A small example of these cultures would be: Britain, Ireland, Scotland, Wales, France (i.e. Gaul), Luxembourg, Belgium, Switzerland, Austria, the Czech and Slovak Republics, Spain, Italy, Greece, Turkey, Egypt, the Netherlands, Germany, Poland, Russia and the United States. 
Even the map is in spanish, there are some registers that explain the expansion of Celtic people in Europe. The Celts first known homeland was actually in Central Asia - East and West Turkestan, which is N/NW of Tibet. Celtic remains, relics and burial sites have been found by British Archaeological expeditions dating back to the 1920's and still continuing today (with the permission of the Chinese governement). 
Also, the  Celts  of  Central  and  Eastern  Europe  were  mixed  Alpine,  Nordic,  Dinaric  proper,  Noric  (Northern  Dinaric),  Mediterranean  (in  the  Balkan  Peninsula)  Borreby-Nordic  and  other.  The  Celts  who  settled  in  Asia  Minor  (Galatians)  came  from  the  valleys  of  the  Danube  and  the  Rhine.  The  Nordic  Celts  were  very  few  in  the  Danube  area,  were  found  to  some  extent  on  the  banks  of  the  Rhine  and  formed  the  majority  of  the  Celtic  population  only  at  the  mouth  of  the  Rhine,  on  the  North  Sea  coast.  Overall  in  the  mentioned  areas,  the  Alpine  type  seemed  to  be  the  most  common,  coexisting  with  several  others. while  the  Nordics (proper, Borreby, Brünn, Falo-Dalisch  and other)  consisted  a  rather  limited  portion  of  the  total  Celtic  population (more than  10.000.000  around  200BC).  The  only  Celtic  areas  where  the  Alpine  type  was  not  the  most  common,  were  the lands  of  the  Celtiberians  and  Lusitanians,  Gallic  Thrace (Tylis)  and  the  British  Islands,  where  the  Meds  and  the  Atlanto-Meds  have  been  the  commonest  type.

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