Haplogroup J-M172

In, Haplogroup J2 (M172) is a  which is a subdivision of.

Haplogroup J2 is widely believed to be associated with the spread of agriculture from the northern, the , and ,. This connection is supported by its age (8,500 +/- 3,500 thousand years ago), which is very close to the beginning of the , its distribution, which is centered in West Asia and Southeastern Europe, as well as its association with the presence of archaeological artifacts, such as figurines and painted pottery.

Distribution
Haplogroup J2 is found mainly in the northern Fertile Crescent, the Mediterranean (including Southern Europe and North Africa), the Iranian plateau and Central Asia. [Semino et Al., 2004], in 33%  and  and Balkan]], and more frequently in  28% of the population (semino et al), 25% of the population,, in  25% of the population, in , in ,  in  , in  , and in the southern  region. According to Semino et al and the National Geographic genographic project, the Frequency of haplogroup J2 generally declines as one moves away from the Northern fertile crescent. Haplogroup J2 is carried by 6% of Europeans and its frequency drops dramatically as one moves northward away from the Mediterranean. Sephardic Jews have roughly twice as much J2 as J1 and Ashkenazi Jews have a near equal proportion of J1 and J2 haplogroup markers. (Behar et al.) J2 (M-172) is divided into eight sub-Haplogroups defined by mutations M12/M102, M47, M67/M92, M68, M137, M158, M339, and M340 (see Diagram), four of which occur at informative frequencies [Simono et Al., 2004] , The less-heterogeneous J2 (J-M172), which occurs as frequently as J1( J-M267) in some Middle Eastern populations, is the more prevalent in Europe. J-M102 illustrates population expansions from the southern Balkans. J-M67 is most frequent in the Caucasus (Georgia), and J-M92, which indicates affinity between Anatolia and southern Italy. Whereas J-M67* and J-M92 show higher frequencies and variances in Europe and in Turkey. Likewise, J-M47 and J-M68 characterize very few Near Eastern and Asian samples.

In Italy, one of the European countries with the highest frequencies of J2, it has been found in the remains of ancient, who spoke a non-Indo-European language of unknown affinity. Another important fact about the distribution of Haplogroup J2 is that it appears to have dispersed from a ern homeland to the west through a primarily maritime or littoral route, as it is found in high concentrations among the populations of the coasts of the in both Eurasia and Africa, and particularly along the coasts of the eastern Mediterranean in Europe. This distribution may be more consonant with a Neolithic or post-Neolithic maritime dispersal from the Middle East, such as through n commercial and colonial activities, or even through colonization.

Turkey is one of the countries with major J2 population. About 25% of Turkish men are J2 according to a recent study. Combined with J1, one third of the total population of Turkish people belongs to Haplogroup J.

Typically, modern populations of the southern Middle East (especially -speaking ones) have a higher frequency of the related haplogroup J1, whereas the great majority of Haplogroup J representatives among the populations of the Northern Middle East, Lebanon, Europe, and India belong to the subclade J2. Haplogroup J2 has been shown to have a more northerly distribution in the Middle East when compared to its brother haplogroup, J1, which has a more southerly distribution. This suggests that, if the occurrence of Haplogroup J among modern populations of Europe, Central Asia, and South Asia does reflect Neolithic from the Middle East, the source population is more likely to have originated from, the  or northern  than from regions further south. .

Subdivisions
Haplogroup J2 is subdivided into two complementary sub-haplogroups: J2a, defined by the M410 genetic marker, and J2b, defined by the M12 genetic marker. A subclade of haplogroup J2a, defined by the M92 marker has been implicated in the ancient colonization.

The s of Haplogroup J2 with their defining mutation, according to the 2006 ISOGG tree:


 * J2 (M172)
 * J2*
 * J2a (M410)
 * J2a*
 * J2a1 (DYS413≤18)
 * J2a1*
 * J2a1a (M47, M322)
 * J2a1b (M67 (S51))
 * J2a1b*
 * J2a1b1 (M92, M260)
 * J2a1b1*
 * J2a1b1a (M327)
 * J2a1b2 (M163, M166)
 * J2a1c (M68)
 * J2a1d (M137)
 * J2a1e (M158)
 * J2a1f (M289)
 * J2a1g (M318)
 * J2a1h (M319)
 * J2a1i (M339)
 * J2a1j (M419)
 * J2a1k (DYS445≤7)
 * J2a2 (M340)
 * J2b (M12, M314, M221)
 * J2b*
 * J2b1 (M102)
 * J2b1*
 * J2b1a (M241)
 * J2b1a*
 * J2b1a1 (M99)
 * J2b1a2 (M280)
 * J2b1a3 (M321)
 * J2b1b (M205)