Y-DNA:I-FGC15543 mtDNA:H1a1, Sample:VK480 / Estonia_Salme_II-E Age:Viking 10th century CE Age:Viking 858 68 CE mtDNA:R0a2b, Sample:VK306 / Sweden_Skara 33 They hypothesise that T1a1, T2a1b, T2b, T2e and T2f1 entered Europe from Anatolia in the Late Glacial period, while T2b and T2e followed in the immediate postglacial period from 11,000 years ago. mtDNA:U5a2a1b, Sample:VK18 / Russia_Ladoga_5680-3 mtDNA:V, Sample:VK541 / Ukraine_Lutsk Y-DNA:R-S658 Y-DNA:R-BY92608 Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia Location:Hundstrup_Mose, Sealand, Denmark mtDNA:H1c21, Sample:VK408 / Russia_Ladoga_5757-18 Location:Bdkergarden, Langeland, Denmark Location:Ladby, Funen, Denmark I don't know why they would have shown in your list in the past, unless they have since opted out of matching. The two of them have very different distributions, which are diametrically opposed in most regions. Y-DNA:R-FGC17230 Location:San_Lorenzo, Foggia, Italy Age:Viking 880-1000 CE Age:Viking 850-900 CE Age:Early Viking 660-780 CE Y-DNA:R-YP256 mtDNA:N1a1a1a2. Location:Kopparsvik, Gotland, Sweden Link to the locations to see the locations of the excavation sites, and the haplogroups for the tree locations. Age:Viking 10-12th centuries CE Subdividing Y-chromosome haplogroup R1a1 reveals Norse Viking - PubMed Posted on January 7, 2018. Location:Varnhem, Skara, Sweden Full article: I am a Viking! DNA, popular culture and the construction Location:Gnezdovo, Russia [2], Wilde et al. I will update the haplogroup information daily as more becomes available. FTDNA Comment:Links up with PGA3 (Personal Genome Project Austria) and FTDNA customer from Denmark. Location:Ingiridarstadir, Iceland mtDNA:H6a1a, Sample:VK149 / UK_Oxford_#13 Age:Early Viking 8th century CE Y-DNA:I-FT115400 Age:Viking 10-11th centuries CE Location:Brse, Sealand, Denmark Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia Y-DNA:N-Y21546 Sweeping DNA Survey Highlights Vikings' Surprising Genetic Diversity Location:Kaagrden, Langeland, Denmark Y-DNA:R-BY135243 Y-DNA:I-P109 Age:Early Viking 8th century CE Subdividing Y-chromosome haplogroup R1a1 reveals Norse Viking dispersal lineages in Britain Eur J Hum Genet. 1, sk 3 [7], Haplogroup T has also been found among Iberomaurusian specimens dating from the Epipaleolithic at the Afalou prehistoric site in Algeria. Age:Viking 850-900 CE Age:Early Viking 8th century CE Location:029a, Eastern Settlement, Greenland Y-DNA:R-FGC17429 Age:Viking 10th century CE FTDNA Comment:VK484 and VK486 both split R-FT103482 (Z283). Age:Viking 10-13th centuries CE mtDNA:H10-x, Sample:VK117 / Norway_Trondheim_SK328 The Cheek/Chick DNA Project - Haplogroups Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia welliott FTDNA Customer Join Date: Aug 2017 Location:Ship_Street_Great, Dublin, Ireland Age:Early Norse 10-12th centuries CE Y-DNA:T-BY215080 New path = R-BY18973>R-BY18970 FTDNA Comment:Said to be brother of VK497 at I-BY86407 which is compatible with this placement, although no further Y-SNP evidence exists due to low coverage Location:Kopparsvik, Gotland, Sweden The largest single group are probably Jewish, then Finnish. mtDNA:K1a3a, Sample:VK183 / Greenland F6 Age:Viking 10-12th centuries CE Last edited by GogMagog; 05-16-2015 at 08:52 AM . Location:Varnhem, Skara, Sweden Location:St_Johns_College_Oxford, Oxford, England, UK Age:Early Viking Late Germanic Iron Age/early Viking Age:Viking 10th century CE New branch = I-Y98280 Found in Svan population from Caucasus (Georgia) T* 10,4% and T1 4,2%. New study reignites debate over Viking settlements in - ScienceNordic Y-DNA:I-FGC22026 mtDNA:H17a2, Sample:VK488 / Estonia_Salme_II-H If the haplogroup you are seeking is NOT shown in your direct upstream branches, you can type the name of the haplogroup into the search box. Its age is between 9,900 and 19,500 years (Behar et al., 2012b). Y-DNA:R-BY125166 Y-DNA:R-A151 Y-DNA:I-M253 Haplogroup T is composed of two main branches T1 and T2. mtDNA Haplogroup T mtFULL - for updated haplogroups please join T1 and T2 projects - mtDNA Test Results for Members . Derived for 1, ancestral for 7. New branch = R-FT31867 Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia About 33% of Norwegians fall under the I-M253 haplogroup. One ancient individual carried the T2b subclade (1/9; 11%). Location:Ridgeway_Hill_Mass_Grave_Dorset, Dorset, England, UK Age:Viking 10-11th centuries CE Y-DNA:N-Y21546 mtDNA:K1a10, Sample:VK406 / Sweden_Skara 203 Age:Viking 900-1050 CE 2020 Nov 2. doi: 10.1038/s41431-020-00747-z. Location:Hofstadir, Iceland Y-DNA:I-S7642 Location:Galgedil, Funen, Denmark Forms a new branch downstream of I-Y37415 (P109). Sample:VK190 / Greenland late-0996 does this exists? Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia Age:Early modern 16-17th centuries CE Y-DNA:I-BY3433 Location:Frojel, Gotland, Sweden Y-DNA:R-YP4345 Location:Gl._Lejre, Sealand, Denmark 2 possible G>A mutations with a I-Y15295* sample mtDNA:U5b1b1-T16192C! mtDNA:T2b4-T152C! mtDNA:U5b2b5, Sample:VK444 / Oland_1059 [1] It is also distributed among the Soqotri (1.2%). Y-DNA:R-L21 Age:Viking 900-1050 CE Location:Bogvej, Langeland, Denmark Age:Early modern 16-17th centuries CE Location:Hofstadir, Iceland [11], In Africa, haplogroup T is primarily found among Afro-Asiatic-speaking populations, including the basal T* clade. Age:Viking 10th century CE Y-DNA:I-M253 mtDNA:H, Sample:VK279 / Denmark_Galgedil AXE Derived 11 ancestral for 6. Age:Viking 11th century Y-DNA:I-FGC43065 mtDNA:H8c, Sample:VK461 / Gotland_Frojel-025A89 Age:Medieval 11-13 centuries CE mtDNA:K1a4a1b, Sample:VK529 / Norway_Nordland 642 New path = R-Y13816>R-Y13833 Y-DNA:I-BY78615 Age:Viking 9-11th centuries CE New branch = N-BY160234 The other subclades are L41.2 (very rare) and L161.1 (found mostly in Germany and the British Isles). Y-DNA:R-BY110718 Age:Viking 10th century CE Forms a new branch down of Y6908 (Z140). FTDNA Comment:Speculative placement U106+, but U106 (C>T) in ancient samples can be misleading. Age:Viking 7-9th centuries CE Location:Kurevanikha, Russia mtDNA:H7, Sample:VK542 / Ukraine_Chernigov Y-DNA:R-BY166438 Click to reveal Age:Viking 9th century CE Age:Iron Age 100 CE Location:Oland, Sweden This does NOT increase the price you pay but helps me to keep the lights on and this informational blog free for everyone. Y-DNA:R-P310 Y-DNA:R-M198 This includes a great number of European nobles, including George I of Great Britain and Frederick William I of Prussia (through the Electress Sophia of Hanover), Charles I of England, George III of the United Kingdom, George V of the United Kingdom, Charles X Gustav of Sweden, Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden, Maurice of Nassau, Prince of Orange, Olav V of Norway, and George I of Greece. It is almost non-existent outside of Europe, suggesting that it arose in Europe. New branch = I-Y103013 Sample:VK326 / Denmark_Ribe 5 Y-DNA:R-M269 Y-DNA:I-M253 New path = R-FT104609>R-FT103482 Location:Varnhem, Skara, Sweden Y-DNA:R-CTS4179 This website is using a security service to protect itself from online attacks. Y-DNA:R-S2857 Age:Iron Age 200-400 CE Y-DNA:R-YP617 Y-DNA:I-CTS8407 Y-DNA:I-Y98280 New branch = R-FT22694 FTDNA Comment:CTS2208+, BY47171-, CTS7676-, Y20288-, BY69785-, FT253975+ Location:Telemark, Nor_South, Norway Y-DNA:I-Y20861 New path = I-FGC15543>I-FGC15561 Y-DNA:I-Z171 mtDNA:J2b1a, Sample:VK379 / Oland_1077 Age:Viking 9-11th centuries CE FTDNA Comment:Shares 1 SNP with a man from England. [3][4] It is also common among modern day Iranians. Age:Viking 10th century CE New branch = I-BY198083 Y-DNA:I-M253 435 Age:Viking 10-11th centuries CE mtDNA:H1-C16239T, Sample:VK401 / Sweden_Skara 229 Age:Viking 900-1050 CE New branch = I-Y79817 In Britain, haplogroup I1-M253 et al is often used as a marker for "invaders," Viking or Anglo-Saxon. Y-DNA:R-Y75899 Mitochondrial DNA haplogroups have not been recalculated, but you just might see them in the Million Mito Project. Members of the H1 haplogroup share a common matrilineal (direct maternal) ancestor, who lived around 9,900 years ago or possibly earlier, most likely in southwest Europe. Do a browser search on this article to see if your haplogroup is shown. Age:Viking 10th century CE mtDNA:U4a2a, Sample:VK487 / Estonia_Salme_II-A Certain medical studies had shown mitochondrial Haplogroup T to be associated with reduced sperm motility in males, although these results have been challenged (Mishmar 2002) harv error: no target: CITEREFMishmar2002 (help). New path = J-BY62479>J-BY72550 Y-DNA:R-BY3222 mtDNA:T2b6a, Sample:VK220 / Russia_Ladoga_5680-11 Location:Oppland, Nor_South, Norway Age:Viking 900-1050 CE Location:64, Eastern Settlement, Greenland The most important or identifiable haplogroup for Vikings is I1, as well as R1a, R1b, G2, and N. The SNP that defines the I1 haplogroup is M253. Age:Early Viking 8th century CE Age:Viking 8-16th centuries CE FTDNA Comment:Splits J2-BY62479 (M67). Celebrity DNA | Haplogroup Y-DNA:I-Y22478 Haplogroups - Genealogy Explained - Irish Ancestry Research Y-DNA:R-CTS11962 Y-DNA:R-BY92608 Y-DNA:N-L550 08-06-2013, 01:11 AM #2 DLRowe77 Junior Member Posts 1 Sex mtDNA:H10e, Sample:VK553 / Estonia_Salme_II-M Y-DNA:R-CTS4179 New path = N-BY29005>N-BY21933 Y-DNA:R-CTS1211 Age:Early Viking 8th century CE Vikings, Vikings, Vikings! "eastern" ancestry in the whole Baltic Iron mtDNA:H1m, Sample:VK205 / Orkney_Newark 68/12 Go to your Y or mitochondrial DNA results and find your haplogroup. mtDNA:J1c2t, Sample:VK397 / Sweden_Skara 237 Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia mtDNA:C4a1a-T195C! A haplogroup is a group of similar haplotypes that share a common ancestor. I need to check all of my ancestral lines, both male and female. Sample:VK329 / Denmark_Ribe 8 mtDNA:HV6, Sample:VK297 / Denmark_Hundstrup Mose sk 2 Location:Oland, Sweden , Iceland, and northwest Europe. Y-DNA:I-FT3562 The alternative SNP names are provided as shown on the ISOGG Y-SNP tree . Y-DNA:R-P312 New path = R-Y32857>R-Z27210 Y-DNA:N-CTS2929 Location:Bdkergarden, Langeland, Denmark Y-DNA:R-YP1395 Location:149, Eastern Settlement, Greenland mtDNA:H64, Sample:VK354 / Oland_1026 T is found in approximately 10% of native Europeans. Y-DNA:R-S6752 Age:Early Norse 10-12th centuries CE mtDNA:H16b, Sample:VK524 / Norway_Nordland 3708 mtDNA:J1c2c1, Sample:VK295 / Denmark_Hessum sk 1 Age:Early Viking 8th century CE Y-DNA:R-S6355 Y-DNA:I-Y79817 Age:Viking 10th century CE Y-DNA:I-BY61100 Location:Galgedil, Funen, Denmark Y-DNA:I-Y22923 mtDNA:U4b1b1, Sample:VK166 / UK_Oxford_#4 Location:Church2, Faroes Y-DNA:R-S18894 Y-DNA:R-L23 mtDNA:U5b1b1g1, Sample:VK420 / Norway_Hedmark 2813 Y-DNA:R-Z16372 New path FT13004>FT12648 mtDNA:H2a2b, Sample:VK403 / Sweden_Skara 217 In the FTDNA Learning Center, the page explaining the mtDNA Matches page says this in the FAQ area: Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia By looking at the Y DNA SNPs of the tester, and the Y DNA SNPs of the ancient sample, I can see that the intersecting SNP is DF29, roughly 52 SNP generations in the past. VK151 has no coverage for 2 of these mutations T1a1 DNA haplogroup mtDNA Age:Viking 11th century CE mtDNA:H3a1a, Sample:VK27 / Faroe_10 Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia The second-most common haplogroup in England is Haplogroup I1a, sometimes called the "Viking haplogroup" because it seems to follow routes of Viking conquest in northern Europe. mtDNA:H52, Sample:VK262 / UK_Dorset-3739 New path = I-FGC22035>I-FGC22026 Y-DNA:R-BY202785 New branch = I-FT49567 mtDNA:H1c, Sample:VK159 / Russia_Pskov_7283-20 Y-DNA:J-Z8424 Y-DNA:R-Z18 Location:Ridgeway_Hill_Mass_Grave_Dorset, Dorset, England, UK Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia Age:Viking 9-11th centuries CE Location:Kopparsvik, Gotland, Sweden Location:St_Johns_College_Oxford, Oxford, England, UK Y-DNA:R-BY25698 Age:Early Viking 8th century CE FTDNA Comment:Shares 1 SNP with a man from Denmark. Location:St_Johns_College_Oxford, Oxford, England, UK Location:Bakkendrup, Sealand, Denmark Y-DNA:R-M269 Haplogroup T1a1i is a younger haplogroup, estimated at about 6000 years. Age:Viking 10-13th centuries CE It is believed to have originated around 25,100 years ago in the Near East. FTDNA Comment:Shares 6 SNPs with man from Sweden down of R-BY38950 (R-Y47841) Location:029a, Eastern Settlement, Greenland VK399 possibly groups with these two as well Age:Viking 10-13th centuries CE Age:Early Viking 8th century CE mtDNA:H7, Sample:VK531 / Norway_Troms 5001A Y-DNA:I-FT13004 H1 (Mitochondrial DNA) - geni family tree Age:Viking 900-1050 CE Y-DNA:R-BY115469 Y-DNA:R-S3201 Vikings raiding parties from Scandinavia originated in Norway, Sweden and Denmark. Y-DNA:I-Z73 Origins and history of Haplogroup I2 (Y-DNA) - Academia.edu mtDNA:U2e2a1a, Sample:VK533 / Oland 1076 28364 35 mtDNA:J1b1a1, Sample:VK398 / Sweden_Skara 231 Location:Church2, Faroes Location:Kopparsvik, Gotland, Sweden FTDNA Comment:Shares 5 SNPs with a man from Norway. mtDNA:U2e2a1a1, Sample:VK165 / UK_Oxford_#3 Y-DNA: R-YP390 Location:St_Johns_College_Oxford, Oxford, England, UK Some contemporary notable figures have made their test results public in the course of news programs or documentaries about this topic; they may . Location:Kopparsvik, Gotland, Sweden Age:Iron Age 5-6th centuries CE Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia Location:San_Lorenzo, Foggia, Italy Location:Nordland, Nor_North, Norway mtDNA:H2a2b1, Sample:VK513 / Greenland F8 mtDNA:H1a, Sample:VK483 / Estonia_Salme_II-V Also a half-Ashkenazi half-Sephardi person inherited his Sephardic mother's line from Greece or Turkey and it is T1a1j. mtDNA:V, Sample:VK551 / Estonia_Salme_II-U Age:Viking 10-11th centuries CE Age:Viking 10-11th centuries CE mtDNA:H1b5, Sample:VK466 / Russia_Gnezdovo 77-222 New branch = R-FT383000 Age:Late Norse 1360 CE What are Haplogroups? Living DNA explain | Living DNA Y-DNA:I-S26361 It is maintained by Dr. Mannis Van Oven. Y-DNA:G-M201 mtDNA:T2a1a, Sample:VK482 / Estonia_Salme_II-P Y-DNA:R-BY166065 Please include what you were doing when this page came up and the Cloudflare Ray ID found at the bottom of this page. T1a1 Viking settlement. Location:Varnhem, Skara, Sweden New path = R-BY67003>R-BY45170 Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia Age:Early Viking 8th century CE mtDNA:N1a1a1a2, Sample:VK267 / Sweden_Karda 21 An original phylogenetic approach identified mitochondrial haplogroup Y-DNA:I-Y19934 Location:Hedmark, Nor_South, Norway Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia It is strongly represented in Europe today although it extends into North Africa and Asia. FTDNA Comment:Splits I-Y5612 (P109). Age:Early Viking 8th century CE Age:Viking 6-10th centuries CE A study in 2015 estimated the origin as between 3,470 to 5,070 years ago or between 3,180 to 3,760 years ago, using two different techniques. Age:Viking 8-11th centuries CE . Within subhaplogroup T2e, a very rare motif is identified among Sephardic Jews of Turkey and Bulgaria and suspected conversos from the New World (Bedford 2012). Y-DNA:I-A8462 mtDNA:I1a1e, Sample:VK173 / UK_Oxford_#17 Age:Early Viking 8th century CE Sample:VK215 / Denmark_Gerdrup-B; sk 1 Location:Galgedil, Funen, Denmark Age:Early Viking 8th century CE Location:St_Johns_College_Oxford, Oxford, England, UK Location:Tollemosegrd, Sealand, Denmark Location:Varnhem, Skara, Sweden Age:Viking 6-10th centuries CE Michael and Goran have agreed to share their work as they process these samples providing a rare glimpse real-time into the lab. mtDNA:J1c5. Y-DNA:I-Y22024 Y-DNA:R-Y13833 Location:Galgedil, Funen, Denmark Location:Hessum, Funen, Denmark Location:Ribe, Jutland, Denmark mtDNA:H3a1a, Sample:VK239 / Faroe_5 Forms a new branch down of I-S19291. An original phylogenetic approach identified mitochondrial haplogroup Y-DNA:I-BY86407 Creates a new branch down of I-Y19932 (L22). Age:Viking 10-11th centuries CE Location:Ladoga, Russia Y-DNA:R-Z27210 Age:Early modern 16-17th centuries CE mtDNA:U5a1a1, Sample:VK323 / Denmark_Ribe 2 Y-DNA:R-YP396 Age:Early Viking 8th century CE New path = R-FT148796>R-FT148754 Y-DNA:R-S1491 Location:Galgedil, Funen, Denmark Y-DNA:L-Z5931 One of these burials may actually be the earliest Pict skeleton sequenced to date. Performance & security by Cloudflare. mtDNA:U5a1a, Sample:VK75 / Greenland late-0929 Please click on the links in the articles or to the vendors below if you are purchasing products or DNA testing. Location:Eyrephort, Ireland Location:St_Johns_College_Oxford, Oxford, England, UK mtDNA:W3a1, Sample:VK342 / Oland_1016 mtDNA:H1-C16239T. Location:Islandbridge, Dublin, Ireland mtDNA:H3, Sample:VK210 / Poland_Krakw-Zakrzwek gr. Location:Varnhem, Skara, Sweden Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia Age:Early Viking 8th century CE FTDNA Comment:Shares 3 SNPs with a man from Sweden. mtDNA:U4a2, Sample:VK405 / Sweden_Skara 83 Y-DNA:I-BY106963 Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia Derived for 2, ancestral for 4 (BY18964+?). New branch = R-BY166432 mtDNA:J1c1a, Sample:VK16 / Russia_Ladoga_5680-2 Derived for 9 ancestral for 6. Location:Ladoga, Russia Location:Varnhem, Skara, Sweden mtDNA:H1b, Sample:VK315 / Denmark_Bakkendrup Grav 16 mtDNA:J1c5, Sample:VK389 / Norway_Telemark 3697 Age:Viking 900-1050 CE The following is a list of the Y chromosome DNA haplogroup and mtDNA haplogroup nicknames used by BritainsDNA, ScotlandsDNA, IrelandsDNA, CymruDNAWales and YorkshiresDNA. New branch = R-BY154143 We also identified three potential susceptibility loci, including G13708A/rs28359178, which has demonstrated an inverse association with familial breast cancer risk. 9-21-2020 updates with 240 analyzed only 60 to go! Location:Galgedil, Funen, Denmark Location:Varnhem, Skara, Sweden mtDNA:H3a1, Sample:VK46 / Faroe_19 New branch = R-FT22694 FTDNA Comment:Shares 8 SNPs with an American man. mtDNA:J1c6, Sample:VK60 / Gotland_Frojel-00702 The mtDNA haplogroup came back as T2b, which is common in England, Iceland, and . Age:Early Viking 8th century CE Location:Frojel, Gotland, Sweden ISOGG 2016 Y-DNA Haplogroup I - International Society of Genetic Genealogy The observation of haplogroup I in the present study (<2% in modern Scandinavians) supports our previous findings of a pronounced frequency of this haplogroup in Viking and Iron Age Danes. Y-DNA:R-CTS5533 Location:Hofstadir, Iceland Y-DNA:I-BY73576 Y-DNA:R-L151 Y-DNA:I-Y22923 Age:Viking 10-11th centuries CE Location:St_Johns_College_Oxford, Oxford, England, UK "Extremely Rare" Norwegian with Y Haplogroup I-M253 -> I-L22 It is usually symptom-less and increases the risk of sudden cardiac death, which often happens to those of as early in life as teenagers and may affect those who are active and have no other risk factors.[14]. Location:Church2, Faroes Location:Sandomierz, Poland Age:Viking 900-1050 CE Age:Viking 8-9th centuries CE Y-DNA:R-YP1026 [10] Additionally, haplogroup T has been observed in ancient Guanche fossils excavated in Gran Canaria and Tenerife on the Canary Islands, which have been radiocarbon-dated to between the 7th and 11th centuries CE. mtDNA:H1a1, Sample:VK469 / Gotland_Kopparsvik-260 More conservative placement is at R-P310 Y-DNA:R-M459 Location:Church2, Faroes Y-DNA:R-BY111759 Age:Early Viking 8th century CE Y-DNA:R-BY27605 FTDNA Comment:Shares 1 SNP with a man from Finland. You can email the site owner to let them know you were blocked. Y-DNA:R-YP4963 Y-DNA:R-FT7019 mtDNA:H1a1, Sample:VK414 / Norway_Oppland 1517 Y-DNA:I-FT105192 mtDNA:K2a3a, Sample:VK337 / Oland_1064 Location:Ridgeway_Hill_Mass_Grave_Dorset, Dorset, England, UK Location:Oland, Sweden mtDNA:H1e2a, Sample:VK352 / Oland_1012 FTDNA Comment:Splits the R-BY11762 branch, positive for 5 variants ancestral for ~14, new path = R-A8041>R-BY11764>BY11762 Age:Viking 10-12th centuries CE Age:Viking 880-1000 CE Location:Bakkendrup, Sealand, Denmark Have seen it on Genoplot! FamilyTreeDNA - mtDNA Haplogroup T mtFULL - for updated haplogroups Age:Viking 8-11th centuries CE One Viking boat burial in an Estonian Viking cemetery shows that 4 Viking brothers died and were buried together, ostensibly perishing in the same battle, on the same day. mtDNA:H3g1, Sample:VK386 / Norway_Oppland 5305 Location:Ladoga, Russia FTDNA Comment:Splits I-BY3430. Location:Bogvej, Langeland, Denmark Y-DNA:I-FT49567 Location:Varnhem, Skara, Sweden Age:Viking 10-12th centuries CE mtDNA:T2b, Sample:VK453 / Gotland_Kopparsvik-134 442 Ancient Viking Skeletons Hold DNA Surprises - DNAeXplained Y-DNA:I-FT8660 mtDNA:T2, Sample:VK282 / Denmark_Stengade I, LMR c195 Age:Viking 10-12th centuries CE mtDNA:T2b21, Sample:VK184 / Greenland F7 New branch = R-FT383000 Age:Viking 9th century CE Y-DNA:R-FT148754 R1a1a1 (M417) was the most common haplogroup in the Corded Ware Culture (CWC) and was probably found before in the Pontic-Caspian steppe in cultures such as the Sredny Stog in Ukraine, which in my opinion may not have been originally Indo-European, but eventually became Indo-Eu Continue Reading More answers below Lars Eidevall FTDNA Comment:Shares 10 SNPs with a man with unknown origins (American) downstream of R-BY1701. Age:Viking 10-12th centuries CE Location:Ladoga, Russia Y-DNA:I-BY67827 mtDNA:T2b, Sample:VK23 / Russia_Ladoga_5680-9 For example, Doug McDonald maintains a map of the distribution of haplogroups at www.scs.uiuc.edu/~mcdonald/WorldHaplogroupsMaps.pdf. FTDNA Comment:Splits the I-Z24071 branch, positive only for Y22478. Y-DNA:R-YP1370 [9] Fossils excavated at the Late Neolithic site of Kelif el Boroud in Morocco, which have been dated to around 3,000 BCE, have also been observed to carry the T2 subclade. mtDNA:K1a4a1a2b, Sample:VK404 / Sweden_Skara 277 In human population genetics, mitochondrial (mtDNA) haplogroups define the major lineages of direct maternal (female) lines back to a shared common ancestor in Africa.In human genetics, Haplogroup T is a predominately Eurasian lineage.. Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia mtDNA:W6a, Sample:VK555 / Estonia_Salme_II-I Forms a new branch down of N-FGC14542. Y-DNA:R-BY67003 Y-DNA:R-Y9081 Age:Viking 10-11th centuries CE Say what??? A few tentative medical studies have demonstrated that Haplogroup T may offer some resistance to both Parkinson's disease and Alzheimer's disease. Age:Viking 900-1050 CE mtDNA:H27, Sample:VK382 / Oland_1132 Derived for 7, ancestral for 3. Location:Alken_Enge, Jutland, Denmark Age:Viking 880-1000 CE mtDNA:U5a1g1, Sample:VK29 / Sweden_Skara 17 Age:Viking 858 68 CE Y-DNA:I-BY266 Location:Varnhem, Skara, Sweden Age:Viking 10-12th centuries CE Sample:VK144 / UK_Oxford_#8 Age:Viking 847 65 CE mtDNA:HV-T16311C! mtDNA:K2b1a1, Sample:VK515 / Norway_Nordland 4512 Age:Viking 10th century CE See more ideas about viking history, norse vikings, vikings. This phylogenetic tree of haplogroup I subclades is based on the paper (van Oven 2008) harv error: no target: CITEREFvan_Oven2008 (help) and subsequent published research (Behar 2012b). Y-DNA:I-B293 The haplogroup was previously thought to have originated 15,000 years ago in Iberia, but as of 2010 it was estimated to have originated between 4,000 - 5,000 years ago, in Chalcolithic Europe. Age:Viking 10-11th centuries CE Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia FTDNA Comment:Shares 2 SNPs with a man from Switzerland. Age:Viking 11th century Forms a new branch down of I-A5952 (Z140). mtDNA:H1a3a, Sample:VK123 / Iceland_X104 mtDNA: J1b1a1a, Sample: VK422 / Norway_Hedmark 4304 mtDNA:T2b4b, Sample:VK268 / Sweden_Karda 22 I have done Full Genome Scan of my MTDNA and am T1a1 I have exact matches whose ancestry is Irish, English, Dutch, German, Swedish, Finnish, Russian and Jewish. Just hours later, Science Daily published the article, Worlds largest DNA sequencing of Viking skeletons reveals they werent all Scandinavian. Science magazine published Viking was a job description, not a matter of heredity, massive ancient DNA study shows. National Geographic wrote here, and CNN here. FTDNA Comment:Splits N-BY21933 (L550). Location:Oland, Sweden Y-DNA:I-BY198216 FTDNA Comment:Said to be brother of VK497 at I-BY86407 which is compatible with this placement, although no further Y-SNP evidence exists due to low coverage Forms a new branch down of I-A1472 (Z140). mtDNA:H10e. Location:Oppland, Nor_South, Norway mtDNA:T2b5, Sample:VK139 / Denmark_Galgedil ANG Age:Viking 880-1000 CE Age:Viking 9-11th centuries CE Y-DNA:R-JFS0009 Age:Viking 9-11th centuries CE Ashkenazi T1 mtDNA - FamilyTreeDNA Forums For example, Ive typed I-BY3428. If youve taken the Big Y test, click on the Block Tree on your results page and then look across the top of your results page to see if the haplogroup in question is upstream or a parent of your haplogroup. New study reignites debate over Viking settlements in England. New path = R-FT104609>R-FT103482 mtDNA:J1c9, Sample:VK127 / Iceland_HDR08 Sample:VK274 / Denmark_Kaargarden 391 Derived for 1 ancestral for 6. Location:Kopparsvik, Gotland, Sweden FTDNA Comment:Splits I-Y130594 (Z59). FTDNA Comment:Shares 4 SNPs with a man from England. Location:Ridgeway_Hill_Mass_Grave_Dorset, Dorset, England, UK Location:Varnhem, Skara, Sweden Location:Church2, Faroes Y-DNA:I-Y36105 It is thought that this group played an important role in spreading agriculture across Europe. Location:Rantzausminde, Funen, Denmark mtDNA:J1c4, Sample:VK263 / UK_Dorset-3742 mtDNA:H5c, Sample:VK489 / Estonia_Salme_II- Kosminski's T1a1 haplogroup may have been uncommon in late 19th-century Britain, suggesting a lower percentage match, but that doesn't preclude the possibility that another person with the same maternal haplogroup committed the murder and left biological evidence on the shawl. Elwald has R-U106 & I-M233 & 1-M253 haplogroup roots, for beginnings surname mutations of Anglo Scottish Scandinavian Elwald (Elwold, Ellwood) Ellot Border Ellot-Elliot. Y-DNA:R-FT20255 New branch = I-FT373923 Y-DNA:R-FGC52679 Your IP: mtDNA:X2c2, Sample:VK495 / Estonia_Salme_II-C The second way of establishing Viking connections through genetic genealogy was by taking Y-DNA tests which revealed a haplogroup associated with "Vikings" or Scandinavian populations. mtDNA:H3v-T16093C, Sample:VK232 / Gotland_Kopparsvik-240.65 ", "Unravelling migrations in the steppe: Mitochondrial DNA sequences from ancient central Asians", "Major genomic mitochondrial lineages delineate early human expansions", "The Emerging Tree of West Eurasian mtDNAs: A Synthesis of Control-Region Sequences and RFLPs", "Molecular instability of the mitochondrial haplogroup T sequences at nucleotide positions 16292 and 16296", "Mitochondrial DNA variability in Russians and Ukrainians: Implication to the origin of the Eastern Slavs", "Mitogenomic diversity in Tatars from the Volga-Ural region of Russia", "Evidence of Pre-Roman Tribal Genetic Structure in Basques from Uniparentally Inherited Markers", "Evidence of Authentic DNA from Danish Viking Age Skeletons Untouched by Humans for 1,000 Years", "Most of the extant mtDNA boundaries in south and southwest Asia were likely shaped during the initial settlement of Eurasia by anatomically modern humans", "Natural selection shaped regional mtDNA variation in humans", "Phylogeny of mitochondrial DNA macrohaplogroup N in India, based on complete sequencing: Implications for the peopling of South Asia", "No evidence for an mtDNA role in sperm motility: Data from complete sequencing of asthenozoospermic males", "Drawing the history of the Hutterite population on a genetic landscape: Inference from Y-chromosome and mtDNA genotypes", "Genetic Evidence for Complexity in Ethnic Differentiation and History in East Africa", "Where West Meets East: The Complex mtDNA Landscape of the Southwest and Central Asian Corridor", "Tracing European Founder Lineages in the Near Eastern mtDNA Pool", "Extensive Female-Mediated Gene Flow from Sub-Saharan Africa into Near Eastern Arab Populations", "Genomic identification in the historical case of the Nicholas II royal family", "Human mtDNA Haplogroups Associated with High or Reduced Spermatozoa Motility", "The Druze: A Population Genetic Refugium of the Near East", "The Expansion of mtDNA Haplogroup L3 within and out of Africa", "Mitochondrial DNA and Y-chromosomal stratification in Iran: Relationship between Iran and the Arabian Peninsula", "New genetic evidence supports isolation and drift in the Ladin communities of the South Tyrolean Alps but not an ancient origin in the Middle East", "History of Click-Speaking Populations of Africa Inferred from mtDNA and Y Chromosome Genetic Variation", "Tracing the Phylogeography of Human Populations in Britain Based on 4th-11th Century mtDNA Genotypes", "Classification of European mtDNAs From an Analysis of Three European Populations", "Updated comprehensive phylogenetic tree of global human mitochondrial DNA variation", "Bayesian phylogenetic analysis of Semitic languages identifies an Early Bronze Age origin of Semitic in the Near East", "Geological records of the recent past, a key to the near future world environments", The Genographic Project Public Participation Mitochondrial DNA Database, Genetic Genealogy: A Personal Perspective on Tara, Karelians and Kent, England, Analysis of a Haplogroup T sequence (T5/T2), Phylogenetic Networks for the Human mtDNA Haplogroup T, mtDNA Haplogroup T - Full Genomic Sequence Research Project, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Haplogroup_T_(mtDNA)&oldid=1137138591, Short description is different from Wikidata, Articles with unsourced statements from August 2019, Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License 3.0, G709A, G1888A, A4917G, G8697A, T10463C, G13368A, G14905A, A15607G, G15928A, C16294T, This page was last edited on 3 February 2023, at 00:31.
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