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Saturday, November 10, 2012

Haplogroup T STR111 tree

Today, I want to present the STR111 tree of haplogroup T, and I used the same method as before.

The number of individuals that tested all 111 STR values is fairly small (N=66). Still, I think that some clades are clearly visible, even without using any SNP information.

The nomenclature at FTDNA is based on ISOGG 2011, however, not exactly, e.g. L453, L454 are not labeled as T1 only, not as T1a:

T   L206, L445, L452, L455, M184/Page34/USP9Y+3178, M193, M272, Page129
•     T*   -
•     T1   M70/Page46, Page78
•    •     T1*   -
•    •     T1a   L162/Page21, L299, L453, L454
•    •     •     T1a*   -
•    •     •     T1a1   L208/Page2
•    •     •    •     T1a1*   -
•    •     •    •     T1a1a   M320
•    •     •    •     T1a1b   P77
•    •     •    •     T1a1c   P330
•    •     •    •     T1a1d   P321
•    •     •    •     •     T1a1d*   -
•    •     •    •     •     T1a1d1   P317
•    •     T1b   L131
•    •     •     T1b*   -
•    •     •     T1b1   P322, P328
•    •     •    •     T1b1*   -
•    •     •    •     T1b1a   P327

Rectangular STR111 tree of haplogroup T (pdf version):

Polar STR111 tree of haplogroup T (pdf version):
 

4 comments:

  1. What you think is origin of halopgrop T, in which country it born?

    ReplyDelete
  2. I'm an American living in Florida. My Haplogroup/subclade is T1a1c. I find it very interesting that I may have Kurdish "cousins."

    ReplyDelete
  3. I'm an American living in Florida. My Haplogroup/subclade is T1a1c. I find it very interesting that I may have Kurdish "cousins."

    ReplyDelete