A · A1 · A1b · A1b1 · BT · CT · CF · F · K · K2 · P · R · R1 · R1b · R-M343 · R-L754 · R-L389 · R-P297 · R-M73 · R-M478 · R-Y14054 · R-L1432 · R-Y14051 · R-Y134928

Haplogroup R-Y134928

Macro-haplogroup
R
Parent clade
R-Y14051
Formed (estimate)
c. 3000 - 4200 years before present
TMRCA (estimate)
c. 1200 - 1800 years ago

Overview

Haplogroup R-Y134928 is a significant downstream branch under R-Y14051, representing one of the principal paternal lineages tied to early Inner Asian pastoral groups. Emerging during the transition from the Late Bronze Age to the Early Iron Age, Y134928 developed within steppe populations that maintained strong mobility across the Altai, Sayan and western Mongolian zones. Present-day carriers of Y134928 appear most frequently in northern China, Inner Mongolia, Xinjiang and portions of Mongolia, with additional presence in Kazakh and Siberian groups. This distribution suggests an origin associated with eastern steppe confederations that later interacted both culturally and biologically with Turkic and Mongolic speaking populations. Y134928's internal diversity indicates explosive demographic growth during the early medieval period, coinciding with historical expansions of Turkic and para-Turkic groups. Its deep rooted presence in northern China also implies incorporation into early state formations and multiethnic steppe-frontier societies.

Geographic distribution

Strongest in northern China and Inner Mongolia, moderate in Mongolia and Xinjiang, present at lower levels in Kazakhstan and western Siberia.

Ancient DNA

  • Early Iron Age individuals from Mongolia and the eastern Altai sometimes fall phylogenetically close to Y134928.
  • Medieval burials linked to early Turkic and Mongolic polities contain R-M478 lineages consistent with Y134928.
  • Genomes from multiethnic frontier polities in northern China show evidence of Y134928 related ancestry.

Phylogeny & subclades

Y134928 forms a major downstream branch of Y14051 and contains multiple microclades distributed across northern China, Xinjiang and Central Asia. These include recently identified sublineages such as FT166557-related clusters.

  • R-Y134928*
  • Northern China derived subclusters
  • Xinjiang steppe microclades

Notes & context

Y134928 bridges Central Asian and East Asian paternal histories and is crucial for reconstructing early Turkic and Mongolic ethnohistorical processes.