https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikiped...aplogroups.png
https://i.redd.it/j7sndz76drq81.png
Russians
R1a, N, I2a, I1
Printable View
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikiped...aplogroups.png
https://i.redd.it/j7sndz76drq81.png
Russians
R1a, N, I2a, I1
Russians have almost no haplogroup N. It is found only in the sparsely populated north of Russia. The main Russian population is about 10% N1c, almost like Belarusians. In the Orel region, R1a is up to 63%. Vyatichi!
https://i.ibb.co/2hH2zbG/N.jpg
I guess my haplogroup is rare among Turks. I am also not sure whether R1a-Z283 is found higher among Balkan Turks.
I2a, E1b1b, R1a
R1a is very common in my country but surprisingly we don’t have a single R1a and only one R1b in our extended family. Most of my male family members are I2a1 probably because we are Hunter Gathers ;)
R1b is the most common here
Mainly J2, R1b, N, R1a and G2
https://i.ibb.co/tpr8Gsz/382724127-7...52440009-n.jpg
most prevalent haplogroups are J2, J1, L3, in medium quantity are Q1a and G2.. the rest in small numbers are R1a, R1b, R2, L2, D, C, E, I2, T and N
Dalmatian Serbs (Северна Далмација, N 201) https://iiIi.io/HLjO2TJ.png
For Crete
1.J2a
2. I2a and E-V13 and G
3. R1b L23 and R1b U152
4. R1a, J1,J2b,N, T
In my country I’m surrounded by inferior E1b. But for my tribe I’m glad they are mostly of the same clade as mine. Some are J1, J*. But most of them are J2.
R1a +N1c1
From Wikipedia:
I - 27.9% (I2a1= 17.3%, I1=5.6%, Other I2= 5.0%)
R1a - 20.1%
E1b1b -19.6%
J -18.4% (J2b = 8.9% ,J2a=7.3%, J1=2.2%)
R1b - 10.1%
G - 2.2%
N - 0.6%
T - 0.6%
FTDNA
https://i.imgur.com/bdH6L31.jpg
So witch one is correct ftdna or Wikipedia
Samples : 1 100
Source : Mršić et al. (2012)
I2a(xI2a1) - 37.7%
R1a - 22.1%
E1b1b-M35 - 10.6%
R1b - 7.9%
I1 - 5.8%
J2b - 3.7%
G2a - 2.7%
H - 1.8%
J2a1h - 1.2%
J1 - 1.1%
J2a1b - 1%
all others < 1%
In Poland:
R - R1a and R1b
I - I1 and I2
are the most common ones. They together make up to 90% of all, the exact amount depending on the study (for example in one study R1a was 57% and R1b 14,1%, wheres I (total) was 15,7%, making up circa 87% total).
Other, less common ones are N, E, J, G which make up the remaining 10 (or slightly more) percent.
I'm N1a (N-Y17696)
Rare in Hungary, like 1% or smth like that.
It was a pleasant surprise for me, it indicated a paternal migration route over the last 1000 years or so that went from the Baltic area, through Poland, Slovakia and finally Hungary. Interesting if for no other reason then that it was uncommon.
Just took a look on Wiki, found this:
"According to a study by Pamjav, the area of Bodrogköz suggested to be a population isolate found an elevated frequency of Haplogroup N: R1a-M458 (20.4%), I2a1-P37 (19%), R1a-Z280 (14.3%), and E1b-M78 (10.2%). Various R1b-M343 subgroups accounted for 15% of the Bodrogköz population. Haplogroup N1c-Tat covered 6.2% of the lineages, but most of it belonged to the N1c-VL29 subgroup, which is more frequent among Balto-Slavic speaking than Finno-Ugric speaking peoples. Other haplogroups had frequencies of less than 5%.[134]"
Well, Bodrogköz is more or less the area where my paternal line is from. And I am part of the N1c-VL29 subgroup. So, N is not quite as rare (6.2%) when looking at this particular region of Hungary.
In Spain 70%( End 85-90% in Basque country) according dna studies is R1b and 45% iberian branch But in my experience it is lower since the majority who have taken the test either in that forum or in others, there are many people with pre-Indo-European haplogroups such as I2 (especially the Pyrenean area) G and E (in general the European branches or from the middle east) Second most common haplogroup according to genetic studies is J2 maximum 25% in some areas and E maximum 40% in some areas with the same percentage about 10% then I2 about 5% and reaches 15-30% in some areas R1a J1 and T also exist but very little
Only in some areas such as Cadiz and Eivissa does the T reach 10-15%
R1a1, I1b, N3a
N is surely the second or third most common haplogroup among the Russians. Keep in mind that the Volga-Vyatka, Ural and Siberian regions are not represented in those statistics. And Asian Russia is home to 25% or so of the entire population. N must be at 15% in Slavic Russia as a whole (with R1a at ~45% and I2 at ~10%).