A · BT · CT · CF · F · J · J1-M267 · J1-Z1828 · J1-FGC9350

Haplogroup J1-FGC9350

Macro-haplogroup
J
Parent clade
J1-Z1828
Formed (estimate)
c. 6,000 to 8,300 years before present
TMRCA (estimate)
c. 1,900 to 2,900 years ago

Overview

J1-FGC9350 belongs to the highland-rooted J1-Z1828 complex and traces its earliest ancestry to upland agro-pastoral populations occupying the Armenian Highlands, eastern Anatolia and northern Zagros. These groups practiced transhumant herding strategies centered on high-altitude pastures, fortified settlements and early metallurgical traditions. Their demographic and cultural patterns contributed directly to the processes underlying the rise of the Kura-Araxes cultural horizon. Throughout the Bronze and Iron Ages, FGC9350-bearing groups maintained demographic continuity in mountainous regions where geographic isolation supported stable microclade formation. The lineage’s downstream phylogenetic structure shows multiple localized highland subbranches, often tied to specific valleys, plateau systems and long-standing agro-pastoral communities. Later archaeological and historical signals indicate persistence of these lineages through the medieval period.

Geographic distribution

Concentrated in Armenia, eastern Turkey and northwest Iran; moderate in Georgia; rare in Mesopotamian lowlands.

Ancient DNA

  • Early Bronze Age Kura-Araxes samples reflect upstream ancestry consistent with early FGC9350.
  • Iron Age highland burials maintain continuity with FGC9350-affiliated subclades.
  • Medieval South Caucasus individuals display downstream branching consistent with this lineage.

Phylogeny & subclades

A structured highland-derived J1-Z1828 lineage shaped by long-term isolation and localized microclade development.

  • FGC9350*
  • Armenian Highland branches
  • Eastern Anatolia microclades

Notes & context

A lineage central to long-term highland demographic continuity and the persistence of ancient agro-pastoral population structures.