Еще одна группа интересна, в нее входят манси-русски6-финны-шведы-карел-эстонец.
Их выделяет мутация 390 = 24
Both, DYS392=13 and DYS390=24 are in general pretty unknown in Finland, because Finnish I1 has a very low diversity. Those mutations in Finland are within a distance of a few hudnred years from Bothnia Modal are "family mutations". We know that some Tavastian type with 385a-b=14-15 and DYS439=10 moved to Karelia about 800AD and exists today around Ladoga.
I'll look closer types DYS392=13 and DYS390=24, but if the age calculation shows over 3000 years distance with Bothnia-type, these types obviously are not meaningful finds in context with Bothnia.
The problem in analyzing Finnish, Swedish and Polish types is that they all are very similar, no clear identifiers to define haplotypes, especially Finnish and Polish are similar if we have not L22-result. I cannot do more than make age calculations.
It seems to me that in Russia we have old Russian haplotypes, Swedish-Finnish types and of cource AS-types. I am not sure about T2, which is pretty sure one of most widespread I1-haplotype in Poland. I can refer to old Goths, not anyway sure about it.
I did yesterday an exercise by 67-markers to see and show how close Finnish Bothnia is both Swedish Norse and Polish T2. All Poles in the sheet belong to T2 and Swedes to Norse, acording to K. Nordvedt. The first row is I1-Bothnia modal by 67 markers. These are like brothers, but nobody, including Ken Nordvedt, has not succeeded to find the route of I1 to Finland.
Click the picture to enlarge it.
http://img210.imageshack.us/i/bothpolskanruss.jpg/ Thanks for your haplotype networks. I try to explore them, but it is not easy without key alleles.