Fixed :D
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How did T1 subgroups get here then? :D
http://i51.tinypic.com/2vt35fk.jpg
Apparently...
Top 10 locations for T1 by highest frequency:
1. Romania - 8.51%
2. Parsis (Pakistan) - 6.80%
3. Bulgaria - 6.38%
4. Portugal (Northern) - 6.38%
5. Azerbaijan - 6.25%
6. Armenia - 5.76%
7. Brahui (SW Pakistan) - 5.30%
8. Mazandarian (N Iran) - 4.8%
9. Macedonia - 4.5%
10. Pathan (NW Pakistan) - 4.5%
D:
uebereuropean and extremely rare H14
I have NO idea! It would certainly be great to find out...but haven't a clue where to start, lol.
J1c1 here
Latest map of mine, after a several people (a Fin, a Pole and an Ukrainian) with a certain mutation got their own subgroup.
The remaining people with the same mtDNA subclade:
http://img807.imageshack.us/img807/7021/mtdna.jpg
The relation of Haplogroup to subclade:
Scandinavia: 8% of customers in my Haplogroup, 10% of these in my subclade (0.8% of all Scandinavian customers)
British Isles: 10% in the Haplogroup, 4% of them in my subclade (0.4% of all British customers)
Western Europe (France, Lower countries, Germany): 9% in my Haplogroup, of wich are 1% my subclade (0.09% of the customers)
Wich means, the massive spots in Germany are caused by the large number of people who tested, rather than real "relative distribution".:rolleyes2:
Spain is in rated "southern Europe" and the statistic doesnt even list the subclade. The main Haplogroup is at 5% there.
But it seems a quiet rare clade anywhere in the world, if looking at the numbers.
Strange.... my grandmother had 7 children and her mother had 10 children. Her grandmother had 9 children. All quiet fertile... why is this lineage driven to extinction? :(
W1e
K1c2, most common area is Ireland. Otzi was another branch of K1. Haplogroup K is actualy a subclade of haplogroup U8. So could have clicked U and K on the poll.
K1c2
http://www.theapricity.com/forum/att...1&d=1312738444http://www.theapricity.com/forum/att...5&d=1312738603
Wow this thread is over 2 years old and I am the first and only V.
I got the first of my results back tonight, and my mtDNA Haplogroup is V. I believe this to be Northern Scandinavian, but I will have to do some more research. :)
Well my little familytreedna HVR2 mtdna V group as finally grown (after about a year) to 4 people. It seems Scotland has entered the picture and as it now stands it is Ireland 3 - Scotland 1. Stay tuned in for more exciting developments.
Lots of Hs here, I guess that makes sense. Mine's H1.
K is still increadable low.
2.94%
Why is that?
Belgium: 13%
Ireland: 11%
Denmark: 10.5%
Austria: 10.5%
Netherland: 10%
Switzerland: 10%
England: 9.5%
Wales: 9.5%
Germany: 9%
Portugal: 7.5%
Iceland: 7.5%
and so on.....
But 2.94% in here? Come on! :P
Mine is H7.
http://english.martinvarsavsky.net/w...Haplogroup.jpg
23andme says that it is found highest amongst Scandinavians and Basques. It is supposedly rare and I've been able to find out a bit about it but not as much as I'd like to :D
Interesting Yes mtDNA H is one of the most common European markers. It's origins are most likely Anatolia or the Caucasus. It spread into Europe during the Ice age. H1 is typical of Iberia as well.
That's the info they give for the H haplogroup as whole, but not for H7 specifically.
H7 frequency map according to Álvarez-Iglesias et al 2009
http://i116.photobucket.com/albums/o...7dispersal.png
Most of the H7 people that I'm sharing with are French, followed by Eastern Europeans.
H7 haplogroup project on Ftdna
http://www.familytreedna.com/public/...7/default.aspx
Well, I associate it more with the Völkerwanderung of the Germanic peoples into Iberia. I'm also of a similar subclade, H7a, which definitely peaks in Western Germany, and the Low countries. However the H7 levels in Iberia are so low - in numerical terms I mean - that we can't make a strong case out of this conjecture.
here is the map of the "H7 Members" project group on FTDNA:
Check for "all members".
The other things are mutation clusters inside of H7
http://www.familytreedna.com/public/...?section=mtmap
I belong to a seemingly rare subclade of H, H4a1. While it appears to be most common in Northern Europe, my great grandmother was an Italian immigrant and all known relatives prior were also Italian.
Just got my results... H1 maternally. No paternal DNA available.
http://i39.tinypic.com/35k3bmf.png
13,000 years ago, not long after the end of the Ice Age. At that time much of Europe was covered by glacial ice sheets that descended southward from Scandinavia and extended across the alpine regions of the Pyrenees and Italian Alps. People who had formerly inhabited continental Europe sought refuge in the warmer climates of southern France, the Iberian and Italian peninsulas.
The H1 mutation likely arose in a woman living on the Iberian peninsula. Even today, almost 25% of the Spanish population carries the H1 haplogroup. With the waning of the Ice Age, some populations grew rapidly and expanded northward from the Iberian refuge. Others turned southward, crossing the Strait of Gibraltar into northern Africa.
Following the Atlantic coast northwards, hunter-gatherers carried H1 into what would become the British Isles. As the ice sheets retreated farther they carried the haplogroup as far as Scandinavia. The H1 haplogroup remains quite high in the present-day populations of Britain and Ireland as well, ranging from levels of 15% to 40%.
About 13% of present-day Europeans trace their maternal ancestry to the H1 haplogroup. Though it is of western European origin, it also reaches significant levels outside Europe, from Morocco and Tunisia to Lebanon and east into Central Asia
I'm a Finnish H1
J1b the highest frequencies occur among the Desert tribemen of Arabia
I have just joined this forum and saw this thread. My mtDNA is T2b. My background is mostly English although I have some Dutch, German and French. There seemed to be very few Ts on this forum. I did see a few. I have read Ts are present in Western England and Ireland.
I am plain H with no subclade.
My mtDNA is C4a1 so I voted for 'other'.
My mtDNA haplogroup is U4. :)
H1c
I am H29 and it's very rare, serious now !