Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jan 29, 2018 13:39:40 GMT
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haplogroup_R_(Y-DNA)Haplogroup R or R-M207, is a Y-chromosome DNA haplogroup. It is both numerous and widespread amongst modern populations. Some descendant subclades have been found since pre-history in Europe, Central Asia and South Asia. Others have long been present, at lower levels, in parts of West Asia and Africa. Some authorities have also suggested, more controversially, that R-M207 has long been present among Native Americans in North America – a theory that has not yet been widely accepted. Karafet et al. (2014) and other researchers state that a "rapid diversification ... of K-M526", also known as K2, into K2a and K2b , followed by K2b1 and P (also known as K2b2) "likely occurred in Southeast Asia". This was followed by the relatively rapid "westward expansion" of P1 – the immediate ancestor of both Haplogroups Q and R.[6][7]
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Post by Deleted on Jan 29, 2018 13:42:04 GMT
Origins
Haplogroup P1 (P-M45), the immediate ancestor of Haplogroup R, likely emerged in Southeast Asia.[6] The SNP M207, which defines Haplogroup R, is believed to have arisen during the Upper Paleolithic era, about 27,000 years ago.[2][1] Only one confirmed example of basal R* has been found, in 24,000 year old remains, known as MA1, found at Mal'ta–Buret' culture near Lake Baikal in Siberia.[2] (While a living example of R-M207(xM17,M124) was reported in 2012, it was not tested for the SNP M478; the male concerned – among a sample of 158 ethnic Tajik males from Badakshan, Afghanistan – may therefore belong to R2.) It is possible that neither of the primary branches of R-M207, namely R1 (R-M173) and R2 (R-M479) still exist in their basal, undivergent forms, i.e. R1* and R2*. No confirmed case, either living or dead, has been reported in scientific literature. (Although in the case of R2*, relatively little research has been completed.) Despite the rarity of R* and R1*, the relatively rapid expansion – geographically and numerically – of subclades from R1 in particular, has often been noted: "both R1a and R1b comprise young, star-like expansions" (Karafet 2008). The wide geographical distribution of R1b, in particular, has also been noted. Hallast et al. (2014) mentioned that living examples found in Central Asia included: the "deepest subclade" of R-M269 (R1b1a1a2) – the most numerous branch of R1b in Western Europe, and; the rare subclade R-PH155 (R1b1b) found only in one Bhutanese individual and one Tajik. (While Hallast et al. suggested that R-PH155 was "almost as old as the R1a/R1b split", [8] R-PH155 was later discovered to be a subclade of R-L278 (R1b1) and has been given the phylogenetic name R1b1b.)
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Post by Διαμονδ on Jan 29, 2018 13:58:02 GMT
Lamburk-What do you think is your haplo?
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Post by Deleted on Jan 29, 2018 14:07:16 GMT
R-M269 R1b1a1a2
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Post by Διαμονδ on Jan 29, 2018 14:12:07 GMT
man this is very typical Western European haplo!
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Post by Deleted on Jan 29, 2018 14:21:59 GMT
man this is very typical Western European haplo! I was just kidding.
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Post by Διαμονδ on Jan 29, 2018 14:28:15 GMT
But seriously? You haplo maybe..
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jan 29, 2018 14:37:08 GMT
But seriously? You haplo maybe.. No idea. I am probably the rarest amongst Indians who is interested in this. Also, Indians don't allow anthropology and genetic testing at all.
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Post by Διαμονδ on Jan 30, 2018 10:43:12 GMT
This is a very old haplo!
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