Tomenable
Well-known member
- Messages
- 5,991
- Reaction score
- 1,714
- Points
- 113
- Location
- Poland
- Ethnic group
- Polish
- Y-DNA haplogroup
- R1b-L617
- mtDNA haplogroup
- W6a
Check my ethnic breakdown of Y-DNA haplogroups in Europe:
docs.google.com
I assigned haplogroups to ethnic groups in the following way:
Mesolithic: In Western Europe I2a & I2b; in Eastern & Central Europe only I2b.*
South European: G, J2, J1, E, T, H, L, F, R2, R1b-PF7562, R1b-Z2103, R1b-V88, etc.
Celtic-Italic-Beaker: R1b-P312 (except for R1b-L238), R1b-PF7589, R1b-S1194, etc.
Germanic: I1-M253, R1b-U106, R1b-L238, Q and also R1a in Western Europe.
Balto-Slavic: Haplogroups R1a and I2a in Eastern Europe and Central Europe.
Uralic-Baltic: Haplogroup N.
I used data about R1b subclades collected by MitchellSince1893 on Anthrogenica (and his source was the FTDNA Haplotree):
genoplot.com
For several countries he did not publish data about R1b subclades, so I assumed frequenciies like in neighbouring countries:
Iceland - I assumed frequencies of subclades like in Norway
Moldova - I assumed frequencies of subclades like in Romania
North Macedonia - I assumed frequencies of subclades like in Bulgaria
Kosovo - I assumed frequencies of subclades like in Albania
Montenegro - I assumed frequencies of subclades like in Serbia
Croatia - I assumed frequencies of subclades like in Serbia
Bosnia - I assumed frequencies of subclades like in Serbia
Kashubians - I assumed frequencies of subclades like in Poland
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When it comes to overall frequencies of haplogroups, for most countries I used Eupedia:
For some Slavic countries I used frequencies which I collected from various studies here:
docs.google.com
For Sardinians I used the data about haplogroups from the Francalacci et al. 2013 study.
=====
*Actually current designations are I2a1 and I2a2 (instead of I2a and I2b) if I'm not mistaken.
Ethnic breakdown of Y-DNA in Europe
I assigned haplogroups to ethnic groups in the following way:
Mesolithic: In Western Europe I2a & I2b; in Eastern & Central Europe only I2b.*
South European: G, J2, J1, E, T, H, L, F, R2, R1b-PF7562, R1b-Z2103, R1b-V88, etc.
Celtic-Italic-Beaker: R1b-P312 (except for R1b-L238), R1b-PF7589, R1b-S1194, etc.
Germanic: I1-M253, R1b-U106, R1b-L238, Q and also R1a in Western Europe.
Balto-Slavic: Haplogroups R1a and I2a in Eastern Europe and Central Europe.
Uralic-Baltic: Haplogroup N.
I used data about R1b subclades collected by MitchellSince1893 on Anthrogenica (and his source was the FTDNA Haplotree):
Genoplot — DNA Ancestry, Whole-Genome Imputation & qpAdm Formal Statistics
Free DNA ancestry analysis with whole-genome imputation, 500+ admixture calculators, and academic-grade qpAdm and f-statistics — the toolkit behind peer-reviewed paleogenetics research.
For several countries he did not publish data about R1b subclades, so I assumed frequenciies like in neighbouring countries:
Iceland - I assumed frequencies of subclades like in Norway
Moldova - I assumed frequencies of subclades like in Romania
North Macedonia - I assumed frequencies of subclades like in Bulgaria
Kosovo - I assumed frequencies of subclades like in Albania
Montenegro - I assumed frequencies of subclades like in Serbia
Croatia - I assumed frequencies of subclades like in Serbia
Bosnia - I assumed frequencies of subclades like in Serbia
Kashubians - I assumed frequencies of subclades like in Poland
=====
When it comes to overall frequencies of haplogroups, for most countries I used Eupedia:
European Y-DNA haplogroups frequencies by country
Frequency tables showing the percentage for each Y-DNA haplogroup by country and region in Europe, the Middle East and North Africa.
www.eupedia.com
For some Slavic countries I used frequencies which I collected from various studies here:
Y-DNA of Slavs
For Sardinians I used the data about haplogroups from the Francalacci et al. 2013 study.
=====
*Actually current designations are I2a1 and I2a2 (instead of I2a and I2b) if I'm not mistaken.
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