AliShirwan
Regular Member
- Messages
- 25
- Reaction score
- 4
- Points
- 0
- Ethnic group
- Kurd
- Y-DNA haplogroup
- J1-M267
- mtDNA haplogroup
- T1a2b
How would you know if your T1 is Indo-European?
Is it correct to say there is no one of determining it without knowing my subslcades? Since T1 was found in Andronovo aswell.Once it is discovered in Yamnaya we will know. It could be related to Neolithic Farmer expansion. Probably Late Neolithic.
Andronovo was Bronze Age, right?Is it correct to say there is no one of determining it without knowing my subslcades? Since T1 was found in Andronovo aswell.
How would you know if your T1 is Indo-European?
Oh no problem. Well I thought two Sarmatian remains discovered contained the Y-DNA of J1-M267. Which seems interesting, but curious why it has been seen alot in the Indo-Europeans. In terms of the spread.I just noticed that your mtDNA is T1. I was referring to YDNA. I'm not very familiar with mt T1. Sorry for confusion.
Regarding T1, the only deep clade that could been linked to the Indo-European migrations is T1a1a and its subclade T1a1a1, which Pala et al estimate to be respectively 11,000 years old and 6,800 years old. The latter represents as much as 70% of all T1 lineages and its timeframe fits perfectly with a Bronze Age expansion. Furthermore, T1a1a1 is particularly common in countries with high levels of Y-haplogroup R1a, such as Central and Northeast Europe, but also everywhere in Central Asia and deep into North Asia, as far east as Mongolia.
Shortly after the arrival of early farmers in Armenia and Anatolia (8 kya), agriculture spread to Greece and the Balkans, before rapidly expanding across Europe.47.Furthermore, the classification of Armenian as an old Indo-European language with similarities to the ancestral Proto-Indo-European languages has led to the supposition that agriculturalists migrating from Armenia into Europe were responsible for the establishment of Indo-European languages in the continent.13, 14 However, despite the close linguistic relationship between Armenians and the Indo-European speaking populations of Europe,12 we see little genetic support for this claim. The derived M412 allele, which is found in nearly all haplogroup R1b1b1*-L23 chromosomes in Europe,27 is absent in the sampled Armenians, which also exhibit a scarcity of haplotype sharing with Europeans, suggesting a limited role for Armenians in the introduction of R1b into Europe.