An estimation for
Holocene-era Near Easterners (e.g., Mesolithic
Caucasus hunter-gatherers,
Mesolithic and Neolithic
Iranians, and
Natufians) suggests that they formed from a combination of Basal Eurasian ancestry, and
Western Hunter-Gatherer-related (WHG) and or
Ancient North Eurasians-related (ANE) ancestries respectively. The Mesolithic and Neolithic Iranian lineage is inferred to derived between 38–48% ancestry from Basal Eurasians respectively, with the remainder ancestry being made up by Ancient North Eurasian or
Eastern Hunter-Gatherer (EHG) like ancestry, while Natufians derived a mean average of 50% Basal and 50% 'unknown hunter-gatherer' ancestry being closer to Western Hunter-Gatherers (WHG). It has been found that the "models of genetic history of West Asian human populations who are modeled as a mixture of 'basal Eurasians' and West European hunter–gatherers" is in agreement with the genomic data on 'East Mediterranean
Dogs', who "are modeled as a mixture of a basal branch (splitting deeper than the divergence of the Asian and European dogs) and West European dogs". The Ancient North African
Iberomaurusian (
Taforalt) individuals were found to have harbored ~65% West Eurasian-like ancestry and considered likely direct descendants of such "Basal Eurasian" population. However they were shown to be genetically closer to Holocene-era Iranians and Levantine populations, which already harbored increased archaic (Neanderthal) admixture.
Early European Farmers (EEFs), who had some
Western European Hunter-Gatherer-related ancestry and originated in the Near East, also derive approximately 30% (to up to 44%) of their ancestry from this hypothetical Basal Eurasian lineage. An
Upper Paleolithic specimen from Kotias Klde cave in the
Caucasus (Caucasus_25,000BP) had around 24% Basal Eurasian and 76% Upper Paleolithic European ancestry. Among modern populations, Basal-like ancestry peaks among
Arabs (such as
Qataris) at c. 45%, and among
Iranian populations at c. 35%, and is also found in significant amounts among modern Northern Africans, in accordance with the high affinity towards the 'Arabian branch' of Eurasian diversity, which expanded into Northern and Northeastern Africa between 30 and 15 thousand years ago. Modern populations of the
Levant derive between 35-38% ancestry from Basal Eurasians, modern Anatolians and populations from the
Caucasus derive between 25-30% ancestry from Basal Eurasians, and modern
Europeans derive around or less than 20% ancestry from Basal Eurasians. Modern
Bedouins and
Yemenis are considered to represent direct descendants of the Basal Eurasians, carrying the highest amount of indigenous 'Arabian ancestry', and being basal to all modern Eurasian populations without displaying higher 'African-associated' admixture, and thus "are among the best genetic representatives of the autochthonous population on the
Arabian Peninsula". ==References==