A · BT · CT · CF · F · J · J1-M267 · J1-P58 · J1-Y5027

Haplogroup J1-Y5027

Macro-haplogroup
J
Parent clade
J1-P58
Formed (estimate)
c. 4,800 to 6,200 years before present
TMRCA (estimate)
c. 1,200 to 2,000 years ago

Overview

J1-Y5027 is a downstream lineage of the major Arabian-rooted J1-P58 clade and appears to have formed during the early Bronze Age among pastoralist groups living across the northern Arabian plateau, Wadi Sirhan basin and southern Jordan. These communities relied on flexible pastoral mobility systems structured around wells, wadis and transitional grazing corridors that allowed for sustained movement between the Hejaz and the Levantine fringe. Archaeological parallels include early desert encampments, oasis-linked settlements and proto-caravan nodes that supported interregional trade. During the Bronze and Iron Age periods, Y5027-bearing populations played an active role in the demographic growth of North Arabian tribal confederations. Its downstream phylogeny shows clear founder effects connected to clan-level expansions in the Hejaz and northern Arabia, with later dispersal into Mesopotamia, the Gulf and portions of the southern Levant during late antiquity and early Islamic expansions.

Geographic distribution

Most common in Saudi Arabia and Jordan; moderate in Iraq and Syria; low in Kuwait, Egypt and the Levant.

Ancient DNA

  • Bronze Age Levantine samples show upstream J1-P58 diversity consistent with proto Y5027 groups.
  • Iron Age North Arabian individuals display branching patterns overlapping with early Y5027.
  • Early Islamic burials in Hejaz contain downstream Y5027 derivatives.

Phylogeny & subclades

A structured J1-P58 branch associated with pastoral mobility, tribal segmentation and desert-steppe expansions.

  • Y5027*
  • Hejaz derivatives
  • Northern Arabian branch clusters

Notes & context

A lineage important for reconstructing the demographic development and territorial expansions of early North Arabian tribal populations.