5
BMAC E1b1b1 (4011-3886 ybp)
Scythian E-CTS1273 (E-V13) (4885-4632 ybp; unreliable)
Saka (Scythian) E-Y31991 (2555 ybp)
Eastern Scythian E-M84 (2400 ybp)
The BMAC one is very interesting. They are supposedly the forefathers of all Iranic populations (alongside Andronovo), and it shows that E1b1b was long established in Iranic people. It should be noted that E1b1b has always been a minority in Iranic people, but it’s clear that it’s not a foreign element.
https://www.google.com/maps/d/u/0/vi...2265183618&z=4
E-V13 levels in Iran:
Yazd Zoroastrians 5.9%
Persians and Kurds 5%
Azeris 1.6%
Armenians 0.5-1%
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3399854/
Haplogroup E in Iran is mainly represented by the E1-M123 (3.7%) and E1b-M78 (3.0%) branches. The first is almost entirely characterized by its sub-lineage M34 and reaches its highest incidence (13.6%) in Kurdistan. The second is present as E1b-M78* in Lorestan (9.8%) and E1b-V13 (5.9%) and E1b-V22 (2.9%) in the Zoroastrians of Yazd. It is worth noting the presence of individuals carrying African-specific haplogroups (three belonging to E2-M75 and 17 to E1b-M2) in South-East Iran (Hormozgan and Sistan Baluchestan), whereas the North-East African E1b-M81 is not observed.
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