A · BT · CT · CF · F · J · J1-M267 · J1-Z1828 · J1-FGC10012

Haplogroup J1-FGC10012

Macro-haplogroup
J
Parent clade
J1-Z1828
Formed (estimate)
c. 6,100 to 8,200 years before present
TMRCA (estimate)
c. 1,700 to 2,600 years ago

Overview

J1-FGC10012 is a downstream lineage within the highland-oriented J1-Z1828 complex and originated among agro-pastoral communities inhabiting the Armenian Highlands, eastern Anatolia and the northern Zagros. These societies practiced vertical transhumance, early metallurgy and stable upland agricultural production. Their settlement systems often included fortified hilltop villages, valley farmsteads and interconnected herding networks typical of early highland West Asian cultures. Across the Bronze and Iron Ages, FGC10012-bearing groups remained localized in mountainous regions where ecological barriers enforced long-term demographic continuity. Genetic and archaeological continuity between ancestral FGC10012 populations and later Iron Age and medieval highland communities demonstrates the deep rootedness of this clade in upland West Asian landscapes.

Geographic distribution

Common in Armenia and eastern Turkey; moderate in northwest Iran; rare in Georgia and the South Caucasus generally.

Ancient DNA

  • Kura-Araxes individuals show upstream J1-Z1828 ancestry consistent with proto FGC10012.
  • Iron Age highland burials display continuity with downstream FGC10012 signatures.
  • Medieval Armenian plateau remains preserve several derived branches of this lineage.

Phylogeny & subclades

A highland-rooted J1-Z1828 derivative defined by long-term isolation, demographic stability and region-specific microclade formation.

  • FGC10012*
  • Armenian Highlands sets
  • Eastern Anatolian microclusters

Notes & context

A lineage demonstrating the persistent demographic structure of upland West Asian agro-pastoral communities.