Location:Islandbridge, Dublin, Ireland The geographic distribution within subclade T2 varies greatly with the ratio of subhaplogroup T2e to T2b reported to vary 40-fold across examined populations from a low in Britain and Ireland, to a high in Saudi Arabia (Bedford 2012). mtDNA:H10, Sample:VK177 / UK_Oxford_#21 Y-DNA:R-Z16372 Location:Ladoga, Russia Age:Viking 880-1000 CE Location:Karda, Sweden Location:Gerdrup, Sealand, Denmark Creates a new branch down of I-Y19932 (L22). mtDNA:J2a1a1a2, Sample:VK552 / Estonia_Salme_II-K For example, Ive typed I-BY3428. FTDNA Comment:Shares 1 SNP with a man from England. mtDNA:H1a1, Sample:VK150 / UK_Oxford_#14 New branch = I-FT49567 Y-DNA:I-FT13004 Y-DNA:I-Y98280 Age:Viking 11-12th centuries CE Age:Viking 10-11th centuries CE FTDNA Comment:Shares 3 SNPs with a man from Sweden. Y-DNA:R-BY33037 Age:Viking 10-11th centuries CE Location:Brough_Road_Birsay, Orkney, Scotland, UK Age:Viking 900-1050 CE Goran Runfeldt, a member of the Million Mito team and head of research at FamilyTreeDNA began downloading DNA sequences immediately, and Michael Sager began analyzing Y DNA, hoping to add or split Y DNA tree branches. mtDNA:H64, Sample:VK354 / Oland_1026 Age:Viking 900-1050 CE The current build is #17. mtDNA:U5b1-T16189C!-T16192C! Age:Viking 10th century CE mtDNA:H7b, Sample:VK463 / Gotland_Frojel-019A89 Y-DNA:I-FGC15560 mtDNA:J1d, Sample:VK475 / Gotland_Kopparsvik-187 Age:Early Viking 700 CE Y-DNA:N-Y5005 Location:Ridgeway_Hill_Mass_Grave_Dorset, Dorset, England, UK Age:Viking 9-11th centuries CE Age:Early Viking 8th century CE T1a1: 15: 130856: Dorde Mrtensdr Bjrk-Huggare 1630-1675 Kronoby FI: Finland: T1a1: T16093Y, T16126C, A16129G, A16163G, C16186T, T16187C, T16223C, G16230A, T16278C, C16294T, C16311T: mtDNA:H4a1a1a, Sample:VK400 / Sweden_Skara 236 Location:Tollemosegrd, Sealand, Denmark New branch = I-BY60851 Sample:VK509 / Estonia_Salme_I-6 Derived for 9 ancestral for 6. See more ideas about viking history, norse vikings, vikings. Age:Viking 10th century CE mtDNA:H1e2a, Sample:VK352 / Oland_1012 Age:Iron Age 4th century CE Age:Viking 10th century CE But the recent discovery of a skeletal sample from 1200 BC in the Hebrides blows that out of the water. Please include what you were doing when this page came up and the Cloudflare Ray ID found at the bottom of this page. Age:Viking 10-12th centuries CE 1, sk 3 Age:Viking 9-11th centuries CE Location:Church2, Faroes Location:Galgedil, Funen, Denmark Sample:VK34 / Sweden_Skara 135 FTDNA Comment:Shares 2 SNPs with an American of unknown origins. In the FTDNA Learning Center, the page explaining the mtDNA Matches page says this in the FAQ area: Compared with the most frequent haplogroup in the general population (that is, H and T clades), the T1a1 haplogroup has a HR of 0.62 (95% CI, 0.40 to 0.95; P = 0.03). mtDNA:H1a, Sample:VK479 / Gotland_Kopparsvik-272 Location:Frojel, Gotland, Sweden Age:Viking 9-11th centuries CE New branch = I-BY78615 mtDNA:H1c3, Sample:VK156 / Poland_Bodzia B4 . Age:Early Viking 8th century CE Location:Oland, Sweden mtDNA:H6a1a, Sample:VK517 / Sweden_Uppsala_UM36031_623b I match two of the burials (mtdna: J1b1a1a): Sample: VK24 / Faroe_AS34/Panum As well as its vegetable gardens, orchards and citrus trees, it also boasts interesting aras nearby, such as Los Gaitanes Pass (which it shares with Ardales and Antequera), the Sierra de Huma and the Sierra de Aguas.. Its urban layout, of Arabic origin, gives it a . Derived for 2 SNPs total. Derived for 1 ancestral for 2. I was surprised to find a sister-branch to my own mitochondrial J1c2f. Y-DNA:I-Y22923 mtDNA:J2a2c, Sample:VK238 / Faroe_4 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:H1a1, Sample:VK469 / Gotland_Kopparsvik-260 Y-DNA:E-CTS5856 Age:Viking 880-1000 CE FTDNA Comment:Shares 1 SNP with a man from Sweden. Location:Oland, Sweden Age:Viking 11-12th centuries CE Location:Oland, Sweden Y-DNA:N-Y7795 Y-DNA:R-YP4342 Location:Ladoga, Russia Age:Viking 880-1000 CE mtDNA:H5a2a, Sample:VK543 / Ireland_EP55 mtDNA:H1-C16239T, Sample:VK175 / UK_Oxford_#19 mtDNA:J1c3k, Sample:VK140 / Denmark_Galgedil PT Y-DNA:I-BY31739 Location:Church2, Faroes Y-DNA:I-BY78615 Surprisingly, Swedes had only 10%. Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia Y-DNA:N-Y4706 Y-DNA:I-FGC22026 Age:Early Viking 8th century CE Age:Iron Age 1st century CE Location:Bogvej, Langeland, Denmark Sample:VK35 / Sweden_Skara 118 Location:Varnhem, Skara, Sweden Location:Nordland, Nor_North, Norway Sample:VK160 / Russia_Kurevanikka_7283-3 Age:Viking 880-1000 CE Location:Ridgeway_Hill_Mass_Grave_Dorset, Dorset, England, UK The excavated bones underwent osteoarchaeological analysis and were assigned to at least 19 individuals. These are known as single nucleotide polymorphisms ( SNPs ). Haplogroup T1a is a branch on the maternal tree of human kind. Y-DNA:R-M198 mtDNA:T2a1a, Sample:VK512 / Estonia_Salme_II- Y-DNA:R-U106 Location:Nordland, Nor_North, Norway mtDNA:U5b2b5, Sample:VK444 / Oland_1059 Kyle, a 53-year-old man from Texas, said that his GAT showed that he "had a Viking haplogroup" (I-M253) and that it confirmed a "Viking lineage" on . Age:Viking 858 68 CE Age:Viking 10-13th centuries CE Y-DNA:R-BY27605 Location:Bogvej, Langeland, Denmark Y-DNA:I-FGC22153 Location:Ladoga, Russia Location:Cedynia, Poland Y-DNA:R-PH3519 mtDNA:H1a1, Sample:VK480 / Estonia_Salme_II-E Users in this group may want to share their family trees with each other to find overlaps and merge duplicate profiles in order to join or expand the World Family Tree and discover new . Location:Nordland, Nor_North, Norway mtDNA:H1a, Sample:VK497 / Estonia_Salme_II- mtDNA:H17, Sample:VK146 / UK_Oxford_#10 New branch = R-FT383000 Haplogroup I2a1b (M423) I2a1b (M423, L178) was known as I1b until 2007, and I2a2 from 2008 to 2010. Many of these lineages would have settled at first in Southeast Europe. 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. I dont see the intersecting SNP yet, between the tester and the ancient sample, so if I click on I-Y2592, I can view the rest of the upstream branches of haplogroup I. Forms a new branch down of N-FGC14542. Y-DNA:I-FT105192 Age:Viking 10-12th centuries CE FTDNA Comment:FT83323- Y-DNA:I-Y132154 Age:Viking 10-11th centuries CE Location:Ladoga, Russia Age:Viking 10-11th centuries CE Y-DNA:R-YP1370 Go to your Y or mitochondrial DNA results and find your haplogroup. Location:Kaagrden, Langeland, Denmark Location:Pskov, Russia mtDNA:H6a1a3a, Sample:VK98 / Iceland_083 Y-DNA:R-BY32357 Location:Hofstadir, Iceland Location:Kopparsvik, Gotland, Sweden Location:Church2, Faroes Y-DNA:R-YP6189 Location:Lutsk, Ukraine mtDNA:H1, Sample:VK535 / Italy_Foggia-891 Y-DNA:R-FT381000 Y-DNA:I-S18218 Age:Viking 10-12th centuries CE It is thought that this group played an important role in spreading agriculture across Europe. Age:Viking 9-11th centuries CE It is strongly represented in Europe today although it extends into North Africa and Asia. mtDNA:J1c6, Sample:VK60 / Gotland_Frojel-00702 New branch = R-BY186623 Y-DNA:R-YP1395 Y-DNA:I-BY98617 Y-DNA:R-L151 New branch = R-Y96503 For example, Haplogroup I1a is significantly more common in parts of England that had historical Viking settlements. Y-DNA:R-Y13467 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. Age:Viking 880-1000 CE Derived for 9 ancestral for 6. 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. Note that new Y DNA branches appear on the tree the day AFTER the change is made, and right now, changes resulting from this paper are being made hourly. Y-DNA:I-M253 DNA and the Vikings Steve Harding - University of Nottingham Derived for 1 ancestral for 6. Age:Early modern 16-17th centuries CE Y-DNA:R-JFS0009 Age:Viking 9-11th centuries CE mtDNA:H1-T16189C! Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia mtDNA:H4a1a4b, Sample:VK286 / Denmark_Bogovej Grav BJ Location:Hundstrup_Mose, Sealand, Denmark Derived for 1, ancestral for 7. Age:Early Norse 10-12th centuries CE Age:Viking 10-12th centuries CE The influence of Viking-Age migrants to the British Isles is obvious in archaeological and place-names evidence, but their demographic impact has been unclear. Location:Hessum, Funen, Denmark Derived for 9, ancestral for 3. Sample:VK151 / UK_Oxford_#15 mtDNA:HV6, Sample:VK508 / Estonia_Salme_I-5 New path = R-FT148796>R-FT148754 Y-DNA:R-Y96503 Age:Viking 9-11th centuries CE mtDNA:K1a4, Sample:VK317 / Denmark_Kaargarden Grav BF99 { Source: Finding Your Roots} Robert John Downey Jr. Downey is a US TV and movie actor. Age:Viking 10th century CE We also identified three potential susceptibility loci, including G13708A/rs28359178, which has demonstrated an inverse association with familial breast cancer risk. Location:Cedynia, Poland Age:Early Viking 8th century CE Age:Viking 10-11th centuries CE mtDNA:H2a2a2, Sample:VK245 / Faroe_16 Y-DNA:I-S7660 Y-DNA:I-Y36105 Age:Viking 9-11th centuries CE Location:Skmsta, Uppsala, Sweden New branch = I-FT118954 Y-DNA:I-M6155 Yesterday, in the journal Nature, the article Population genomics of the Viking world, was published by Margaryan, et al, a culmination of 6 years of work. Y-DNA:J-Z8424 Location:Kopparsvik, Gotland, Sweden Y-DNA:I-DF29 Y-DNA:G-M201 Age:Viking 880-1000 CE FTDNA Comment:Splits I-FT8660 (L813) Derived for 3, ancestral for 3. Derived for 1 ancestral for 13. mtDNA:H3g1, Sample:VK386 / Norway_Oppland 5305 Location:Church2, Faroes New branch = I-FT373923 Derived for 8, ancestral for 2. New path = N-BY29005>N-BY21933 Location:Ridgeway_Hill_Mass_Grave_Dorset, Dorset, England, UK Forms a new branch down of R-FT20255 (Z18). According to Ian Logan's mtDNA database, a particular T1a1j holder tested by Doron Behar's team and carrying the GenBank code JQ702925 has Sephardic Jewish roots in Rhodes, Greece. mtDNA:I1a1, Sample:VK70 / Denmark_Tollemosegard-EW Age:Early Viking 8th century CE Y-DNA:R-S6752 Location:Oppland, Nor_South, Norway mtDNA:K1a, Sample:VK445 / Denmark_Gl Lejre-A1896 He almost surely belongs to a branch under Q-Y2200. Age:Early Viking 8th century CE However, some studies have also shown that people of Haplogroup T are less prone to diabetes (Chinnery 2007 harvnb error: no target: CITEREFChinnery2007 (help) and Gonzlez 2012 harvnb error: no target: CITEREFGonzlez2012 (help)). Age:Viking 10-13th centuries CE mtDNA Haplogroup T1a Phylotree History Phylotree.org is the maternal (mtDNA) tree of humanity. FTDNA Comment:Possibly falls beneath I-BY195155. Location:Kopparsvik, Gotland, Sweden New branch = R-FT22694 Y-DNA:I-BY198083 Age:Viking 10th century CE Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia mtDNA:H6a1a5. 435 Location:Church2, Faroes Age:Early Viking 8th century CE Location:Ljungbacka, Malmo, Sweden mtDNA:J1c2, Sample:VK507 / Estonia_Salme_I-4 mtDNA:X2c1, Sample:VK396 / Sweden_Skara 166 Forms a new branch downstream of R-BY220332 (U152). mtDNA:J1c5. Location:Varnhem, Skara, Sweden mtDNA:H28a, Sample:VK505 / Estonia_Salme_I-2 Geneticists usually state that mitochondrial haplotype T came to the British Isles with the Vikings circa 800 AD. Y-DNA:R-S1491 Y-DNA:R-Y13202 Location:St_Johns_College_Oxford, Oxford, England, UK Age:Viking 900-1050 CE Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia LAV010, NA34, I7779, ble007, R55 and EDM124 are all non-R ancient samples that are U106+. New path I-BY65928>I-BY61100 Y-DNA:R-CTS4179 Location:Alken_Enge, Jutland, Denmark Age:Viking 10th century CE mtDNA: J1b1a1a, Sample: VK422 / Norway_Hedmark 4304 Y-DNA haplogroup I is a European haplogroup, representing nearly one-fifth of the population. Y-DNA:R-Z27210 mtDNA:U3a1, Sample:VK426 / Sweden_Skara 216 Y-DNA:I-FT49567 Forms a new branch down of I-A1472 (Z140). At least some Viking raiders seem to be closely related to each other, and females in Iceland appear to be from the British Isles, suggesting that they may have become Vikings although we dont really understand the social and community structure. Y-DNA:R-S9257 Age:Viking 10th century CE The two of them have very different distributions, which are diametrically opposed in most regions. Age:LNBA 2400 BC Location:Kaagrden, Langeland, Denmark 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. 2 possible G>A mutations with a I-Y15295* sample Location:Varnhem, Skara, Sweden Age:Early Viking 8th century CE Location:Troms, Nor_North, Norway Y-DNA:I-FT8660 Age:Viking 10th century CE mtDNA:K2a3, Sample:VK394 / Norway_Hedmark 4460 Age:Viking 900-1050 CE Location:Varnhem, Skara, Sweden mtDNA:H1bb, Sample:VK546 / Ireland_08E693 Location:Varnhem, Skara, Sweden mtDNA:J1b1b1, Sample:VK218 / Russia_Ladoga_5680-4 FTDNA Comment:Splits R-BY45170 (DF27). Age:Viking 10-13th centuries CE mtDNA:H16, Sample:VK484 / Estonia_Salme_II-Q [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:H6a1a, Sample:VK149 / UK_Oxford_#13 Location:Oland, Sweden Age:Viking 10-11th centuries CE New branch = I-Y98280 Y-DNA:R-M269 mtDNA:H6a1a, Sample:VK485 / Estonia_Salme_II-O Age:Early modern 16-17th centuries CE Age:Viking 10th century CE FTDNA Comment:Shares 2 SNPs with a man from Finland. Location:Buckquoy_Birsay, Orkney, Scotland, UK Location:Galgedil, Funen, Denmark Cloudflare Ray ID: 7a2fdce02d2454a9 Age:Viking 10-13th centuries CE mtDNA:K1a-T195C! mtDNA:H27, Sample:VK382 / Oland_1132 New path FT13004>FT12648 Haplogroup T is composed of two main branches T1 and T2. Performance & security by Cloudflare. Age:Medieval 13th century Age:Viking 10-12th centuries CE mtDNA:U5b1e1, Sample:VK256 / UK_Dorset-3722 Y-DNA:I-BY19383 Location:Ladoga, Russia Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia Y-DNA:I-Y141089 Location:Bakkendrup, Sealand, Denmark FTDNA Comment:Links up with PGA3 (Personal Genome Project Austria) and FTDNA customer from Denmark. Age:Viking 9-11th centuries CE mtDNA:J1b1a1, Sample:VK388 / Norway_Nordland 253 Location:Ladoga, Russia Y-DNA:R-BY115469 mtDNA:H2a2b1, Sample:VK513 / Greenland F8 Age:Viking 9-11th centuries CE Y-DNA:I-L813 But very little trace of the Danish Vikings is found in modern day Britons' DNA, concluded DNA scientists in 2015. VK399 possibly groups with these two as well FTDNA Comment:Shares 3 SNPs with a man from Greece. mtDNA:H13a1a1b, Sample:VK64 / Gotland_Frojel-03504 New path = R-FT104609>R-FT103482 Y-DNA:I-M253 Location:Ladoga, Russia Location:Troms, Nor_North, Norway Y-DNA:I-L801 Subdividing Y-chromosome haplogroup R1a1 reveals Norse Viking dispersal lineages in Britain Eur J Hum Genet. Y-DNA:R-L448 Not the grave where the sample was taken, but a Viking cemetery from Denmark. Age:Viking 10th century CE mtDNA:H5a1c1a, Sample:VK258 / UK_Dorset-3733 FTDNA Comment:Shares 8 SNPs with a man from France. Y-DNA:R-S764 Location:St_Johns_College_Oxford, Oxford, England, UK mtDNA:T2b11, Sample:VK44 / Faroe_17 Location:Church2, Faroes His Y-DNA is R-M343 (formerly R1b). Forms a new branch down of R-FT20255 (Z18). At the same time a new branch was discovered that groups this new Ancient/American branch with the established I-FT274828 branch. Y-DNA:R-M269 Location:Ridgeway_Hill_Mass_Grave_Dorset, Dorset, England, UK Y-DNA:R-L21 Y-DNA:I-BY73576 Forms a branch down of I-BY98617 (L22). Y-DNA:R-Y75899 I will update the haplogroup information daily as more becomes available. Location:Ribe, Jutland, Denmark Location:Hesselbjerg, Jutland, Denmark mtDNA:H3h, Sample:VK410 / Russia_Ladoga_5680-15 Y-DNA:I-M253 FTDNA Comment:Splits R-FT148754 (DF63). The following is a list of the Y chromosome DNA haplogroup and mtDNA haplogroup nicknames used by BritainsDNA, ScotlandsDNA, IrelandsDNA, CymruDNAWales and YorkshiresDNA. Sample:VK143 / UK_Oxford_#7 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. Lalueza-Fox et al. ", "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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