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Originally Posted by
hrvclv
@Eastara
Thank you for your helpful post. I'll have one more question, though. Does it mean that H1-T16189C! is to be considered as a subclade of H1, just like H1a, H1b, etc... or is T16189C! simply an "anomaly" which can occur among various subclades of H, and therefore doesn't constitute a category as such ? For ex., can you have H1a-T16189C!, H1b-T16189C!, H2-16189C!, etc... ? I am afraid I am not proficient enough in genetics to sort it all out by myself...
Yes, this should be considered a subbranch of H1, but why they use the back mutation, and not the normal alphanumeric labelling, I am not sure.
The position 16189 is rather unstable, and the back mutation T16189C and also the transition C16189A happen in many other haplogroups.