Abstract

This study identifies and describes 38 branches of the haplogroup R1a STR haplotypes which currently exist in Europe or which migrated from Europe to areas in the east, south, and southeast between 6000 and 4500 years before the present (ybp). The study is based on 2471 haplotypes which have been tested for either 67- or 111-markers; it essentially creates a unified robust system, which assembles dozens of R1a-SNPs and thousands of STRs and assigned haplotypes to branches, some of which do not have SNP assignments as yet. The assembled system consists of base (deduced ancestral) haplotypes, one for each STR branch and for each SNP-assigned subclade, each with its characteristic (ancestral) set of alleles, arranged in the chronological space from ~ 9000 ybp to 1300 ybp. We found that the most ancient R1a subclades (R1a1-M198- and R1a1a-M198+/M417-) bearers of which currently live in Europe (the present day haplotypes are scattered between England and the Balkans) appeared in Europe at least 7300 ybp, and possibly 9000 ybp. R1a’s three principal downstream subclades, L664 (North-Western branch), Z93 (South-Eastern branch), and Z283 (Eurasian branch), split from their common European ancestor at about the same time, around 7000 - 6000 ybp. L664 apparently stayed in North-Western Europe; its lineage recovered and began expanding ~ 4575 ybp. The Z93 subclade began to expand during the Aryan migrations, on the Aryan's journey to India and the Middle East in the 3rd-2nd millennia BC. The Z283 subclade split ~ 5500 ybp into three branches. One of them, Z280 (the Central Eurasian branch) moved east to the Russian Plain in 4800 - 4600 ybp, and formed at least 16 sub-branches there and in the course of the later westward repopulation of Europe in the 1st millennium BC – 1st millennium CE. Some of the older branches, like the Russian Plain branch, largely stayed in the present Russia-Ukraine-Belarus-Poland- Baltic countries region, and were described by early historians as the Scythians, Antes, Veneti, and a multitude of different proto-Slavic tribes (though many of them belonged to haplogroups other than R1a, primarily I1 and I2). Those R1a branches which are “older” than 3000 years, such as the Russian Plain branch (4600 ybp), the Western Eurasian (4300 ybp), and the Balto-Carpathian (4300 ybp), did not move en mass to Europe but stayed behind at the Russian Plain. In the middle of 1st millennium CE, the time of the collapse of the Roman Empire, multiple migrations of R1a were taking place eastward and westward; these migrations gradually formed the current landscape of R1a in Europe. All 38 branches and their datings are listed in the Appendix of this paper; current distribution maps are shown in the body of the paper.

Highlights

  • The preceding article in this journal (Klyosov & Rozhanskii, 2012) provided data in support of the theory that haplogroup R1a arose in Central Asia around 20,000 years before the present, and described the prior history of the haplogroup, which is directly related to the appearance of Europeoids (Caucasoids) ~58,000 years ago

  • It follows from the data presented in this study, that all three principal downstream R1a subclades, L664, Z283 and Z93, split from their common European ancestor at about the same time, around 7000 - 6000 ybp, and that all three went through a population bottleneck, and expanded 1000 - 1500 years later

  • L664 apparently stayed in North-Western Europe; its lineage recovered and began expanding ~4575 ybp

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Summary

Introduction

The preceding article in this journal (Klyosov & Rozhanskii, 2012) provided data in support of the theory that haplogroup R1a arose in Central Asia around 20,000 years before the present (ybp), and described the prior history of the haplogroup, which is directly related to the appearance of Europeoids (Caucasoids) ~58,000 years ago. It differs from the parent base haplotype (RP branch) by 11 mutations This places the common ancestor at ~4825 ybp, which is within the margin of error for both the Russian Plain (RP) and the Central Eurasian (Z280) common ancestors. The base haplotype differs from that of Z280 by 8 mutations, which corresponds to 1800 years, and translates to a common ancestor at 4650 ybp It is well within margin of error for TMRCA of the entire Central Eurasian branch. The Northern European base haplotype differs by 13 mutations (3025 “lateral” years) from that of Z280, and is independently defined by SNP L365 It again places its common ancestor at 5260 ybp, which is Z280 itself. Its topology follows closely that of SNP phylogeny, while the dates of its principal nodes are quite robust, as it is shown by the examples above

Conclusion and Some Historical
Findings
Materials and Methods
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