Seven of 42 skeletons from Linear Pottery Culture (Linearbandkeramik) sites were found to be members of the N1a haplogroup (see
Neolithic European). N1a was also identified in skeletal remains within a 6200-year-old megalithic long mound near
Prissé-la-Charrière, France. A 2500-year-old fossil of a Scytho-Siberian in the
Altai Republic, easternmost representative of the
Scythians, was found to be a member of N1a1. A study of a 10th and 11th century Hungarians found that N1a1a1 was present in high-status individuals but absent from commoners. One of thirteen skeletons analyzed from a medieval cemetery dated 1250-1450 AD in
Denmark was found to be a member of subclade N1a1a. The N1 subclade has also been found in various other fossils that were analysed for ancient DNA, including specimens associated with the
Starčevo (N1a1a1, Alsónyék-Bátaszék, Mérnöki telep, 1/3 or 33%), Linearbandkeramik (N1a1a1a3, Szemely-Hegyes, 1/1 or 100%; N1a1b/N1a1a3/N1a1a1a2/N1a1a1/N1a1a1a, Halberstadt-Sonntagsfeld, 6/22 or ~27%),
Alföld Linear Pottery (N1a1a1, Hejőkürt-Lidl, 1/2 or 50%),
Transdanubian Late Neolithic (N1a1a1a, Apc-Berekalja, 1/1 or 100%),
Protoboleráz (N1a1a1a3, Abony, Turjányos-dűlő, 1/4 or 25%),
Iberia Early Neolithic cultures (N1a1a1, Els Trocs, 1/4 or 25%),
Rinaldone-
Gaudo Eneolithic cultures (N1a1a1a3,
Monte San Biagio, 1/1 or 100%). ==Distribution==