
Haplogroup R1b (Y-DNA) - Eupedia
Migration map of Y-haplogroup R1b in the Late Neolithic and Early Bronze Age (c. 5500-3000 BCE) The Siberian & Central Asian branch When R1b crossed the Caucasus in the Late Neolithic, it split into two main groups.
Haplogroup R1b - Wikipedia
Map of Indo-European migrations from c. 4000 to 1000 BC according to the Kurgan model. The magenta area corresponds to the assumed urheimat (Samara culture, Sredny Stog culture).
New migration map of haplogroup R1b | Eupedia Forum
Jul 18, 2013 · This map shows the diffusion/migration of subclades once they have grown enough to represent a sizeable part of the lineages in a given population. This can takes centuries or millennia after the mutation for that subclade first appeared.
Maps of Y-DNA haplogroups in and around Europe - Eupedia
Their lineages belong to haplogroup R1b-S116 (aka P312), in other words most of the European R1b minus the Greco-Etruscan R1b-L23, the Germanic R1b-U106 and R1b-L238, and the Proto-Celto-Germanic L11, L51 and L150.
Haplogroup Migration Map - Phillips DNA Project
Mar 8, 2009 · Haplogroup R1b and its subgroups are predominantly found in western Europe and the British Isles. It is the most common haplogroup in Europe and a subgroup of R1b is believed by some researchers to be Celtic.
Haplogroup R1b-M269 - Indo-European.eu
These are maps of modern distribution of haplogroup R1b-M269 and its main subclades, using natural neighbour interpolation. The expansion of extant R1b-M269 subclades was most likely associated originally with the expansion of Proto-Indo-Europeans. Data used is …
FamilyTreeDNA - R1b-S1194 and Subclades Project
Mapping the locations of our direct paternal ancestors helps us see similarities and differences in migration patterns. This page displays a map of the earliest known direct paternal ancestors for project members.
SNP Tracker - Scaled Innovation
Compare R1a to R1b: They're together until they get out to Mongolia and Lake Baikal, then split with R1a taking the northern route west to Europe, while R1b retraces its ancient path and weaves around the Caspian and Black Seas, finally following the Danube valley into Europe.
R1b and Subclades Project for R1b (M343+ and M269+) Y DNA …
Mapping the locations of our direct paternal ancestors helps us see similarities and differences in migration patterns. This page displays a map of the earliest known direct paternal ancestors for project members. To display all members of the project, select All from the drop-down menu.
The migration map for R1b highlights our ancestors’ route and shows that members of this haplogroup carry the following Y-chromosome markers: M168 > M89 > M9 > M45 > M207 > M173 > M343