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Post by Διαμονδ on Nov 23, 2017 12:09:45 GMT
E-M215, also known as E1b1b and formerly E3b, is a major human Y-chromosome DNA haplogroup. It is a division of the macro-haplogroup E-M96, which is defined by the single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) mutation M215. In other words, it is one of the major patrilineages of humanity, linking from father-to-son back to a common male-line ancestor ("Y-chromosomal Adam"). It is a subject of discussion and study in genetics as well as genetic genealogy, archaeology, and historical linguistics. The E-M215 haplogroup has two ancient branches that contain all the known modern E-M215, E-M35 and E-M281 subclades. Of the latter two subhaplogroups, the only branch that has been confirmed in a native population outside of Ethiopia is E-M35. E-M35 in turn has two known branches, E-V68 and E-Z827, which contain by far the majority of all modern E-M215 subclade bearers. E-V68 and E-V257 have been found at highest frequencies in North Africa and the Horn of Africa, but also at lower percentages in parts of the Middle East and Europe, and in isolated populations of Southern Africa. Distribution of haplogroup E1b1b in Europe, the Near East and North AfricaOriginsRed Sea origins & Neolithic expansionHaplogroup E1b1b (formerly known as E3b) represents the last major direct migration from Africa into Europe. It is believed to have first appeared in the Horn of Africa approximately 26,000 years ago and dispersed to North Africa and the Near East during the late Paleolithic and Mesolithic periods. E-M78 and E-Z827 originated respectively at 20,000 years and 24,000 years. E1b1b lineages are closely linked to the diffusion of Afroasiatic languages. Lazaridis et al. (2016) tested the first ancient DNA samples from the Mesolithic Natufian culture in Israel, possibly the world's oldest sedentary community, and found that the male individuals belonged either to haplogroups CT or E1b1 (including two E1b1b1b2 samples). These are to date the oldest known E1b1b individuals. The same haplogroups show up in Pre-Pottery Neolithic B Jordan, accompanied by new haplogroups (H2 and T). Besides, E1b1b was not found in Neolithic Iran or Anatolia, and only showed up twice among the hundreds of Neolithic European samples that have been tested. This evidence suggests that at the end of the last glaciation 12,000 years ago, E1b1b men were present in the Levant, but not in other parts of the Near East. There is evidence that the Natufians already cultivated cereals like rye before the Neolithic period. Cereal farming may therefore trace its roots (literally) to the E1b1b tribes of the Mesolithic Levant. Nowadays, the highest genetic diversity of haplogroup E1b1b is observed in Northeast Africa, especially in Ethiopia and Somalia, which also have the monopoly of older and rarer branches like M281, V6 or V92. This suggests that E1b1b may indeed have appeared in East Africa, then expanded north until the Levant. Nevertheless, many lineages now found among the Ethiopians and Somalians appear to have come from the Fertile Crescent during the Neolithic period. This includes some E1b1b subclades like V22 (12,000 years old) and V32 (10,000 years old), but also undeniably Near Eastern lineages like T1a-CTS2214 and J1-L136. North African Neolithic cattle herder hypothesis Decker et al (2013) reported that Iberian and Italian cattle possess introgression from African taurine, which could imply that cattle were not just domesticated in West Asia, but also independently in North Africa. If that is the case, E-M78 or E-M123 could have come to southern Europe through North African cattle herders during the Neolithic, although this hypothesis remains purely conjectural. See also : Southern Neolithic route brought Megaliths from the Levant to Western Europe.
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Post by randomserb on Feb 2, 2018 16:21:36 GMT
Btw. Most of Serbian haplogroup E comes from Montenergin Brda, and expansion of these tribes.
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Post by Διαμονδ on Feb 2, 2018 23:25:03 GMT
Serbs have less then 19%. Although maybe few regions probably can rach that number, for the most tested parts it is between 11% and 15%. It seems that Kosovo Albanians does not have as much either. Newer results show increased J and lowered E, from what I saw. Bulgarians only 16% ? Where did tou get this data? It is the most common single haplogroup on Bugaria, reaching over 30% by all researches I saw. Maybe you should add sources for data. Anyway, hello to everyone since I am new here. Thanks for the comments!
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kriptc06
New Member
Posts: 44
Likes: 31
Y-DNA: E-V13
mtDNA: D
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Post by kriptc06 on Feb 9, 2018 0:32:46 GMT
Review E-M78 map, by another user, It is still missing some E-V13 (subclade of m78) in western europe.
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Post by Διαμονδ on Feb 9, 2018 0:38:05 GMT
E-M78 - more African haplo?
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Post by Διαμονδ on Feb 9, 2018 0:44:18 GMT
As far as I know, Hitler was E-V13!
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