Your
Y-chromosome results identify you as a member of haplogroup
R1b.
The genetic markers that define
your ancestral history reach back roughly 60,000 years
to the first common marker of all non-African men, M168,
and follow your lineage to present day, ending with
M343, the defining marker of haplogroup R1b.
If you look at the map highlighting
your ancestors' route, you will see that members of
haplogroup R1b carry the following Y-chromosome
markers:
M168 > M89 > M9 >
M45 > M207 > M173 > M343
Today, roughly 70 percent of the
men in southern England belong to haplogroup R1b.
In parts of Spain and Ireland, that number exceeds 90
percent.
What's a haplogroup, and why do
geneticists concentrate on the Y chromosome in their
search for markers? For that matter, what's a marker?
Each of us carries DNA that is a
combination of genes passed from both our mother and
father, giving us traits that range from eye color and
height to athleticism and disease susceptibility. One
exception is the Y chromosome, which is passed directly
from father to son, unchanged, from generation to generation.
Unchanged, that is unless a mutationa
random, naturally occurring, usually harmless changeoccurs.
The mutation, known as a marker, acts as a beacon; it
can be mapped through generations because it will be
passed down from the man in whom it occurred to his
sons, their sons, and every male in his family for thousands
of years.
In some instances there may be more
than one mutational event that defines a particular
branch on the tree. This means that any of these markers
can be used to determine your particular haplogroup,
since every individual who has one of these markers
also has the others.
When geneticists identify such a
marker, they try to figure out when it first occurred,
and in which geographic region of the world. Each marker
is essentially the beginning of a new lineage on the
family tree of the human race. Tracking the lineages
provides a picture of how small tribes of modern humans
in Africa tens of thousands of years ago diversified
and spread to populate the world.
A haplogroup is defined by a series
of markers that are shared by other men who carry the
same random mutations. The markers trace the path your
ancestors took as they moved out of Africa. It's difficult
to know how many men worldwide belong to any particular
haplogroup, or even how many haplogroups there are,
because scientists simply don't have enough data yet.
One of the goals of the five-year
Genographic Project is to build a large enough database
of anthropological genetic data to answer some of these
questions. To achieve this, project team members are
traveling to all corners of the world to collect more
than 100,000 DNA samples from indigenous populations.
In addition, we encourage you to contribute your anonymous
results to the project database, helping our geneticists
reveal more of the answers to our ancient past.
Your Ancestral Journey: What
We Know Now
M168: Your Earliest Ancestor
Fast Facts
Time of Emergence: Roughly 50,000
years ago
Place of Origin: Africa
Climate: Temporary retreat of Ice
Age; Africa moves from drought to warmer temperatures
and moister conditions
Estimated Number of Homo sapiens:
Approximately 10,000
Tools and Skills: Stone tools; earliest
evidence of art and advanced conceptual skills
Skeletal and archaeological evidence
suggest that anatomically modern humans evolved in Africa
around 200,000 years ago, and began moving out of Africa
to colonize the rest of the world around 60,000 years
ago.
The man who gave rise to the first
genetic marker in your lineage probably lived in northeast
Africa in the region of the Rift Valley, perhaps in
present-day Ethiopia, Kenya, or Tanzania, some 31,000
to 79,000 years ago. Scientists put the most likely
date for when he lived at around 50,000 years ago. His
descendants became the only lineage to survive outside
of Africa, making him the common ancestor of every non-African
man living today.
But why would man have first ventured
out of the familiar African hunting grounds and into
unexplored lands? It is likely that a fluctuation in
climate may have provided the impetus for your ancestors'
exodus out of Africa.
The African ice age was characterized
by drought rather than by cold. It was around 50,000
years ago that the ice sheets of northern Europe began
to melt, introducing a period of warmer temperatures
and moister climate in Africa. Parts of the inhospitable
Sahara briefly became habitable. As the drought-ridden
desert changed to a savanna, the animals hunted by your
ancestors expanded their range and began moving through
the newly emerging green corridor of grasslands. Your
nomadic ancestors followed the good weather and the
animals they hunted, although the exact route they followed
remains to be determined.
In addition to a favorable change
in climate, around this same time there was a great
leap forward in modern humans' intellectual capacity.
Many scientists believe that the emergence of language
gave us a huge advantage over other early human species.
Improved tools and weapons, the ability to plan ahead
and cooperate with one another, and an increased capacity
to exploit resources in ways we hadn't been able to
earlier, all allowed modern humans to rapidly migrate
to new territories, exploit new resources, and replace
other hominids.
M89: Moving Through the
Middle East
Fast Facts
Time of Emergence: 45,000 years
ago
Place: Northern Africa or the Middle
East
Climate: Middle East: Semiarid grass
plains
Estimated Number of Homo sapiens:
Tens of thousands
Tools and Skills: Stone, ivory,
wood tools
The next male ancestor in your ancestral
lineage is the man who gave rise to M89, a marker
found in 90 to 95 percent of all non-Africans. This
man was born around 45,000 years ago in northern Africa
or the Middle East.
The first people to leave Africa
likely followed a coastal route that eventually ended
in Australia. Your ancestors followed the expanding
grasslands and plentiful game to the Middle East and
beyond, and were part of the second great wave of migration
out of Africa.
Beginning about 40,000 years ago,
the climate shifted once again and became colder and
more arid. Drought hit Africa and the grasslands reverted
to desert, and for the next 20,000 years, the Saharan
Gateway was effectively closed. With the desert impassable,
your ancestors had two options: remain in the Middle
East, or move on. Retreat back to the home continent
was not an option.
While many of the descendants of
M89 remained in the Middle East, others continued
to follow the great herds of buffalo, antelope, woolly
mammoths, and other game through what is now modern-day
Iran to the vast steppes of Central Asia.
These semiarid grass-covered plains
formed an ancient "superhighway" stretching from eastern
France to Korea. Your ancestors, having migrated north
out of Africa into the Middle East, then traveled both
east and west along this Central Asian superhighway.
A smaller group continued moving north from the Middle
East to Anatolia and the Balkans, trading familiar grasslands
for forests and high country.
M9: The Eurasian Clan
Spreads Wide and Far
Fast Facts
Time of Emergence: 40,000 years
ago
Place: Iran or southern Central
Asia
Estimated Number of Homo sapiens:
Tens of thousands
Tools and Skills: Upper Paleolithic
Your next ancestor, a man born around
40,000 years ago in Iran or southern Central Asia, gave
rise to a genetic marker known as M9, which marked
a new lineage diverging from the M89 Middle Eastern
Clan. His descendants, of which you are one, spent the
next 30,000 years populating much of the planet.
This large lineage, known as the
Eurasian Clan, dispersed gradually over thousands of
years. Seasoned hunters followed the herds ever eastward,
along the vast super highway of Eurasian steppe. Eventually
their path was blocked by the massive mountain ranges
of south Central Asiathe Hindu Kush, the Tian
Shan, and the Himalayas.
The three mountain ranges meet in
a region known as the "Pamir Knot," located in present-day
Tajikistan. Here the tribes of hunters split into two
groups. Some moved north into Central Asia, others moved
south into what is now Pakistan and the Indian subcontinent.
These different migration routes
through the Pamir Knot region gave rise to separate
lineages.
Most people native to the Northern
Hemisphere trace their roots to the Eurasian Clan. Nearly
all North Americans and East Asians are descended from
the man described above, as are most Europeans and many
Indians.
M45: The Journey Through
Central Asia
Fast Facts
Time of Emergence: 35,000
Place of Origin: Central Asia
Climate: Glaciers expanding over
much of Europe
Estimated Number of Homo sapiens:
Approximately 100,000
Tools and Skills: Upper Paleolithic
The next marker of your genetic
heritage, M45, arose around 35,000 years ago,
in a man born in Central Asia. He was part of the M9
Eurasian Clan that had moved to the north of the mountainous
Hindu Kush and onto the game-rich steppes of present-day
Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, and southern Siberia.
Although big game was plentiful,
the environment on the Eurasian steppes became increasing
hostile as the glaciers of the Ice Age began to expand
once again. The reduction in rainfall may have induced
desertlike conditions on the southern steppes, forcing
your ancestors to follow the herds of game north.
To exist in such harsh conditions,
they learned to build portable animal-skin shelters
and to create weaponry and hunting techniques that would
prove successful against the much larger animals they
encountered in the colder climates. They compensated
for the lack of stone they traditionally used to make
weapons by developing smaller points and bladesmicrolithsthat
could be mounted to bone or wood handles and used effectively.
Their tool kit also included bone needles for sewing
animal-skin clothing that would both keep them warm
and allow them the range of movement needed to hunt
the reindeer and mammoth that kept them fed.
Your ancestors' resourcefulness
and ability to adapt was critical to survival during
the last ice age in Siberia, a region where no other
hominid species is known to have lived.
The M45 Central Asian Clan
gave rise to many more; the man who was its source is
the common ancestor of most Europeans and nearly all
Native American men.
M207: Leaving Central
Asia
Fast Facts
Time of Emergence: 30,000
Place of Origin: Central Asia
Climate: Glaciers expanding over
much of Europe and western Eurasia
Estimated Number of Homo sapiens:
Approximately 100,000
Tools and Skills: Upper Paleolithic
After spending considerable time
in Central Asia, refining skills to survive in harsh
new conditions and exploit new resources, a group from
the Central Asian Clan began to head west towards the
European subcontinent.
An individual in this clan carried
the new M207 mutation on his Y chromosome. His
descendants ultimately split into two distinct groups,
with one continuing onto the European subcontinent,
and the other group turning south and eventually making
it as far as India.
Your lineage falls within the first
haplogroup, R1, and gave rise to the first modern
humans to move into Europe and eventually colonize the
continent.
M173: Colonizing EuropeThe
First Modern Europeans
Fast Facts
Time of Emergence: Around 30,000
years ago
Place: Central Asia
Climate: Ice Age
Estimated Number of Homo sapiens:
Approximately 100,000
Tools and Skills: Upper Paleolithic
As your ancestors continued to move
west, a man born around 30,000 years ago in Central
Asia gave rise to a lineage defined by the genetic marker
M173. His descendants were part of the first
large wave of humans to reach Europe.
During this period, the Eurasian
steppelands extended from present-day Germany, and possibly
France, to Korea and China. The climate fostered a land
rich in resources and opened a window into Europe.
Your ancestors' arrival in Europe
heralded the end of the era of the Neandertals, a hominid
species that inhabited Europe and parts of western Asia
from about 29,000 to 230,000 years ago. Better communication
skills, weapons, and resourcefulness probably enabled
your ancestors to outcompete Neandertals for scarce
resources.
This wave of migration into Western
Europe marked the appearance and spread of what archaeologists
call the Aurignacian culture. The culture is distinguished
by significant innovations in methods of manufacturing
tools, more standardization of tools, and a broader
set of tool types, such as end-scrapers for preparing
animal skins and tools for woodworking.
In addition to stone, the first
modern humans to reach Europe used bone, ivory, antler,
and shells as part of their tool kit. Bracelets and
pendants made of shells, teeth, ivory, and carved bone
appear at many sites. Jewelry, often an indication of
status, suggests a more complex social organization
was beginning to develop.
The large number of archaeological
sites found in Europe from around 30,000 years ago indicates
that there was an increase in population size.
Around 20,000 years ago, the climate
window shut again, and expanding ice sheets forced your
ancestors to move south to Spain, Italy, and the Balkans.
As the ice retreated and temperatures became warmer,
beginning about 12,000 years ago, many descendants of
M173 moved north again to repopulate places that
had become inhospitable during the Ice Age.
Not surprisingly, today the number
of descendants of the man who gave rise to marker M173
remains very high in Western Europe. It is particularly
concentrated in northern France and the British Isles
where it was carried by ancestors who had weathered
the Ice Age in Spain.
M343: Direct Descendants
of Cro-Magnon
Fast Facts
Time of Emergence: Around 30,000
years ago
Place of Origin: Western Europe
Climate: Ice sheets continuing to
creep down Northern Europe
Estimated Number of Homo sapiens:
Tools and Skills: Upper Paleolithic
Around 30,000 years ago, a descendant
of the clan making its way into Europe gave rise to
marker M343, the defining marker of your haplogroup.
You are a direct descendent of the people who dominated
the human expansion into Europe, the Cro-Magnon.
The Cro-Magnon are responsible for
the famous cave paintings found in southern France.
These spectacular paintings provide archaeological evidence
that there was a sudden blossoming of artistic skills
as your ancestors moved into Europe. Prior to this,
artistic endeavors were mostly comprised of jewelry
made of shell, bone, and ivory; primitive musical instruments;
and stone carvings.
The cave paintings of the Cro-Magnon
depict animals like bison, deer, rhinoceroses, and horses,
and natural events important to Paleolithic life such
as spring molting, hunting, and pregnancy. The paintings
are far more intricate, detailed, and colorful than
anything seen prior to this period.
Your ancestors knew how to make
woven clothing using the natural fibers of plants, and
had relatively advanced tools of stone, bone, and ivory.
Their jewelry, carvings, and intricate, colorful cave
paintings bear witness to the Cro-Magnons' advanced
culture during the last glacial age.
This is where your genetic trail,
as we know it today, ends.