meanwhile back in africa about 40,000 bc another mutation, m96, occurred on the
DESCRIPTION
M130. M91. M96. M60. Meanwhile back in Africa about 40,000 BC another mutation, M96, occurred on the the M168 lineage. This M96 marker is at the root of yDNA haplogroup E. M168. NEXT. yDNA Haplogroup E. yDNA Haplogroup E. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Meanwhile back in Africa about 40,000 BCanother mutation, M96, occurred on the the M168 lineage. This M96 marker is atthe root of yDNA haplogroup E.
M168
M60
M91
M130
M96
NEXT
yDNA Haplogroup EyDNA Haplogroup E
Haplogroup E (M96) arose in NE Africa about 40,000 years ago as a branch of the M168 lineage and later split into two quite distinct subgroups, E3a and E3b.
NEXT
M96
Haplogroup E (M96) arose in NE Africa about 40,000 years ago as a branch of the M168 lineage and later split into two quite distinct subgroups, E3a and E3b.
E3a -About 30,000 BC the M2 mutationdeveloped on the earlier M96 lineage andresulted in the very large E3a haplogroup, which spread throughout Africa, especiallyWest Africa, and represents most all African American Y-chromosomes today.
Ben, Marc and Rafiq from our CSUEB sample belong to haplogroup E3a.
NEXT
M2
M96
E3a
Haplogroup E (M96) arose in NE Africa about 40,000 years ago as a branch of the M168 lineage and later split into two quite distinct subgroups, E3a and E3b. .
E3a -About 30,000 BC the M2 mutationdeveloped on the earlier M96 lineage andresulted in the very large E3a haplogroup, which spread throughout Africa, especiallyWest Africa, and represents most all African American Y chromosomes today.
E3b - about 20,000 BC in the Near Eastanother mutation occurred in a separate pop-ulation of the M96 lineage. This marker (M35)defines haplogroup E3b, which spread into Europe during the Neolithic and occurs in high frequencies among Jewish men.
M35
NEXT
M2
M96
E3b
Dark blue = the geographicaldistribution of haplogroup E.
NEXT
The End
A kiosk presentationprepared for the exhibition
March 2 to June 15, 2007
For more information visit our web site:
http://class.csueastbay.edu/anthropologymuseum