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Haplogroup J2a-Y16799

Macro-haplogroup
J
Parent clade
J2a-M67
Formed (estimate)
c. 8,200 to 11,500 years before present
TMRCA (estimate)
c. 3,000 to 4,500 years ago

Overview

J2a-Y16799 is a downstream lineage under J2a-M67 that appears to have formed among upland agricultural and pastoral populations of the eastern Anatolian highlands and the Armenian plateau. Its earliest diversification aligns with the mid Holocene transition in the region, where early farming settlements merged with emerging pastoral systems. Archaeological evidence from upland river basins, fortified Chalcolithic sites and high-altitude terraces fits the demographic behaviors inferred from Y16799 distributions. By the Bronze Age, Y16799-bearing communities were incorporated into the broader highland demographic zones connected with the Kura Araxes sphere and later regional polities. The lineage demonstrates strong continuity across high-altitude zones known for environmental stability and longstanding cultural persistence. Its downstream structure suggests limited but enduring demographic expansions along upland river valleys and adjacent plateaus.

Geographic distribution

Armenia, eastern Turkey, northwest Iran, northern Iraq; moderate presence in Georgia and low presence in Syria and the Levant.

Ancient DNA

  • Bronze Age Armenian plateau samples show patterns consistent with upstream phases of Y16799.
  • Chalcolithic Upper Tigris individuals contain ancestral J2a structures aligning with this branch.
  • Eastern Anatolian Bronze Age sites show continuity with Y16799-related lineages.
  • Iron Age highland peoples exhibit downstream segments tied to the clade.
  • Classical highland settlements preserve genetic continuity consistent with Y16799.

Phylogeny & subclades

A highland-oriented subbranch under J2a-M67 with several microclades concentrated in eastern Anatolia and the Armenian plateau.

  • Y16799*
  • Armenian plateau microbranches
  • Upper Euphrates derivatives

Notes & context

A structurally important highland lineage for reconstructing post-Neolithic demographic continuity in eastern Anatolia.