A · BT · CT · CF · F · J · J1-M267 · J1-Z1828 · J1-FGC10485

Haplogroup J1-FGC10485

Macro-haplogroup
J
Parent clade
J1-Z1828
Formed (estimate)
c. 6,100 to 8,100 years before present
TMRCA (estimate)
c. 1,700 to 2,400 years ago

Overview

J1-FGC10485 is a downstream lineage of the highland-centered J1-Z1828 complex and emerged among early agro-pastoral groups occupying the Armenian Highlands, eastern Anatolia and the northern Zagros. These communities practiced vertical transhumance, maintained fortified upland settlements and participated in long-established metallurgical traditions characteristic of early West Asian highland societies. Their archaeological signatures align closely with phases of the Kura-Araxes cultural expansion. During the Bronze and Iron Ages, populations carrying FGC10485 remained geographically stable within mountainous zones where ecological boundaries preserved demographic continuity. The downstream topology reveals region-specific microclades formed by long-term settlement in highland valleys. Medieval populations of Armenia and eastern Anatolia show continued derivation from ancestral FGC10485 lineages, reflecting substantial continuity across millennia.

Geographic distribution

Most common in Armenia and eastern Turkey; moderate in northwest Iran; rare in Georgia and the central Caucasus.

Ancient DNA

  • Kura-Araxes individuals show upstream J1-Z1828 variation that matches proto FGC10485.
  • Iron Age highland remains continue to exhibit signatures consistent with FGC10485 ancestry.
  • Medieval Armenian plateau burials preserve downstream FGC10485 branches.

Phylogeny & subclades

A highland-rooted J1-Z1828 branch shaped by ecological isolation, stable agro-pastoral economies and long-term genetic continuity.

  • FGC10485*
  • Armenian Highlands derivatives
  • Eastern Anatolian upland microclades

Notes & context

A lineage essential for understanding the demographic continuity of highland West Asian populations.