A · BT · CT · CF · F · J · J1-M267 · J1-P58 · J1-L147.1 · J1-ZS1432

Haplogroup J1-ZS1432

Macro-haplogroup
J
Parent clade
J1-L147.1
Formed (estimate)
c. 4,500 to 5,900 years before present
TMRCA (estimate)
c. 1,200 to 2,000 years ago

Overview

J1-ZS1432 is a downstream branch of the Arabian-rooted J1-L147.1 line and formed among early pastoral communities occupying northern Arabia during the late Neolithic and early Bronze Age. These groups relied on desert wells, periodic grazing systems and mobility circuits that connected the Hejaz, Najd and western Mesopotamia. Their ecological strategies paralleled those of later Semitic-speaking tribal populations. During the Bronze and Iron Ages, ZS1432-bearing groups became part of the tribal formations that shaped the cultural and demographic landscape of northern Arabia and the Hejaz. Founder effects identified in downstream branches suggest persistent clan-based organization. During the early Islamic era, ZS1432 lineages expanded further into Iraq and the Gulf region, producing additional microbranches.

Geographic distribution

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

Ancient DNA

  • Bronze Age Levant samples display ancestral J1-P58 patterns matching proto ZS1432.
  • Iron Age desert populations show diversification consistent with early ZS1432.
  • Early Islamic Arabian burials include downstream ZS1432 derivatives.

Phylogeny & subclades

A structured J1-L147.1 descendant shaped by desert mobility, tribal segmentation and localized founder events.

  • ZS1432*
  • Hejaz derivatives
  • Northern Arabian microclades

Notes & context

A lineage essential for tracing the early demographic structure of tribal North Arabian groups.