Daddy bear Santa Claus in Ancient Japan ?
the Y-chromosome J2#1 haplotype is found in gene pool of Okinawan populations,
southerner Japanese East Asian (frequency 1.12%).
This haplotype shows match patterns in populations of the Caucasus mountain,
and areas along the northern coast of continental Europe,
such as The Netherlands, Hamburg, Estonia and Poland.
According to a 2011 study “In search of the genetic footprints of Sumerians: a survey of
Y-chromosome and mtDNA variation in the Marsh Arabs of Iraq”, Haplogroup J, with its two
branches J1-M267 and J2-M172, is a Middle Eastern Y-chromosome lineage dating to about
30,000 years ago with a common ancestral origin of Marsh Arabs (located in Southern Iraq)
and Southern Arabian. From focal points of high frequency in Near East the haplogroup has a
frequency distribution that shows radial decreasing clines (i.e. migratory paths) toward
the Levant area, Central Asia, Caucasus, North Africa, Europe.
Like haplogroups E3b and G, J and its subclades originated in Near East and spread across
Europe and Mediterranean during Neolithic. It is common among Semitic populations, and
includes the Cohen Modal Haplotype – the paternal genetic legacy of Jewish priestly class.
It is also present in North Africa, Arabia and Caucasus. J Haplotype #1:The highest
frequencies for this haplotype occur in Mediterranean countries, among American Hispanics
and in the Caucasus such as Northeastern Georgia Georgian Northeast Georgia.
No comments:
Post a Comment