R1b
(M343) Haplogroup
The following information is what is supplied to participants of the
National
Geographic Genographic Study if they fall into the R1b haplogroup.
Haplogroups are defined by genetic mutations or "markers" found in the Y
chromosome of your DNA. This study is comparing the DNA of its participants in order
to determine their deep ancestral roots. These roots are based upon
common information contained in every participants DNA. My DNA,
tested through Family Tree DNA
and transferred to the
National
Geographic Genographic Study, falls into this particular haplogroup.

Y Chromosome Markers Tested and My Personal Results
(Click to Enlarge)
Your Y chromosome results identify you as a member of haplogroup R1b, a
lineage defined by a genetic marker called M343. This haplogroup is the
final destination of a genetic journey that began some 60,000 years ago
with an ancient Y chromosome marker called M168.

R1b Migration Map (Click to Enlarge)
The very widely dispersed M168 marker can be traced to a single individual
- "Eurasian Adam." This African man, who lived some 31,000 to 79,000 years
ago, is the common ancestor of every non-African person living today. His
descendants migrated out of Africa and became the only lineage to survive
away from humanity's home continent.
Population growth during the Upper Paleolithic era may have spurred the
M168 lineage to seek new hunting grounds for the plains animals crucial to
their survival. A period of moist and favorable climate had expanded the
ranges of such animals at this time, so these nomadic peoples may have
simply followed their food source.
Improved tools and rudimentary art appeared during this same epoch,
suggesting significant mental and behavioral changes. These shifts may
have been spurred by a genetic mutation that gave "Eurasian Adam's"
descendants a cognitive advantage over other contemporary, but now
extinct, human lineages.
Some 90 to 95 percent of all non-Africans are descendants of the second
great human migration out of Africa, which is defined by the marker M89.
M89 first appeared 45,000 years ago in Northern Africa or the Middle East.
It arose on the original lineage (M168) of "Eurasian Adam," and defines a
large inland migration of hunters who followed expanding grasslands and
plentiful game to the Middle East.
Many people of this lineage remained in the Middle East, but others
continued their movement and followed the grasslands through Iran to the
vast steppes of Central Asia. Herds of buffalo, antelope, woolly mammoths,
and other game probably enticed them to explore new grasslands.
With much of Earth's water frozen in massive ice sheets, the era's vast
steppes stretched from eastern France to Korea. The grassland hunters of
the M89 lineage traveled both east and west along this steppe
"superhighway" and eventually peopled much of the continent.
A group of M89 descendants moved north from the Middle East to Anatolia
and the Balkans, trading familiar grasslands for forests and high country.
Though their numbers were likely small, genetic traces of their journey
are still found today.
Some 40,000 years ago a man in Iran or southern Central Asia was born with
a unique genetic marker known as M9, which marked a new lineage diverging
from the M89 group. His descendants spent the next 30,000 years populating
much of the planet.
Most residents of the Northern Hemisphere trace their roots to this unique
individual, and carry his defining marker. Nearly all North Americans and
East Asians have the M9 marker, as do most Europeans and many Indians. The
haplogroup defined by M9, K, is known as the Eurasian Clan.
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This large lineage dispersed gradually. Seasoned hunters followed the
herds ever eastward, along a vast belt of Eurasian steppe, until the
massive mountain ranges of south central Asia blocked their path.
The Hindu Kush, Tian Shan, and Himalaya, even more formidable during the
era's ice age, divided eastward migrations. These migrations through the "Pamir
Knot" region would subsequently become defined by additional genetic
markers.
The marker M45 first appeared about 35,000 to 40,000 years ago in a man
who became the common ancestor of most Europeans and nearly all Native
Americans. This unique individual was part of the M9 lineage, which was
moving to the north of the mountainous Hindu Kush and onto the game-rich
steppes of Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, and southern Siberia.
The M45 lineage survived on these northern steppes even in the frigid Ice
Age climate. While big game was plentiful, these resourceful hunters had
to adapt their behavior to an increasingly hostile environment. They
erected animal skin shelters and sewed weather-tight clothing. They also
refined the flint heads on their weapons to compensate for the scarcity of
obsidian and other materials.
The intelligence that allowed this lineage to adapt and thrive in harsh
conditions was critical to human survival in a region where no other
hominids are known to have survived.
Members of haplogroup R are
descendents of Europe's first large-scale human settlers. The lineage is
defined by Y chromosome marker M173, which shows a westward journey of
M45-carrying Central Asian steppe hunters.
The descendents of M173 arrived in Europe around 35,000 years ago and
immediately began to make their own dramatic mark on the continent. Famous
cave paintings, like those of Lascaux and Chauvet, signal the sudden
arrival of humans with artistic skill. There are no artistic precedents or
precursors to their appearance.
Soon after this lineage's arrival in Europe, the era of the Neanderthals
came to a close. Genetic evidence proves that these hominids were not
human ancestors but an evolutionary dead end. Smarter, more resourceful
human descendents of M173 likely out-competed Neanderthals for scarce Ice
Age resources and thus heralded their demise.
The long journey of this lineage was further shaped by the preponderance
of ice at this time. Humans were forced to southern refuges in Spain,
Italy, and the Balkans. Years later, as the ice retreated, they moved
north out of these isolated refuges and left an enduring, concentrated
trail of the M173 marker in their wake.
Today, for example, the marker's frequency remains very high in northern
France and the British Isles-where it was carried by M173 descendents who
had weathered the Ice Age in Spain.

Enlarged British Isles Haplo Distribution
(Click to Enlarge)
Members of haplogroup R1b, defined by M343 are the direct descendents of
Europe's first modern humans-known as the Cro-Magnon people.
Cro-Magnons arrived in Europe some 35,000 years ago, during a time when
Neanderthals still lived in the region. M343-carrying peoples made woven
clothing and constructed huts to withstand the frigid climes of the Upper
Paleolithic era. They used relatively advanced tools of stone, bone, and
ivory. Jewelry, carvings, and intricate, colorful cave paintings bear
witness to the Cro-Magnons' surprisingly advanced culture during the last
glacial age.
When the ice retreated genetically homogenous groups re-colonized the
north, where they are still found in high frequencies. Some 70 percent of
men in southern England are R1b. In parts of Spain and Ireland that number
exceeds 90 percent.
There are many sub-lineages within R1b that are yet to be defined. The
Genographic Project hopes to bring future clarity to the disparate parts
of this distinctive European lineage. |