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Haplogroup E-V68, also known as E1b1b1a, is a major human Y-chromosome DNA haplogroup found in North Africa, the Horn of Africa, Western Asia and Europe.It is a subclade of the larger and older haplogroup, known as E1b1b or E-M215 (also roughly equivalent to E-M35).
Haplogroup E-M2, also known as E1b1a1-M2, is a human Y-chromosome DNA haplogroup.E-M2 is primarily distributed within Africa followed by West Asia. More specifically, E-M2 is the predominant subclade in West Africa, Central Africa, Southern Africa, and the region of the African Great Lakes; it also occurs at moderate frequencies in North Africa, and the Middle East.
Gad et al. (2021) indicates that the ancient Egyptian mummies of Ramesses III and Unknown Man E, possibly Pentawere, carried haplogroup E1b1a-V38. [11]At Cabeço da Amoreira, in Portugal, an enslaved West African man, who may have been from the Senegambian coastal region of Gambia, Mauritania, or Senegal, and carried haplogroups E1b1a and L3b1a, was buried among shell middens between the 16th ...
Khoisan (South Africa) [nb 11] Khoisan: 129 33.3 12.4 0 35.7 14.7 3.9 0 0 0 Tishkoff 2007 [6] Kikuyu & Kamba: Niger-Congo: 42 2 2 0 73 19 0 0 0 0 Wood 2005 [1] [dead link ] ǃKung: Khoisan: 64 36 8 0 39 11 6 0 0 0 Cruciani2002 [8] Luo: Nilo-Saharan: 9 11 22 0 66 0 0 0 0 0 Wood 2005 [1] Maasai: Nilo-Saharan: 26 27 8 0 16 50 0 0 0 0 Wood 2005 ...
Haplogroup E (M96) Haplogroup E1b1a (V38) West Africa and surrounding regions; formerly known as E3a; Haplogroup E1b1b (M215) Associated with the spread of Afroasiatic languages; now concentrated in North Africa and the Horn of Africa, as well as parts of the Middle East, the Mediterranean, and the Balkans; formerly known as E3b
Haplogroup E-P2, also known as E1b1, is a human Y-chromosome DNA haplogroup.E-P2 has two basal branches, E-V38 and E-M215.E-P2 had an ancient presence in the Levant; presently, it is primarily distributed in Africa where it may have originated, and occurs at lower frequencies in the Middle East and Europe.
(Data from studies conducted before 2004 may be inaccurate or a broad estimate, due to obsolete haplogroup naming systems – e.g. the former Haplogroup 2 included members of the relatively unrelated haplogroups known later as Haplogroup G and macrohaplogroup IJ [which comprises haplogroups I and J].)
In human population genetics, Y-Chromosome haplogroups define the major lineages of direct paternal (male) lines back to a shared common ancestor in Africa. Men in the same haplogroup share a set of differences, or markers, on their Y-Chromosome, which distinguish them from men in other haplogroups.