t1a1 haplogroup vikings
t1a1 haplogroup vikings
Age:Early modern 16-17th centuries CE Location:Kopparsvik, Gotland, Sweden Y-DNA:I-BY463 Age:Viking 900-1050 CE New path = R-FT104609>R-FT103482 Y-DNA:I-M6155 mtDNA:J1b1a1, Sample:VK369 / Denmark_Bakkendrup losfund-2, conc.1 mtDNA:H2a2b, Sample:VK403 / Sweden_Skara 217 Y-DNA:G-Y106451 Y-DNA:R-YP390 mtDNA:H13a1a1a, Sample:VK395 / Sweden_Skara 275 Due to mixing resulting from the Viking raids beginning at Lindisfarne in 793 , the UK population today carries as much as 6% Viking DNA. Y-DNA:I-Y36105 Age:Early Viking Late Germanic Iron Age/early Viking Location:Ladoga, Russia Location:St_Johns_College_Oxford, Oxford, England, UK FTDNA Comment:Shares 3 SNPs with a man from Sweden. Age:Viking 10th century CE The alternative SNP names are provided as shown on the ISOGG Y-SNP tree . New branch = R-FT108043 Age:Viking 9-11th centuries CE mtDNA:U4b1b1, Sample:VK166 / UK_Oxford_#4 Age:Early Viking 8th century CE mtDNA:H2a2a2, Sample:VK245 / Faroe_16 Location:Galgedil, Funen, Denmark Y-DNA:I-M253 New path = R-BY67003>R-BY45170 FTDNA Comment:Joins ancient Estonian samples V9 and X14 Age:Early Viking 8th century CE New path = R-BY18973>R-BY18970 mtDNA: J1b1a1a, I match Y-DNA sample VK174 / UK_Oxford_#18 Haplogroup: R-FGC17429, We are a group of 23 Reid males, ancestors from Scotland under R-FGC17427. Y-DNA:R-L20 Location:Oland, Sweden Thats not at all what we thought we knew. Location:Telemark, Nor_South, Norway mtDNA:H3v-T16093C, Sample:VK232 / Gotland_Kopparsvik-240.65 PGA and FTDNA customer formed a branch earlier this week, VK178 will join them at R-BY176639 (Under L48) Age:Early Viking 8th century CE Location:Galgedil, Funen, Denmark Location:Ladoga, Russia Y-DNA:R-FGC71023 Forms a new branch down of I-S19291. Age:Viking 9-11th centuries CE Age:Viking 10-12th centuries CE Age:Viking 8-11th centuries CE Age:Viking 11-12th centuries CE Age:Viking 9-11th centuries CE Location:Buckquoy_Birsay, Orkney, Scotland, UK Y-DNA:J-BY62479 mtDNA:J2b1a, Sample:VK290 / Denmark_Kumle Hoje Grav O Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia mtDNA:H4a1, Sample:VK346 / Oland_1057 Age:Viking 900-1050 CE HG02545 remains at R-FT263905 Y-DNA:I-F3312 mtDNA:U3b1b, Sample:VK380 / Oland_1078 mtDNA:H3a1a, Sample:VK237 / Faroe_15 New path = N-BY29005>N-BY21933 Location:Tollemosegrd, Sealand, Denmark Age:Viking 9-11th centuries CE New branch = I-BY56459 Online ahead of print . VK399 possibly groups with these two as well mtDNA:T2b24, Sample:VK333 / Oland_1028 The geographic distribution within subclade T2 varies greatly with the ratio of subhaplogroup T2e to T2b reported to vary 40-fold across examined populations from a low in Britain and Ireland, to a high in Saudi Arabia (Bedford 2012). Location:Chernigov, Ukraine FTDNA Comment:Shares 1 SNP with a man from Sweden. mtDNA:T2b6a, Sample:VK220 / Russia_Ladoga_5680-11 Location:Frojel, Gotland, Sweden Age:Viking 9th century CE There are also more detailed mtDNA tests available for those who wish to close the gap towards the modern period (equivalent to the BigY result). His Y-DNA is Q-M378 (previously Q1b). Vikings raiding parties from Scandinavia originated in Norway, Sweden and Denmark. mtDNA:H3a1, Sample:VK248 / Faroe_22 mtDNA:U5a1a, Sample:VK75 / Greenland late-0929 Y-DNA:R-BY33037 mtDNA:J1b1a1b, Sample:VK506 / Estonia_Salme_I-3 Haplogroup T1 is not found among the Saami, the Jews, or the Avars of the Caucasus, and is extremely rare in Jordan, Morocco, northern Spain, Bosnia and Croatia. It is thought that this group played an important role in spreading agriculture across Europe. Y-DNA:R-S6355 mtDNA:H1m, Sample:VK205 / Orkney_Newark 68/12 Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia Age:Viking 880-1000 CE Location:Varnhem, Skara, Sweden Age:Medieval 11-13 centuries CE Location:Kopparsvik, Gotland, Sweden Y-DNA:I-BY78615 Age:Viking 10-12th centuries CE Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia Forms a new branch downstream of R-BY220332 (U152). mtDNA:W6. Rough estimations based on these numbers imply that, including me . Y-DNA:I-Y22024 Location:Cedynia, Poland It is strongly represented in Europe today although it extends into North Africa and Asia. Y-DNA:R-Y52895 Age:Early Viking 8th century CE mtDNA:H3a1a, Sample:VK244 / Faroe_12 Age:Viking 10-12th centuries CE Y-DNA:I-S8522 Age:Viking 900-1050 CE Age:Viking 10-11th centuries CE Creates a new branch down of I-Y19932 (L22). The influence of Viking-Age migrants to the British Isles is obvious in archaeological and place-names evidence, but their demographic impact has been unclear. New path = I-FGC22035>I-FGC22026 The mtDNA haplogroup came back as T2b, which is common in England, Iceland, and . Age:Viking 9th century CE Y-DNA:I-S20602 mtDNA:U5a1b3a, Sample:VK338 / Denmark_Bogovej Grav BV New branch = I-FT273387 Age:Early Viking 8th century CE FTDNA Comment:Shares 1 SNP with a man from Denmark. New branch R-BY166438 [13] It is unknown whether or not this is specific to this subclaude of haplogroup T or is a risk factor shared by all of haplogroup T. With a statistically significant difference found in such a small sample, it may be advisable for those of known haplogroup T maternal ancestry to be aware of this and have their physician check for evidence of this condition when having a routine exam at an early age. Age:Viking 8-9th centuries CE mtDNA:H3h, Sample:VK410 / Russia_Ladoga_5680-15 Y-DNA:J-Z8424 Y-DNA:R-BY125166 Age:Early Viking 8th century CE Age:Late Norse 1360 CE Location:Kopparsvik, Gotland, Sweden If your haplogroup isnt showing, you could be downstream of the Viking haplogroup, so youll need to use the Y DNA Block Tree (for Big Y testers) or. Location:Bogvej, Langeland, Denmark Age:Viking 880-1000 CE mtDNA:K1a-T195C! Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia Haplogroup I2a1b (M423) I2a1b (M423, L178) was known as I1b until 2007, and I2a2 from 2008 to 2010. Age:Viking 10-11th centuries CE How About You Are You Related to a Viking? Location:Church2, Faroes Location:149, Eastern Settlement, Greenland mtDNA:U2e2a, Sample:VK532 / Kragehave Odetofter XL718 Members of the H1 haplogroup share a common matrilineal (direct maternal) ancestor, who lived around 9,900 years ago or possibly earlier, most likely in southwest Europe. Location:Ljungbacka, Malmo, Sweden Y-DNA:R-L23 Age:Viking 10-12th centuries CE Derived for 1 ancestral for 6. Location:Ribe, Jutland, Denmark Age:Viking 900-1050 CE Particular haplogroups are associated with well-known ancestral groups such as the Vikings, Aboriginal Australians, and the Celts. mtDNA:T2, Sample:VK282 / Denmark_Stengade I, LMR c195 Age:Viking 900-1050 CE The second way of establishing Viking connections through genetic genealogy was by taking Y-DNA tests which revealed a haplogroup associated with "Vikings" or Scandinavian populations. Age:Early Viking 8th century CE Sample:VK143 / UK_Oxford_#7 Y-DNA:I-Z73 Y-DNA:I-FT8660 Age:Viking 10-12th centuries CE Age:Viking 6-10th centuries CE Y-DNA:N-Y21546 Age:Viking 880-1000 CE On average, 4% of the population shares your maternal haplogroup. Location:San_Lorenzo, Foggia, Italy Age:Viking 11th century It is almost non-existent outside of Europe, suggesting that it arose in Europe. New ancient path = I-Y6908>I-FT273257>I-FT347811 Age:Viking 10-12th centuries CE Forms a new branch down of I-BY158446. mtDNA:H3, Sample:VK210 / Poland_Krakw-Zakrzwek gr. Age:Viking 850-900 CE Y-DNA:I-S18218 Y-DNA:R-CTS4179 Age:Viking 850-900 CE Yesterday, in the journal Nature, the article Population genomics of the Viking world, was published by Margaryan, et al, a culmination of 6 years of work. Age:Viking 10-12th centuries CE FTDNA Comment:Shares 3 mutations with a man from Sweden. FTDNA Comment:Speculative placement U106+, but U106 (C>T) in ancient samples can be misleading. mtDNA:K1a4a1a2b, Sample:VK404 / Sweden_Skara 277 08-06-2013, 01:11 AM #2 DLRowe77 Junior Member Posts 1 Sex Y-DNA:R-L513 Y-DNA:R-M269 Age:Viking 10-12th centuries CE Y-DNA:R-PH3519 mtDNA:I1a1e, Sample:VK173 / UK_Oxford_#17 Y-DNA:I-Y18232 Age:Early Viking 8th century CE mtDNA:H1e2a, Sample:VK352 / Oland_1012 Y-DNA:R-YP256 Y-DNA:T-BY215080 Mitochondrial DNA haplogroups have not been recalculated, but you just might see them in the Million Mito Project. Age:Viking 847 65 CE mtDNA:H1c, Sample:VK159 / Russia_Pskov_7283-20 Y-DNA:I-DF29 Age:Viking 9-11th centuries CE Sample:VK275 / Denmark_Kaargarden 217 Location:Hedmark, Nor_South, Norway Rule of thumb is that SNP generations are 80-100 years each. FTDNA Comment:Shares 8 SNPs with an American man. mtDNA:X2b-T226C, Sample:VK411 / Denmark_Galgedil TT Y-DNA:I-FGC15560 Age:Viking 11th century Location:Oland, Sweden SNP Tracker Map for mtDNA Haplotype T1a1 The T1a1 mutation in southern Turkey is dated at 9,600 year BP. Age:Early Viking 8th century CE mtDNA:U5b1-T16189C!-T16192C! Age:Viking 10th century CE Sample:VK151 / UK_Oxford_#15 mtDNA:U5a1a1, Sample:VK323 / Denmark_Ribe 2 Y-DNA:N-S18447 I have done Full Genome Scan of my MTDNA and am T1a1 I have exact matches whose ancestry is Irish, English, Dutch, German, Swedish, Finnish, Russian and Jewish. Everyone is so excited about this paper, and I want you to be able to see if your Y or mitochondrial DNA, or that of your relatives matches the DNA haplogroups in the paper. Location:Galgedil, Funen, Denmark They share one marker FT381000 (26352237 T>G) mtDNA:K2a5, Sample:VK179 / Greenland F2 Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia Lalueza-Fox et al. The clade is also found everywhere in Central Asia and deep into North Asia, as far east as Mongolia. mtDNA:I2, Sample:VK260 / UK_Dorset-3735 mtDNA:J1c2t, Sample:VK345 / Oland_1045 Location:Oland, Sweden Forms a new branch down of I-A5952 (Z140). Y-DNA:R-BY110718 Y-DNA:R-P310 Location:Oland, Sweden Also a half-Ashkenazi half-Sephardi person inherited his Sephardic mother's line from Greece or Turkey and it is T1a1j. Location:Lutsk, Ukraine mtDNA:H1b1-T16362C, Sample:VK399 / Sweden_Skara 276 Y-DNA:I-Y22923 New branch = R-FT22694 FTDNA Comment:VK484 and VK486 both split R-FT103482 (Z283). mtDNA:H17, Sample:VK146 / UK_Oxford_#10 FTDNA Comment:Forms a branch with VK245 down of R-BY202785 (Z287). Y-DNA:R-BY32357 If youve taken the Big Y test, click on the Block Tree on your results page and then look across the top of your results page to see if the haplogroup in question is upstream or a parent of your haplogroup. Forgot your Kit Number or GAP Username? Location:Ladoga, Russia FTDNA Comment:Possibly forms a branch down of I-Y15295. Location:Varnhem, Skara, Sweden Found in Svan population from Caucasus (Georgia) T* 10,4% and T1 4,2%. New branch = R-FT22694 Y-DNA:I-BY3433 The term " Viking " tends to conjure up images of fierce, blonde men who donned horned helmets and sailed the seas in longboats, earning a fearsome reputation through their violent conquests and. This phylogenetic tree of haplogroup I subclades is based on the paper (van Oven 2008) harv error: no target: CITEREFvan_Oven2008 (help) and subsequent published research (Behar 2012b). Forms a branch down of I-BY98617 (L22). [8] Additionally, haplogroup T has been observed among ancient Egyptian mummies excavated at the Abusir el-Meleq archaeological site in Middle Egypt, which date from the Pre-Ptolemaic/late New Kingdom (T1, T2), Ptolemaic (T1, T2), and Roman (undifferentiated T, T1) periods. Sample:VK14 / Russia_Ladoga_5680-12 Y-DNA:I-BY86407 Y-DNA:I-BY67827 mtDNA:U3b, Sample:VK446 / Denmark_Galgedil LS mtDNA:H3a1a, Sample:VK45 / Faroe_18 Age:Viking 10-12th centuries CE Age:Viking 880-1000 CE Geneticists usually state that mitochondrial haplotype T came to the British Isles with the Vikings circa 800 AD. Y-DNA:I-CTS10228 The most important or identifiable haplogroup for Vikings is I1, as well as R1a, R1b, G2, and N. The SNP that defines the I1 haplogroup is M253. 2 possible G>A mutations with a I-Y15295* sample Age:Viking 10-12th centuries CE Nov 12, 2022 - Explore Lisa Burnette Munn's board "Haplogroup T1a1", followed by 406 people on Pinterest. Age:Viking 880-1000 CE Y-DNA:R-Z198 Location:Varnhem, Skara, Sweden Y-DNA:R-YP5718 Age:Early Viking 8th century CE Do a browser search on this article to see if your haplogroup is shown. mtDNA:X2b4, Sample:VK17 / Russia_Ladoga_5680-17 Please include what you were doing when this page came up and the Cloudflare Ray ID found at the bottom of this page. mtDNA:H7a1, Sample:VK225 / Iceland_A108 mtDNA:N1a1a1, Sample:VK234 / Faroe_2 [7], Haplogroup T has also been found among Iberomaurusian specimens dating from the Epipaleolithic at the Afalou prehistoric site in Algeria. mtDNA:T1a5, Sample:VK538 / Italy_Foggia-1249 FTDNA Comment:Splits I-BY61100 (Z2041). Location:Ridgeway_Hill_Mass_Grave_Dorset, Dorset, England, UK mtDNA: J1b1a1a, Sample: VK422 / Norway_Hedmark 4304 Haplogroup T is a human mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) haplogroup. Y-DNA:I-S7660 I match two of the burials (mtdna: J1b1a1a): Sample: VK24 / Faroe_AS34/Panum mtDNA:U4a2, Sample:VK405 / Sweden_Skara 83 Age:Viking 858 68 CE New branch = NBY149019. mtDNA:H16, Sample:VK484 / Estonia_Salme_II-Q Y-DNA:I-BY55382 Y-DNA:R-CTS11962 Y-DNA: R-YP390 mtDNA:H6c, Sample:VK22 / Russia_Ladoga_5680-13 Users in this group may want to share their family trees with each other to find overlaps and merge duplicate profiles in order to join or expand the World Family Tree and discover new . Age:Viking 986 38 CE mtDNA:H15a1, Sample:VK308 / Sweden_Skara 101 mtDNA:J1c3f, Sample:VK519 / Norway_Nordland 4691b Y-DNA:I-Y141089 Age:Early Norse 10-12th centuries CE Y-DNA:I-B293 Anna 027 457 7918 | Landline 09 579 9841 | hudanalys kristianstad mtDNA:U6a1a1, Sample:VK427 / Sweden_Skara 209 23andme states that I-L22 is "extremely rare among 23andme users" (1/110.000), and I'm trying to dig a bit deeper into this. FTDNA Comment:Joins 2 other ancients on this rare branch. mtDNA:H1a, Sample:VK479 / Gotland_Kopparsvik-272 Location:Ribe, Jutland, Denmark My findings/interpretations: I-L22 originated from a guy about 1300 years ago, 23andme says. Kyle, a 53-year-old man from Texas, said that his GAT showed that he "had a Viking haplogroup" (I-M253) and that it confirmed a "Viking lineage" on . Age:Viking 9-11th centuries CE mtDNA:H3g1b, Sample:VK129 / Iceland_ING08 Location:Brondsager_Torsiinre, Sealand, Denmark For example, Doug McDonald maintains a map of the distribution of haplogroups at www.scs.uiuc.edu/~mcdonald/WorldHaplogroupsMaps.pdf. Y-DNA:R-Y47841 mtDNA:H2a1, Sample:VK343 / Oland_1021 Y-DNA:I-Y103013 Mitochondrial DNA haplogroup, which means they are related along their maternal lines. Age:Early Viking 8th century CE 558 Age:Early Viking 8th century CE New path = I-Y130659>I-Y130594>I-Y130747. Location:Ridgeway_Hill_Mass_Grave_Dorset, Dorset, England, UK Location:St_Johns_College_Oxford, Oxford, England, UK mtDNA:U5b1e1, Sample:VK53 / Gotland_Kopparsvik-161/65 Location:Hedmark, Nor_South, Norway Say what??? does this exists? Age:Viking 10-11th centuries CE Location:Kopparsvik, Gotland, Sweden Age:Viking 10th century CE Location:Kurevanikha, Russia Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia Location:Varnhem, Skara, Sweden Sample:VK327 / Denmark_Ribe 6 FTDNA Comment:Shares 1 SNP with a man from Denmark. Location:Oppland, Nor_South, Norway Age:Viking 9-11th centuries CE Y-DNA:I-A20404 Location:Varnhem, Skara, Sweden By looking at the Y DNA SNPs of the tester, and the Y DNA SNPs of the ancient sample, I can see that the intersecting SNP is DF29, roughly 52 SNP generations in the past. FTDNA Comment:Shares 10 SNPs with a man with unknown origins (American) downstream of R-BY1701. mtDNA:U3b1b, Sample:VK579 / Oland 1099 1785/67 35 Y-DNA:I-Z2040 Based on their DNA, the brothers probably came from Sweden. It is believed to have originated around 25,100 years ago in the Near East. Y-DNA:N-BY21973 Performance & security by Cloudflare. Y-DNA:I-FGC35755 Within subhaplogroup T2e, a very rare motif is identified among Sephardic Jews of Turkey and Bulgaria and suspected conversos from the New World (Bedford 2012). FTDNA Comment:Splits R-Z27210 (U106). mtDNA:U5a1g1, Sample:VK29 / Sweden_Skara 17 mtDNA:H1c3, Sample:VK156 / Poland_Bodzia B4 Y-DNA:I-Y19934 Age:Viking 10th century CE New path = R-FT148796>R-FT148754 Y-DNA:I-FGC43065 mtDNA:K1a4, Sample:VK317 / Denmark_Kaargarden Grav BF99 mtDNA:T2b21, Sample:VK184 / Greenland F7 Y-DNA:I-BY61100 Location:Frojel, Gotland, Sweden FTDNA Comment:Splits I2-FT12648, derived for 5, ancestral for 7. Go to your Y or mitochondrial DNA results and find your haplogroup. Location:Ladby, Funen, Denmark Y-DNA:E-CTS5856 mtDNA:HV6, Sample:VK297 / Denmark_Hundstrup Mose sk 2 You can email the site owner to let them know you were blocked. mtDNA:H10-x, Sample:VK117 / Norway_Trondheim_SK328 Age:Early modern 16-17th centuries CE Location:Ladoga, Russia Y-DNA:I-Z73 Age:Viking 9-11th centuries CE mtDNA:HV9b, Sample:VK57 / Gotland_Frojel-03601 mtDNA:U5a2a1b, Sample:VK18 / Russia_Ladoga_5680-3 mtDNA:H2a2a1, Sample:VK494 / Poland_Sandomierz 1/13 Forms a new branch down of R-YP5161 (L448). New branch = R-BY166432 Well, to simplify, according to the International Society of Genetic Genealogy, a haplogroup is a genetic population group of people who share a common ancestor on either their paternal or maternal line. mtDNA Haplogroup T1a Phylotree History Phylotree.org is the maternal (mtDNA) tree of humanity. Location:Varnhem, Skara, Sweden Y-DNA:R-FT381000 FTDNA Comment:Splits the R-BY11762 branch, positive for 5 variants ancestral for ~14, new path = R-A8041>R-BY11764>BY11762 New branches = I-Y16449>I-BY72774>I-FT382000 mtDNA:J1c2t, Sample:VK397 / Sweden_Skara 237 Location:Nordland, Nor_North, Norway Y-DNA:N-S23232 Age:Viking 10-11th centuries CE Y-DNA:R-FGC10249 mtDNA:H6a1a, Sample:VK492 / Estonia_Salme_II-B Age:Viking 9th century CE Location:Galgedil, Funen, Denmark FTDNA Comment:Splits R-BY16590 (L47). In Britain, haplogroup I1-M253 et al is often used as a marker for "invaders," Viking or Anglo-Saxon. Theres history waiting to be revealed. mtDNA:K2a3, Sample:VK394 / Norway_Hedmark 4460 Y-DNA:R-FGC52679 mtDNA:U3a1, Sample:VK426 / Sweden_Skara 216 The observation of haplogroup I in the present study (<2% in modern Scandinavians) supports our previous findings of a pronounced frequency of this haplogroup in Viking and Iron Age Danes. Age:Viking 850-900 CE Location:Alken_Enge, Jutland, Denmark Age:Viking 900-1050 CE mtDNA:H1a1, Sample:VK469 / Gotland_Kopparsvik-260 mtDNA:H2a1, Sample:VK438 / Gotland_Frojel-04498 Back to Homepage. Age:Viking 10th century CE New branch = I-FT49567 Age:Viking 10th century CE Age:Viking 10th century CE Y-DNA:R-YP4963 Each build is a major update to the tree. Age:Viking 880-1000 CE mtDNA:H1-C16239T, Sample:VK175 / UK_Oxford_#19 mtDNA:J1c3e1, Sample:VK147 / UK_Oxford_#11 Y-DNA:I-Y4738 Y-DNA:R-M269 mtDNA:J1c3f, Sample:VK110 / Iceland_115S Location:St_Johns_College_Oxford, Oxford, England, UK Y-DNA:G-Z1817 mtDNA:K2b1a1, Sample:VK515 / Norway_Nordland 4512 Y-DNA:R-CTS11962 mtDNA:H4a1a1a1a1, Sample:VK204 / Orkney_Newark for Brothwell Location:Balladoole, IsleOfMan Y-DNA:N-Y5005 Age:Early Viking 8th century CE His mtDNA haplogroup is K1a9. Derived for 4, ancestral for 1. Location:Bakkendrup, Sealand, Denmark Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia Location:Varnhem, Skara, Sweden Location:Ridgeway_Hill_Mass_Grave_Dorset, Dorset, England, UK Daily Updates Here! Sample:VK326 / Denmark_Ribe 5 The other subclades are L41.2 (very rare) and L161.1 (found mostly in Germany and the British Isles). Y-DNA:R-S2886 Age:Viking 10-12th centuries CE Age:Viking 900-1050 CE Y-DNA:R-L151 Location:Ribe, Jutland, Denmark Age:Viking 10th century CE Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia Y-DNA:R-FT381000 Age:Viking 10-12th centuries CE Y-DNA:I-M253 Y-DNA:N-Y4706 Location:Oland, Sweden Y-DNA:R-CTS11962 mtDNA:H7b, Sample:VK463 / Gotland_Frojel-019A89 Age:Viking 1053 60 CE Location:Hofstadir, Iceland New branch = R-FT264183. The Danish Viking . Y-DNA:I-FGC22026 Location:Kaagrden, Langeland, Denmark FTDNA Comment:Possible E-Y4972 (Shares 1 G>A mutation with a E-Y4972* sample) Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia The action you just performed triggered the security solution. Sample:VK50 / Gotland_Kopparsvik-53.64 Y-DNA:R-BY2848 Y-DNA:I-FT13004 Age:Iron Age 4th century CE Location:Nordland, Nor_North, Norway This website is using a security service to protect itself from online attacks. New branch = I-Y79817 Y-DNA:R-M459 Location:Sor-Trondelag, Nor_Mid, Norway I was surprised to find a sister-branch to my own mitochondrial J1c2f. FTDNA Comment:Splits I-Y130594 (Z59). mtDNA:U5b1b1-T16192C! mtDNA:H1-C16239T. mtDNA:H1b1, Sample:VK20 / Russia_Ladoga_5680-1 FTDNA Comment:Shares 1 SNP with a man from Romania. Y-DNA:R-S3201 The clade-bearing individuals were inhumed at the Tenerife site, with one specimen found to belong to the T2c1d2 subclade (1/7; 14%). Y-DNA:R-Z2109 Location:St_Johns_College_Oxford, Oxford, England, UK Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia Location:Hvalba, Faroes Location:Hringsdalur, Iceland Location:Varnhem, Skara, Sweden Location:Hofstadir, Iceland Y-DNA:I-L801 Age:Viking 10-11th centuries CE Y-DNA:R-BY58559 Age:Viking 9-11th centuries CE Location:Ridgeway_Hill_Mass_Grave_Dorset, Dorset, England, UK Age:Viking 10th century CE If the haplogroup you are seeking is NOT shown in your direct upstream branches, you can type the name of the haplogroup into the search box. Y-DNA:R-YP4342 FTDNA Comment:Said to be brother of VK497 at I-BY86407 which is compatible with this placement, although no further Y-SNP evidence exists due to low coverage Y-DNA:R-BY166438 mtDNA:HV6, Sample:VK547 / Norway_Nordland 4727 It is maintained by Dr. Mannis Van Oven. The largest single group are probably Jewish, then Finnish. [1] Some non-basal T clades are also commonly found among the Niger-Congo-speaking Serer due to diffusion from the Maghreb, likely with the spread of Islam.[12]. Y-DNA:R-A151 Forms a new branch down of I-FT3562 (P109). FTDNA Comment:CTS2208+, BY47171-, CTS7676-, Y20288-, BY69785-, FT253975+ Age:Viking 10th century CE Y-DNA:R-YP1026 Y-DNA:R-BY18970 A haplogroup is a group of similar haplotypes that share a common ancestor. Age:Viking 10-12th centuries CE Location:St_Johns_College_Oxford, Oxford, England, UK (2004) also found several T and T1 sequences in ancient burials, including Kurgans, in the Kazakh steppe between the 14th-10th centuries BC, as well as later into the 1st millennia BC. Y-DNA:R-BY67003 Age:Viking 10th century CE mtDNA:H82, Sample:VK178 / UK_Oxford_#22 Age:Viking 900-1050 CE New branch = N-FT381631 Age:Viking 9-11th centuries CE Age:Early Viking 8th century CE Y-DNA:R-BY97519 Location:St_Johns_College_Oxford, Oxford, England, UK Location:Kopparsvik, Gotland, Sweden Age:Early modern 16-17th centuries CE Age:Viking 880-1000 CE Derived for 5 ancestral for 3. Y-DNA:R-S6752 Y-DNA:R-P312 mtDNA:U8a2, Sample:VK367 / Denmark_Bogovej D mtDNA:H1b5, Sample:VK493 / Estonia_Salme_II- Age:Viking 9-11th centuries CE Location:Bodzia, Poland Derived for 6 ancestral for 3. Y-DNA:R-M269 mtDNA:H52, Sample:VK262 / UK_Dorset-3739 T1a1 DNA haplogroup mtDNA J1c2 and several subclades or branches were found in Viking burials. Location:Ladoga, Russia Y-DNA:R-Y13833 435 FTDNA Comment:Shares 3 SNPs with a man from Sweden. Age:Viking 10-11th centuries CE Location:Church2, Faroes This article is about the human mtDNA Haplogroup T. For the unrelated human Y-Chromosome Haplogroup T-M184, see, harv error: no target: CITEREFBermisheva2002 (, harv error: no target: CITEREFKivisild_and_Metspalu2003 (, harv error: no target: CITEREFvan_Oven2008 (, harv error: no target: CITEREFSanger2007 (, harvnb error: no target: CITEREFChinnery2007 (, harvnb error: no target: CITEREFGonzlez2012 (, harv error: no target: CITEREFMishmar2002 (, harv error: no target: CITEREFRuiz-Pesini2000 (, harv error: no target: CITEREFIvanov1996 (, human mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) haplogroups, "Genetic Heterogeneity in Algerian Human Populations", "Out of Arabiathe settlement of island Soqotra as revealed by mitochondrial and Y chromosome genetic diversity", "Mitochondrial DNA Signals of Late Glacial Recolonization of Europe from Near Eastern Refugia", http://haplogroup.org/sources/mitochondrial-dna-signals-of-late-glacial-recolonization-of-europe-from-near-eastern-refugia/, "Direct evidence for positive selection of skin, hair, and eye pigmentation in Europeans during the last 5,000 y", "Ancient Egyptian mummy genomes suggest an increase of Sub-Saharan African ancestry in post-Roman periods", "Genomic Analyses of Pre-European Conquest Human Remains from the Canary Islands Reveal Close Affinity to Modern North Africans", "Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy - Medical Encyclopedia", "mtDNA Haplogroup T Phylogeny Based on Full Mitochondrial Sequences", "Mitochondrial DNA structure in the Arabian Peninsula", "The population history of the Croatian linguistic minority of Molise (southern Italy): A maternal view", "Sephardic signature in haplogroup T mitochondrial DNA", "Counting the founders: The matrilineal genetic ancestry of the Jewish Diaspora", "A "Copernican" Reassessment of the Human Mitochondrial DNA Tree from its Root", "Mitochondrial DNA haplogroups and type 2 diabetes: A study of 897 cases and 1010 controls", "Mystery Solved: The Identification of the Two Missing Romanov Children Using DNA Analysis", "Phylogeographic analysis of mitochondrial DNA in northern Asian populations", "MtDNA polymorphisms in five French groups: Importance of regional sampling", "The Arabian Cradle: Mitochondrial Relicts of the First Steps along the Southern Route out of Africa", "Lineage-specific selection in human mtDNA: Lack of polymorphisms in a segment of MTND5 gene in haplogroup J", "Disruptive mitochondrial DNA mutations in complex I subunits are markers of oncocytic phenotype in thyroid tumors", "Whole-mtDNA Genome Sequence Analysis of Ancient African Lineages", "Genetics, Environment, and Diabetes-Related End-Stage Renal Disease in the Canary Islands", "Genetic Patterns of Y-chromosome and Mitochondrial DNA Variation, with Implications to the Peopling of the Sudan", "mtDNA and the Islands of the North Atlantic: Estimating the Proportions of Norse and Gaelic Ancestry", "Genetic Diversity among Ancient Nordic Populations", "Mitochondrial DNA sequence heteroplasmy in the Grand Duke of Russia Georgij Romanov establishes the authenticity of the remains of Tsar Nicholas II", "Ethiopian mitochondrial DNA heritage: Tracking gene flow across and around the gate of tears", "African Y chromosome and mtDNA divergence provides insight into the history of click languages", "MtDNA analysis of Nile River Valley populations: A genetic corridor or a barrier to migration?

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