A · BT · CT · CF · F · J · J1-M267 · J1-P58 · J1-L147.1 · J1-ZS1499

Haplogroup J1-ZS1499

Macro-haplogroup
J
Parent clade
J1-L147.1
Formed (estimate)
c. 4,500 to 5,800 years before present
TMRCA (estimate)
c. 1,200 to 1,900 years ago

Overview

J1-ZS1499 is a downstream cluster of the Arabian-centered J1-L147.1 macrobranch and formed among pastoralist communities distributed across northern Arabia during the late Neolithic to early Bronze Age. These groups relied on desert-steppe ecosystems and mobile herding strategies anchored to wells, wadis and short-range transhumance. Their movement systems parallel the cultural processes that later contributed to North Arabian tribal formation. During the Bronze and Iron Ages, ZS1499-bearing groups participated in population expansions extending through the Hejaz, Najd and western Mesopotamia. Downstream phylogenetic signals reveal distinct founder effects tied to regionally anchored clan structures. During the early Islamic period, some segments expanded further into Iraq and the Gulf, where they formed additional microbranches.

Geographic distribution

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

Ancient DNA

  • Bronze Age Levantine remains show J1-P58 ancestry compatible with proto ZS1499.
  • Iron Age Arabian frontier samples reveal diversification linked to early ZS1499.
  • Early Islamic burials include downstream ZS1499 derivatives.

Phylogeny & subclades

A structured J1-L147.1 lineage shaped by desert mobility systems, tribal founder events and early Semitic-speaking population dynamics.

  • ZS1499*
  • Hejaz and Najd derivatives
  • Northern Arabian clusters

Notes & context

A lineage important for reconstructing the emergence and spread of early tribal societies in northern Arabia.