What is your y-haplogroup?

What is your y-haplogroup?

  • E

    Votes: 27 11.3%
  • G

    Votes: 11 4.6%
  • I1

    Votes: 16 6.7%
  • I2

    Votes: 32 13.4%
  • J1

    Votes: 8 3.3%
  • J2

    Votes: 27 11.3%
  • L

    Votes: 4 1.7%
  • N

    Votes: 5 2.1%
  • Q

    Votes: 2 0.8%
  • R1a

    Votes: 23 9.6%
  • R1b

    Votes: 60 25.1%
  • T

    Votes: 10 4.2%
  • Something else (e.g. C, O, R2). Please list in comments.

    Votes: 7 2.9%
  • Non-human haplogroup (e.g. monkey, Andromedan)

    Votes: 1 0.4%
  • I don't know, but I heard there would be pie. Where's my pie?

    Votes: 6 2.5%

  • Total voters
    239
I'm L-Y109374* for now, but will form a new branch on the next yfull update with another Brazilian.
My male line ancestors were of Portuguese descent and most of my matches seem to be of either Iberian or Scandinavian origin. No clue of how I inherited this haplogroup or of how it ended in Portugal.
 
Hi Mick! My ID on YFull.com is a YF06301, please check this. :) Yours ancestors are ItaloCeltic too ?
Hi ! sorry for not replying I probably didn’t check my eupedia messages ! My ID on YFULL is YF106096 in DF1, R-S5668 terminal Hg R-A11132*
 
Some conclusions from this pool (14/11/2024)


1d_1227AD.png


The most common y-dna's in this pool coincide with the most common haplogroups in the image above (from 1200 ad) in Europe + North Africa and as such, in the Western world in general.

y-dna's with more than 10% votes
  • R1b - 25% -->Western Europe and Americans (non-native)
  • I2 - 13,7% --> Southeast Europe - (Balkans/South Slavic)
  • R1a - 11.1% --> Central-East Europe
  • E - 10.2% --> Greece, South Iberia and North Africa
 
Kirgonix,

I2 is not specific of Southeast Europe (Balkans/South Slavic), it has a continental dispersion.
If some branches have a high concentration in Southeast Europe, like I2a1b (M423), others are more comum in central and western Europe, like I2a2a (M223).
 
Kirgonix,

I2 is not specific of Southeast Europe (Balkans/South Slavic), it has a continental dispersion.
If some branches have a high concentration in Southeast Europe, like I2a1b (M423), others are more comum in central and western Europe, like I2a2a (M223).
Thank you for the correction. The areas I included were basically those that have a greater presence in general, but then I end up generalizing and cases like this become incorrect.
 
J2/JM-67

I don't know the further down breakdown. I haven't done the Big-Y test from FtDNA
All I know is it seems to be associated with Bronze age Mycenaeans, Minoans, Anatolians, Phoenicians, and Southern Italy.

Today, excluding modern Caucasians (Ingush highest) it seems to be common among Lebanese, Greeks, and Southern Italians.
It comes as a surprise to me considering my Northwest European ancestry.
On DNAGenics the site gave me the long notation for my Y-Haplogroup.
I intend on doing the Big-Y test this Christmas season to get a fuller breakdown.

1731598770914.png
 
I am happily confirmed R-Z2124.

However I have also rather incompetently and irresponsibility used the FTDNA SNPs on my mere FamilyFinder autosomal transfer to do the almost certainly incorrect, impossible, and foolish thing - Guess my subclade. Which gives me R-FT353700 of Bashkortostan.

I guess maybe ~10% likelihood this is correct
 

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