning that J2 was not that prevalent in the arab / levant tribes that have spearheaded the invasions of north africa?
      .
      As I see it in order to exclude this hypothesis we would need some DNA testing of individuals that arrived in northern africa when the carthaginians and arabs settled.
      .
      for instance the way arab societies were organized in the pre islamic era it was not uncommon for certain tribes to not mix, whilst other did...

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    3. I don't think so: there's no reason to think that the Arab or Middle Eastern genetics of 1300 years ago were much different of what they are today, and everywhere in West Asia J1 and J2 appear together. This seems to have been already consolidated by the Bronze Age, when known ancient samples are very similar to modern ones (ancient Canaanites = modern Palestinians for example). There's no indication of any "recent" such change. Also what we know of the history of the Muslim conquests strongly support assimilation rather than settlement (sparse only), and it makes a lot of sense when we consider that Arabia Peninsula was (and is) scarcely populated, while the conquered lands were not.

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    4. You don't understand. "berbers" don't exist, it was invented by the french colonial power. North AFricans are Libo-Punics. Libyans originally then libyan-punic, libo-phoenician, that's why they assimilated Arabic so easily but was not possible in Turkey, Iran, etc. They still spoke in Punic even at the time of Saint Augustine and even when the Arabs came.

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    5. "Berber" is a common name for Amazigh. It seems it was spread by Arab conquest, who borrowed the term from Greco-Roman "barbaros/-us" = barbarian.

      Libo-Punics do not exist. Punics were either massacred (Carthage) or assimilated into Latin and late Arab culture. Libu > Libyan was a word used by Egyptians to refer to the Berbers/Amazigh closest to their border, i.e. in Cyrenaica and the Western Egyptian Desert, but was replaced by Meswesh (Amazigh) in the Late Bronze Age, maybe indicating arrival of people from further West (some interpret these Meswesh as being the same as later Mazyes from southern Tunisia and Tripolitania).

      In any case at the dawn of history the Berber groups (distinct from the Punics/Phoenicians) were mostly described as Numidians (Eastern Algeria and inland Tunisia) and Mauri (Morocco and Western Algeria), from which "Moors" (although this term now tends to mean all North Africans, regardless of whether they retain Amazigh culture/language of have been thoroughly Arabized).

      The Phoenician language did persist (at least Septimius Severus is known to have spoken it natively, and had an accent when speaking Latin or Greek therefore) but it's unlikely that it had any currency (and a declining one) outside the former Phoenician colonies. Unsure about Augustine, who wrote in Latin (with some "errors" such as confusing v and b which are very suggestive about the dialect already evolving in North Africa, NativLang has a video on it in YT if you're interested).

      I agree that Punics and Latins were easily assimilated into the new Arabic paradigm, while Berbers were more resilient instead because after all it was their native country and had already resisted other colonizations. Iran was not assimilated into Arabic for similar reasons: they had a proud culture that was not so easily subdued by some random barbarians from the desert. Turkey on the other hand is a case in which the language of Islamization was almost exclusively Turkish, while the native languages such as Greek or Armenian were primarily retained by Christian populations instead (there's some overlap but Ataturk's genocides simplified it greatly by declaring all Christians as "Greek" even if they clearly spoke Turkic only in many cases -- so good for his supposedly "secularist" ideals!)

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  7. @Maju.I am going6 to tell5 you about historic events56 that I am sure you ignore.In the time of Ottman gouvernance in Algeria and because of their stand against one of their ruler , the Kouligris descendant of turkish warrior and algerian women they get chassed to the Kabylie region and settled in Oued Zitoun and zemmouri.Their number was estimated by the french embassy in Algerie from their archives to 3 millions people.The El Khachna a Kemis el khachna near Boumerdes are also from turkish descent.The arab tribes of the Taaliba and Beni toudjin they escaped persecution from certain berber tribe of the Teteri(Media) and found refuge in Kabylie region , where the Amraoua arabe tribe was kabylized just in the 20 century, the Tawerga,Sidi Naamane and the Redjwana cited by the french Authors Doute and Gautier without forgetting the tribe which came out of44% of J1.The blacks algerian make 3% , the Miloudi born in Andalousia, the descendants of the Romans, Phoenicians, the Vandals.The J1 haplogroup came to North Africa in the Neolithic it is found 16% in the Guanch of dead people and 15% in Kabylia (Sammaha Bekada ...) And if in Arabia peninsula there is Arabs with E haplogroup (15%)who believe they are Arab of roots and so 20% in Jordan. Arabs from berber descent who embraced Islam and arab culture are also Arab . Zineddine zidane is a berber,He proudly says when interviewed that he is french. Is He or not?

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    1. I surely am an ignorant in regard to those local historical episodes. I appreciate your contribution in this regard, Djilali. However what I'm judging is what the genetics of the peoples tell us and they do not strongly support those large figures (3 million? that would be like the whole population of all Algeria back then!) In fact Turks also have strong J2, even more than Arabs, and Tizi Ouzud sample does not. It's possible, I guess, that those "Turks" were in fact assimilated others (locals or a poutpourri of various peoples, including Western Europeans, who are known to have joined the ranks of Barbary pirates since the end of the 17th century, when piracy was outlawed in the Caribbean) but at least in Tizi Ouzud there is no strong indication of that (some strong R1, which I know from other sources must be mostly R1b-Western, i.e. European-like, but no J2 nor other markers that could indicate a complex ethnic origin, including Turks or Italians even).

      We must understand that one thing is purported ancestry (per legends, heraldry or personal beliefs) and another different thing real ancestry per genetics.

      "The blacks algerian make 3%"...

      But "black" ancestry is clearly much more common, just that it is diluted. As far as I can tell, most of it does not come from the trans-Saharan caravan slave trade (or similar) but from much older sources in NE Africa (Nubia, Sudan, Ethiopia and such), where Afroasiatic languages originated and that was a key demographic and cultural core in the Mesolithic.

      "The J1 haplogroup came to North Africa in the Neolithic"...

      My opinion is that it is much much older in Northeast Africa (Nile basin), where it is extremely diverse, almost as much as in West Asia, and that it probably arrived to NW Africa in the Mesolithic with the Capsian (Gafsa) culture, which must also have brought the precursor of Berber languages.

      "And if in Arabia peninsula there is Arabs with E haplogroup (15%)who believe they are Arab of roots and so 20% in Jordan".

      Absolutely! E1b is also important in Europe (via Neolithic founder effects), particularly in Albania, Kosovo and Greece. This must have originated (in my not so humble opinion) in those same early Afroasiatic flows of the Mesolithic that make the Capsian in NW Africa but the Natufian in the Levant: people from what is now Nubia and Sudan migrated northwards into Egypt and from there expanded East and West, bringing the Afroasiatic languages with them and also the Africa-rooted E1b lineage.

      What we can use to gauge the influence of West Asian Semitic peoples such as Arabs or Phoenicians, is not each lineage on its own but the apportion of them in the genetic pool. So a random sample of, say 100 ancient West Asian Semites (Arabs, Phoenicians even true original Jews, who should be rather like Palestinians than like modern Jews) they would be something like 30 J2, 20 E1b, 40 J1 and some others (G, R1, etc.), or maybe a bit different, depending on the exact origin but always must have a sizable fraction of J2. And J2 is a lineage that is almost absent in NW Africa, what clearly indicates that the actual genetic (paternal) legacy of ancient Phoenicians and medieval Arabs is very low.

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    2. Don't try to wipe out the Arab elements as insignificant Mr Maju . You are just a person with some intention to manipulate the results . I am a J1 (Ydna ) and U5 (mtdna) my testes were done with Familytreedna and I can tell you following their projects on J1 that 35 to 45% presence of J1 in Algeria and that the haplogroup marker of the Berbers E-M81 don't go behind the bare of 45% .I am an algerian mixte from Arabs and Berbers descendants and I know the situation of Algeria better , so don't try to play with the results .Even the work of Asmahan Bekada is not that much representative by testing a small number of people and missing to test the area between Skikda and Annaba être the 45% of J1 is present regarding the famous american laboratory Familytreedna.

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    4. I don't take it kindly that accusation of "manipulating the results". I have an educated opinion which you are free to disagree with and I'd welcome yours, "Unknown", if it'd be worded in such disagreement and educated terms.

      The question is that E-M81 is not the only "Berber marker" and you see J1 at c. 8% across the board in all samples, with the exception of Mozabites (0%) and Oranians (c. 20%). Also J1 is very strong in non-Arab and even non-Semitic populations of NE Africa, from The Horn to Egypt, it is also strong in non-Semitic populations of the Caucasus and to some extent in non-Semitic populations of the Aegean. J1 is NOT a Semitic or Arab marker per se, it is older than that, much older (my estimate is c. 30-40 Ka BP) and while it reaches its highest frequencies in Yemen, it also shows a relatively low diversity there, indicating it arrived from somewhere else, surely the Fertile Crescent.

      It must be thus qualified with cautious analysis. In The Horn for example the Semitic marker is clearly J2 and not J1, which must be a much older arrival. And this relative parity of J2 and J1 is what actually best defines the "Semitic marker" in Y-DNA, as we can see from Aleppo to Mecca (the frequencies vary somewhat but J1 is always accompanied by J2 in sizable frequencies), and what we see in NW Africa are much lower frequencies of J2, thus J2 is the "Arab marker" (or more broadly the "Semitic marker", because it can also indicate older Phoenician inflow).

      And J2 is concentrated in Oran and Algiers, absent in the rest. Thus only those two cities are candidates for significant Semitic admixture, maybe c. 18-20% once we apply some reasonable multipliers but anyhow only meaning the male input, not the female one that would require a separate analysis.

      18-20% Semitic in the cities, 0% elsewhere.

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    5. Actually the overal Semitic admixture in the major cities is likely in the 10-12%, assuming (as we must) a much lower female immigration rate in both the Phoenician and Arabic colonizations. The 18-20% figure only represents the male input.

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    6. Maju, you are doing a very good job of research. Your analyzes are very relevant, as you see some malicious people would dictate a biased version of what is proven and proven. That said, as you have very well pointed out, the haplogroup J1 30/40000 years old can not be considered as the haplogroup of "Arabs" whose group does not go back beyond 2800 years of age . Moreover, J1 is from the Caucasus, only a small recent branch of this haplogroup corresponds to the Arab group, which in reality has been Arabised / Semitized by the haplogroup E-M123, which is actually the origin of the Semitic languages and cultures.

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    7. It's not so easy to pinpoint where J1 coalesced but I'd say that Fertile Crescent (maybe Zagros area) is a good hunch, together with J2. However these two "brother" lineages expanded in different ways, with J1 being more active to the South and Southwest and J2 to the Northwest instead. What is interesting is that J2 only made it to Africa with Semitic peoples (Arabs, Phoenicians, Habesha), so J2 is the marker to consider rather tha J1, which seems much older in that continent.

      The inverse is true for Europe, where J2 seems to have arrived at least with the Vinca-Dimini wave c. 5000 BCE but J1 did not or only at much lower frequencies, so finding J1 in Iberia for example is a much safer anchor to suspect either Phoenician or Arab/Berber Muslim inflow than J2 or even E1b-M81, which are probably older and in the case of J2 surely arrived from SE Europe (Italy for instance).

      "... the haplogroup E-M123 (...) is actually the origin of the Semitic languages and cultures".

      It's related but it's older. What you see in Semitic peoples is a mix of J1, J2 and other lineages like E1b, etc. There's no single haplogroup that describes Semitic identity, those marker haplogroups I mentioned must be considered relative to region of analysis, so in Africa J2 is the Semitic marker, while in Europe it can be J1 instead.

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  8. thank's for help i need more and more and more
    for my DNA MY family
    i am from tagist "souk ahras" the place of saint augistin
    land i see my "CABILA" WIKI SAID ARAB'S MY GRANDFATHER SAID BERBERS THE BIGEST CABILA IN TUNISIA AND NORTH AFRICA BEN ***** MY NAME
    THANK'SMAN VERY USE FULL

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  9. Hi,
    I'm from Bejaia ,my DNA results show zero trace of middle east(Arabian peninsula).
    FMTDNA RESULTS:
    North Africa 69%
    Iberian Peninsula 2% +(Separdic Jews 14% )+Italy/South Europe 5%
    Eastern Europe/Asia Minor(Anatolian peninsula) 10 %

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    1. Lots of Eastern Europe/Asia Minor! Is that common among Bejaians? In any case it suggests direct Turkish ancestry or something like that.

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    3. I don't know anybody from bejaia who tested(other bougiotes) ,but it certainly came from one of my ancestors who apparently was a separdic jew from spain ...My italian and greek friends have a very high % of Asia minor as well.....also My x chromosome is mainly European .

      My ancient origins :
      82% European:
      Farmer 70%
      Metal Age Invader 6%
      Hunter-gatherer 5%
      Non-European 18%

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    4. That explains everything: Western or "Roman" Jews (Sephardic, Ashkenazi, Moroccan Jews, etc.) are extremely similar to modern Turks (although their best match is Cypriots in fact, not too different from Turks). This implies they are not direct descendants (or mostly not) from Biblical Jews but from converts from Cyprus or Anatolia (Judaism was quite proselytistic once upon a time). This was recently confirmed by ancient Bronze Age DNA from Levant extremely similar to modern Palestinians (who must therefore be the actual descendants from ancient Canaanites and Biblical Jews).

      See:

      https://forwhattheywereweare.blogspot.com/2012/01/spehardi-jews-in-context-of-levant-and.html

      and

      https://forwhattheywereweare.blogspot.com/2016/06/ancient-genomes-from-neolithic-west-asia.html

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    6. Greece/Cyprus makes more sense ,23andme reported it(Asia Minor)as southern/broadly European :

      Southern European (7.3%) :Iberian 2.2%,Italian 2.0%,Broadly Southern European
      3.1%
      Northwestern European :0.4%
      Broadly Northwestern European :0.4%
      Broadly European :4.7%

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    7. Cypriots do not cluster with Greeks proper, they cluster much better with Turks. All three populations are close but there's a clear difference between mainland Greeks and Cypriots. There's also some difference between Cypriots and the standard Turkish sample (it'd be nice if we had regional samples for countries as large as Turkey or France) but it's small and they tend to cluster with each other in PCAs.

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    8. On the other hand the NW Mediterranean component (strongest in Sardinia, also in Iberia, Basques, less strong in Italians) is clearly distinct and very close to the main European Neolithic component. Finally Sicilians tend to Greeks but go even farther than them towards West Asia (suggesting to me that maybe the Siculi/Shekelesh were indeed Semitic colonists). Talking about "Southern European" is not helpful: there's a lot of diversity towards the Mediterranean (3-6 regions IMO), it's rather a general contrast vs the more homogeneous Northern Europe (Irish and Russians are maybe as close in autosomal DNA terms as Turks, Cypriots and Greeks are to each other).

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  10. Thank you for your contribution in unlocking the mystery of "Algerian" Genetics.

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  12. My parents are both Algerians, father from Jijel mountains (near Kabylia mountains) and my mother from Chaouia land between Setif and Batna. I did my DNA tests ( 3 ) one mtdna, an other Y-DNA and the last autosomal which I got recently the results. I have 87% North african, 1% Mid-East , 3% British/Irish , 5% Southern Europe ... but my haplogroups are R-P311(R1B1B2A1A) for the paternal lineage and HV0 for the mother. I know that autosomal is not in all cases related to the haplogroups, but I was very surprised by the haplogroup of my father ( confirmed in two tests FTDNA 8 years ago and 23andme for the latest). I try from now to guess when and how this haplogroup could have been inherited in my paternal lineage.

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    1. R1b seems to exist in North Africa at around 10% frequencies, so it's not that rare. It should be quite old considering that pre-colonial Guanche mummies from Canary Islands had it at even higher frequencies, and also some intriguing I, which is rare in North Africa today but is strongly associated with Paleolithic Europe and has been recently found in Sudan at low but significant frequencies.

      My take on the matter is that, my best theory, is that Paleolithic Europeans migrated to North Africa from Iberia in the Solutrean period some 22,000 years ago, producing the Iberomaurusian or Oranian culture (the first Upper Paleolithic culture west of Cyrenaica) and that some offshoots spread Eastward all the way to the Nile. Later, in the Mesolithic or Epipaleolithic period, people from the Nile, surely carrying Afroasiatic language precursor of Berber/Amazigh, migrated from Nubia and Upper Egypt Westward (other branches heading to Egypt and the Levant). Those people would carry lineages such as E1b-M78 (probably also M81 but less clear) and J1, and correspond to the Capsian (Gafsan) culture.

      We also see the pattern in the mtDNA side: European lineages of strong Iberian affinity such as H1, H3, H4 and H7, probably also V and now it seems that U6 as well (very likely), correspond to the Iberomaurusian wave, while many L(xM,N) in NW Africa have a NE African affinity and should correspond to the Capsian wave.

      More research is needed but it seems quite plausible to me.

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  13. My parents are also both, too, from the mountains of Jijel, I carried out the three tests,
    I'm PF2431, maternal side J2a2d, my autosomal test gives me 90.4% North African 7.2% Spain / Italy,
    PF2431 was found mainly in Spain, Italy, Germany and England,
    I confess that I am lost, I can not understand its origin.

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    1. mtDNA J is probably a Neolithic arrival or maybe from later times (Phoenician, Arab) but from West Asia (or via Europe maybe???)

      Not sure how to interpret the autosomal DNA but it might be just normal in the area (North Africans always show a fraction of SW European affinity, but how it's displayed may depend on how the test is designed). Alternatively you might even have recent Barbary piracy or even colonial SW European ancestry. In a properly designed autosomal analysis the Italian and Iberian ancestry is always distinct anyhow, so maybe try experimenting with other "calculators" for a second and third opinion.

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  14. My parents are also both, too, from the mountains of Jijel, I carried out the three tests,
    I'm PF2431, maternal side J2a2d, my autosomal test gives me 90.4% North African 7.2% Spain / Italy,
    PF2431 was found mainly in Spain, Italy, Germany and England,
    I confess that I am lost, I can not understand its origin.

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  15. What do you think of PF2431 that appeared 14100 years ago, the tmrca is 11300 years old? Can it be related to Ibero-Maurusian or Solutrean culture?
    Thank you

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    1. I don't believe in the "molecular clock" as it's generally used: it's horribly calibrated and it's not regular enough probably.

      But my rule of thumb is add 50-100% to all figures unless you have direct archaeogenetic evidence to calibrate that particular branch.

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    2. That would produce a TRMCA of 22.6-17.0 Ka ago and a general estimate of 28.2-21.2 Ka ago, what seems very compatible with Iberomaurusian (c. 22 Ka ago in Taforalt, oldest site AFAIK).

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    3. Also, just found about this paper (haven't got the time to read it yet): https://www.biorxiv.org/content/early/2017/09/21/191569

      It says something about some North African component already present in Taforalt!

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    4. Correction: not Taforalt but some other place in the Epipaleolithic (aka "Mesolithic"). Interestingly it also finds near-identity of Epipaleolithic Andalusian with Late Neolithic Europeans. Seems a major finding, or rather two!

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  16. My DNA Land result(I'm from Bejaia)
    North African 64%
    East African 2.1%
    Mediterranean Islander 26%
    Southwestern European 6.6%
    Ambiguous 1.4%
    North African
    Includes: Algerian and Mozabite in Algeria; Tunisian in Tunisia and Saharawi in (Morocco) Western Sahara
    Does not include: Yoruba and Esan in Nigeria; Mandenka in Senegal; Basque/French in France; Icelandic in Iceland; Italian/WestSicilian and Sardinian in (Sardinia and 1 other site) Italy; Maltese in Malta; Iberian Population in Spain and Gambian in Western Gambia

    East African
    Includes: Bantu, Kikuyu, Luhya, Luo and Masai in (Webuye, Kinyawa and 4 other sites) Kenya; Datog in Tanzania and Luhya in (Kenya) Webuye
    Does not include: Mbuti (Pygmy) in Congo; Egyptian in Egypt; Ju hoan_North in Namibia; Hadza in Tanzania; Saudi in Saudi Arabia; Yemen and Yemenite Jew in Yemen; Esan in Nigeria and Sri Lankan Tamil from Sri Lanka (expat in the UK)

    Mediterranean Islander
    Includes: Cypriot in Cyprus; Italian/EastSicilian and Italian/WestSicilian in Italy and Maltese in Malta
    Does not include: Egyptian in Egypt; Tunisian in Tunisia; Albanian in Albania; Greek in Greece; Palestinian in (Central) Israel; Sardinian and Toscani in (Sardinia and 1 other site) Italy; Syrian in Syrian and Turkish in (Adana, Aydin, Kayseri and 1 other site) Turkey

    Southwestern European
    Includes: Basque/French and French in (South and 1 other site) France and Basque/Spanish and Iberian Population in Spain
    Does not include: Algerian and Mozabite in Algeria; Saharawi in (Morocco) Western Sahara; Scottish Argyll_Bute_GBR and British in England; Icelandic in Iceland and Italian/Bergamo and Sardinian in (Bergamo and Sardinia) Italy

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  17. My DNA Land results are as follow(From Bejaia):
    North African 64%
    East African 2.1%
    Mediterranean Islander 26%
    Southwestern European 6.6%
    Ambiguous 1.4%
    North African
    Includes: Algerian and Mozabite in Algeria; Tunisian in Tunisia and Saharawi in (Morocco) Western Sahara
    Does not include: Yoruba and Esan in Nigeria; Mandenka in Senegal; Basque/French in France; Icelandic in Iceland; Italian/WestSicilian and Sardinian in (Sardinia and 1 other site) Italy; Maltese in Malta; Iberian Population in Spain and Gambian in Western Gambia

    East African
    Includes: Bantu, Kikuyu, Luhya, Luo and Masai in (Webuye, Kinyawa and 4 other sites) Kenya; Datog in Tanzania and Luhya in (Kenya) Webuye
    Does not include: Mbuti (Pygmy) in Congo; Egyptian in Egypt; Ju hoan_North in Namibia; Hadza in Tanzania; Saudi in Saudi Arabia; Yemen and Yemenite Jew in Yemen; Esan in Nigeria and Sri Lankan Tamil from Sri Lanka (expat in the UK)

    Mediterranean Islander
    Includes: Cypriot in Cyprus; Italian/EastSicilian and Italian/WestSicilian in Italy and Maltese in Malta
    Does not include: Egyptian in Egypt; Tunisian in Tunisia; Albanian in Albania; Greek in Greece; Palestinian in (Central) Israel; Sardinian and Toscani in (Sardinia and 1 other site) Italy; Syrian in Syrian and Turkish in (Adana, Aydin, Kayseri and 1 other site) Turkey

    Southwestern European
    Includes: Basque/French and French in (South and 1 other site) France and Basque/Spanish and Iberian Population in Spain
    Does not include: Algerian and Mozabite in Algeria; Saharawi in (Morocco) Western Sahara; Scottish Argyll_Bute_GBR and British in England; Icelandic in Iceland and Italian/Bergamo and Sardinian in (Bergamo and Sardinia) Italy

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  18. Hi Maju,
    My husband is from Jijel, his 23andme Haplo TL208 and maternal L21a.
    He is rare in comparison to other Algerians.
    He comes up 60-70% North African 30% or less European, with 3% African. Showing 9% Sephardic at Familytree, depending on various the sites.
    I like to analyse his Autosomal Cousin match’s.
    He has distant Iberian, Italian, Turkish, Irish along with Libya to Morocco. His paternal mother’s Haplo EM183. He doesn’t identify as a Berber.
    Any thoughts?

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    Replies
    1. How is he "rare in comparison to other Algerians", Mabah? I'm not familiar with how they appear in Family Tree methodology but in general it's not rare that NW Africans show some strong European affinity, which seems to be input from the Neolithic era (i.e. Sardinian-like).

      See for ancient DNA:

      · https://forwhattheywereweare.blogspot.com/2018/04/north-african-neolithic-was-influenced.html (not too apparent because the details I picked were Europe-centered, as the paper was relevant for both sides of the Western Mediterranean, but follow the link to the original study to see wider analyses also including North Africans)

      · https://forwhattheywereweare.blogspot.com/2018/04/no-iberian-in-iberomaurusian.html

      And for modern DNA maybe these:

      · https://forwhattheywereweare.blogspot.com/2012/01/north-african-autosomal-genetics-again.html

      · https://forwhattheywereweare.blogspot.com/2011/12/north-african-genetics-through-prism-of.html

      European affinity seems to me "normal" among North Africans but maybe your husband is indeed at some extreme. The opposite extreme, the nearly pure Oranian/Iberomaurusian type represented by the Mozabites is maybe more archetypal but not more "normal".

      As for Sephardic or otherwise West Jewish affinity (some sites use Ashkenazi only, very similar to Sephardites but more "bottlenecked" and also more Euro-admixed), it could mean something or nothing or it could even mean Turkish. Let's not forget that Algeria was born as a corsair vassal state of the Ottoman Empire and that Western Jews, Cypriots and Turks are genetically very very similar (suggesting that Western Jews originated in Asia Minor and not in Palestine, which has a clearly distinct genetic pool and had it also in Prehistory).

      So I don't know what to say, but it can be just normal, it can be normal but slightly extra-admixed with other Mediterranean elements (what seems more likely if his ancestral family was from a coastal harbor-city like Algiers or Oran or Bougie) but I wouldn't say on first thought that it's very abnormal. However the last opinion is yours and your husband's, because you are the ones with all the elements of judgment, including surely some access to results from other Algerians testing with the same company (this is important because the model populations/components they use vary from company to company).

      I'm not "expert" in private genetics, what I can help is with general studies that may serve as reference. I think I have already pointed you to the most important ones but search for "North Africa" in this blog for other entries as well.

      As for the mtDNA L2a1, it's not rare in Algeria (1.3%, plus another 1.3% of its descendant L2a1b): https://forwhattheywereweare.bwritlogspot.com/2013/02/algerian-haploid-genetics.html

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    2. Just realized you said he's from Jijel, which is not a place I'm familiar with but for what I read used to be a Phoenician colony and is definitely a coastal port-town, not far from Bejaia (which I called Bougie for random memory reasons).

      In general I'd expect people from coastal background to be more cosmopolitan in ancestry because history suggests so, and also I'd expect self-identified Arabs to be in general more cosmopolitan in ancestry than self-identified Berbers (everything else equal), because the very fact of considering yoursefl Berber implies a bit less interest in cosmopolitanism, a bit more interest in your ancestral community instead.

      It's indeed possible that he (and maybe other people from his town) are "rare" in the sense of extra cosmopolitanism, maybe even very old one, from the times of Carthage, Rome, the Vandals or at the very least the Ottoman Empire and the Barbary pirates.

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  19. Thanks Maju, for your explanation. I will have him further tested at Familytree for his Y DNA and post what comes up.

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  20. Thank you Maju for what you do and helping us understand our ancestry. Has there been any more sampling to share since you last published this article. A big part of North Africans have been fooled about their ethnic origins. They have been damaged beyond repair to a point that they can not accept science that doesn't lie. I'm from Tizi-Ouzou region, and I always considered myself Amazigh. I recently did my DNA test with ancestry.co. Here are the results by region 96% North Africa, 2% Portugal, and 2% Italy. My wife who claims that her grand mother from her mother side is descendant from the Marabout Sidi Abdel Kader Djilali had the following results: 91% North Africa, 5% Portugal, 3% Middle East, and 1% Ghana. We are both from the same village, but of course, we are not related, at least closely. How are we different ethnically from the current inhabitants of Canary Island? A friend of mine who recently visited the region said that when you are there, you feel the connection. I haven't been. Any comments are greatly appreciated.

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    Replies
    1. Thanks for your kind words.

      First of all, some more recent articles on North African genetics you may want to look at:
      ·> https://forwhattheywereweare.blogspot.com/2018/04/north-african-neolithic-was-influenced.html
      ·> https://forwhattheywereweare.blogspot.com/2018/04/no-iberian-in-iberomaurusian.html

      The latter (complemented by the former) challenged my ideas on how was the North African genetic pool formed. I used to think that Iberomaurusian culture (also called "Oranian", Mid-Late Upper Paleolithic of the region) was original from Europe and that the West Asian layer arrived later from Egypt (Capsian culture of the Epipaleolithic and first Neolithic), but the data of these two newer studies says that it was the other way around: that "Iberomaurusian" was not at all related to Iberia but that it came from the East (either Egypt, Cyrenaia or Sudan-Nubia, where Upper Paleolithic cultures are much older) with what is essentially West Asian genetics and that the Iberian influence is from the Neolithic instead (Cardium Pottery, maybe also later influences with Megalithism).

      As for Canary Islands, what is quite apparent is that the Guanche (Berber) layer has been largely (but not completely) destroyed by five long centuries of colonization and that much of that aboriginal blood was forcibly transferred to the Caribbean region ("blood tribute"), while the Canary islands was more and more settled by Europeans. Today Canarias is largely of European ancestry although the aboriginal one is also apparent, notably in the island of La Gomera. See this most interesting (and so far unique) mini-study by Thierno on the matter of the intriguing genetic affinity between the Canary Islands or NW Africa and Puerto Rico (and possibly other Caribbean regions): https://forwhattheywereweare.blogspot.com/2018/10/the-major-guanche-genetic-influence-in.html

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