Both bloodlines now co-exist as one people. In other words it appears that Marsh Arabs autosomal DNA is descended predominantly from the Sumerians BUT based on ydna and mtdna it appears like an Arabian Islamic “Elite” took allot of their local women. Basically, I uploaded my raw AncestryDNA auotosomal data for prediction, and it’s not 100% this is not my haplogroup.Granted, I want to know if my paternal line has an unbroken lineage dating to Sassanian era. That is, my father’s father-father-father… have no Arabs or foreign people to break paternal descent to Sassanian era.Is there any way to determine with absolute certainty I have unbroken lineage to Sassanian era, or is this science simply not at that level yet? We now know that the founding fathers of both the Greek and Roman empires were Edomites. Haplogroup M, as of 2017, is also known as K2b1b. Their ancestors were the Uruk, Ubaid and Halaf people, and the languague they spoke was the Sumerian language. It is located in the South-central Asia region. - Haplogroup R1a1a-M17 is regularly found at frequencies greater than 15% across Iran, contrary to the assertion made by Dr. Wells one decade ago regarding the limited samples he obtained, again from The Eurasian Heartland: A continental perspective on Y-chromosome diversity ; Iranian G2a-P15 Both I* (I M170) and I2* (I P215) are associated with Cro Magnon/Early European Robust humans, and are exceedingly rare among modern populations.I* (M170) is the Paleolithic lineage from which all subclades of Y-DNA I derive. E1b1b is the Y-DNA haplogroup of Edom. Iran is a nation in Asia. Earlier Y-chromosomal haplogroup distribution data on Syriacs from Northern Iraq (n = 7) and Iran (n = 48 and 55) suggested an overall dominance by the R and J haplogroups [35, 39, 45]. (Previously the name Haplogroup S was assigned to K2b1a4.) In fact, it is the most common Haplogroup found in Iran overall and in the above listed study, present in 28% of Iranian Arabs and 25% of the Bakthiari.
They may or may not be shared with any given company or person mentioned either through posts or affiliateships.Some of the links on this site are affiliate links. A. Malyarchuk and M. V. Derenko - Gene Pool Structure of Russian Populations from the European Part of Russia Inferred from the Data on Y Chromosome Haplogroups Distribution // Russian Journal of Genetics, 2008, Vol. A relative paucity of "Indian" haplgroup H (< 10%).
By this theory the Iranians (Iran) should genetically be ralated to the Aryan peoples. The Haplotype frequency table quickly demonstrates that the level of M172, Haplogroup J2 is fairly evenly distributed througout Iran's geography and the population groups studied. )They lived in the Zagros Mountains, where some of the earliest evidence of wine making/production has been discovered.
If we take out the arab imprints for the past 1400 years, what is left in southern Iraq is J2a, T, G and L, in that order of frequency. This is a little bit important to me. It is located in the South-central Asia region.
This haplogroup was found in remains attributed to an elite member of the Hun tribes in Hungary.In conclusion, I shall add that Pre-historic people in northern Caucasus, Southern Caucasus and Zagros Mountains would have adopted farming and exchanged goods and languages for thousands of years. 187–192.Michael F. Hammer, Tatiana M. Karafet, Hwayong Park, Keiichi Omoto, Shinji Harihara, Mark Stoneking and Satoshi Horai, "Dual origins of the Japanese: common ground for hunter-gatherer and farmer Y chromosomes," Ruixia Zhou, Daqun Yang, Hua Zhang, Weiping Yu, Lizhe An, Xilong Wang, Hong Li, Jiujin Xu, and Xiaodong Xie, "Origin and evolution of two Yugur sub-clans in Northwest China: a case study in paternal genetic landscape," Shou et al (2010), Y-chromosome distributions among populations in Northwest China identify significant contribution from Central Asian pastoralists and lesser influence of western Eurasians, Journal of Human Genetics 55, 314-322 (May 2010) | doi:10.1038/jhg.2010.30, Yali Xue, Tatiana Zerjal, Weidong Bao, Suling Zhu, Qunfang Shu, Jiujin Xu, Ruofu Du, Songbin ***, Pu Li, Matthew E. Hurles, Huanming Yang, Chris Tyler-Smith, "Male demography in East Asia: a north-south contrast in human population expansion times," Knowledge of high resolution Y-chromosome haplogroup diversification within Iran provides important geographic context regarding the spread and compartmentalization of male lineages in the Middle East and southwestern Asia. All such money earned goes to support the Y-DNA Q-M242 Project. Unfortunately, the Y-chromosome haplogroup counterparts were not reported at the resolution required for these analyses in the north Iran/Caspian populations. N. Kharkov, V. A. Stepanov, S. P. Feshchenko, S. A. Borinskaya, N. K. Yankovsky, and V. P. Puzyrev, "Frequencies of Y Chromosome Binary Haplogroups in Belarusians," Elizabeth T Wood, Daryn A Stover, Christopher Ehret Alexander Varzari, "Population History of the Dniester-Carpathians: Evidence from Alu Insertion and Y-Chromosome Polymorphisms" (2006)[M. Regueiro et al. 2, pp. Now, the closest living people to the ancient Iranian Agriculturists are Bakhtiaris. Thank you.Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.Authentic Zoroastrianism based on the poetic gathas and their most ancient commentaries To investigate the demographic history of human populations from the Caucasus and surrounding regions, we used high-throughput sequencing to generate 147 complete mtDNA genome sequences from random samples of individuals from three groups from the Caucasus (Armenians, Azeri and Georgians), and one group each from Iran and Turkey.The opinions expressed on this site are strictly those of the site owner and author.