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