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Related: About this forumDid Dutch hordes kill off the early Britons who started Stonehenge?
A gene study has shown that incomers could have ousted Stone Age Britons
Robin McKie Science editor
Saturday 20 May 2017 19.05 EDT
The men and women who built Stonehenge left an indelible mark on the British landscape. However, researchers have discovered that their impact on other aspects of the nation may have been less impressive. In particular, their input into Britains gene pool appears to have fizzled out, having been terminated by light-skinned Bronze Age invaders who arrived just as Ancient Britons were midway through their great Stone Age project. In the end, these newcomers may have completely replaced the people who were building Stonehenge.
This startling conclusion is the result of a huge gene study of humans in prehistoric Europe. It shows that around 2500BC when the main sections of Stonehenge were under construction a race of people known to archaeologists as the Beaker folk arrived in Britain. Their genetic profiles were similar to individuals who were living in the Netherlands at the time. In just a short period, all genetic traces of early Stone Age Britons were replaced by those from these continental newcomers, although work on Stonehenge continued.
It is very striking. There seems to have been a complete replacement of the original folk of Britain with these newcomers, said Garrett Hellenthal, a statistical geneticist based at University College London. Normally you get some older DNA surviving with a wave of immigrants, even a fairly large wave. But you dont see that in this case. Frankly it looks more like an invasion.
The arrival and spread of the Beaker folk is one of the most intriguing puzzles of European prehistory. These people made complex, very distinctive ornaments in silver and gold and constructed distinctive bell-shaped pots or beakers from which they get their name.
More:
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2017/may/20/dutch-invaders-stonehenge-ancient-britons
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Did Dutch hordes kill off the early Britons who started Stonehenge? (Original Post)
Judi Lynn
May 2017
OP
still_one
(96,654 posts)1. Does this explain Theresa May?
shenmue
(38,537 posts)2. I see what you did there
still_one
(96,654 posts)3. The OP always provides us with interesting and scientific stories. I just couldn't resist
though
GeoWilliam750
(2,540 posts)4. Fascinating
Very interesting history on the R1b haplotype.
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,730 posts)5. A genetic profile similar to those who
were living in what today is the Netherlands hardly makes those people Dutch. Ancestors of the modern Dutch maybe.