A · BT · CT · CF · F · J · J1-M267 · J1-P58 · J1-L147.1 · J1-ZS510

Haplogroup J1-ZS510

Macro-haplogroup
J
Parent clade
J1-L147.1
Formed (estimate)
c. 5,200 to 6,900 years before present
TMRCA (estimate)
c. 1,800 to 2,800 years ago

Overview

J1-ZS510 is a downstream lineage within the extensive J1-L147.1 cluster, representing one of the Arabian-rooted branches that expanded during the late Neolithic and early Bronze Age. Its ancestral populations participated in the shift toward mobile pastoralism across the northern Arabian plateau, forming part of the demographic substrate that supported early Semitic-speaking pastoral groups. Environmental fluctuations and resource-driven mobility were key factors shaping the early formation of the lineage. During the Bronze and Iron Ages, ZS510-bearing groups were active along the desert frontiers connecting northern Arabia with the southern Levant and Mesopotamia. The phylogenetic segmentation of the clade displays clear founder effects tied to tribal expansions and caravan-linked mobility networks. Several downstream branches appear to correspond to historically documented tribes during the early Islamic and pre-Islamic periods.

Geographic distribution

Highest frequencies in Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Iraq; moderate in Syria and Kuwait; minor in Egypt and Iran.

Ancient DNA

  • Bronze Age Levant individuals show J1-P58 variants compatible with the ancestral cluster of ZS510.
  • Iron Age desert frontier populations exhibit patterns matching early ZS510 diversification.
  • Early Islamic urban sites contain downstream microclades associated with the lineage.

Phylogeny & subclades

A structured J1-L147.1 branch marked by Arabian plateau expansions, tribal founder events and regionally coherent microbranches.

  • ZS510*
  • Arabian interior derivatives
  • Levantine subbranches

Notes & context

A lineage essential to understanding early North Arabian demographic expansions and tribal networks.