- Haplogroup J1 (Y-DNA)
Haplogroup J1 appears at high frequencies among populations of
Arabian Peninsula ,Southern Levant ,North Africa , andDagestan . J1 was spread by two temporally distinct migratory episodes, the most recent one probably associated with the diffusion of Muslims from Arabia since the 6th century CE. [http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/cgi-bin/resolve?id=doi:10.1086/386295&erFrom=5225318908079357297Guest#pref]Distribution
Haplogroup J1 is most frequent in the Arabian peninsula (
Yemen 85% [http://thegeneticatlas.com/Arabid_Y-DNA] , Hadramawt - Yemen 72%, Qatar 58%) (Cadenas et al. 2008). Its also very frequent, but exclusive to a relatively smaller isolated population inDagestan (Avars 67%,Lezgins 58% (Yunusbaev et al.)J1 in general frequent amongst
Arabs of the southernLevant , i.e. Palestinian Arabs (38.4%) (Semino et al.) and ArabBedouins (62% and 82% in Negev desert Bedouins). It is also very common among other Arabic-speaking populations, such as those of Algeria (35%), Syria (30%), Iraq (33%), theSinai Peninsula , and theArabian Peninsula . The frequency of Haplogroup J1 collapses suddenly at the borders of Arabic countries with mainly non-Arabic countries, such as Turkey and Iran, yet it is found at low frequency among the populations of those countries, as well as inCyprus ,Sicily and theIberian Peninsula . It enteredEthiopia in theNeolithic with theNeolithic Revolution and spread of agriculture, where it is found mainly among Semitic speakers 11% Eritrea & 9 % Ethiopia (amhara 33.3%). It spread later to North Africa in historic times (as identified by the motif YCAIIa22-YCAIIb22; Algerians 35.0%, Tunisians 30.1%), where it became something like a marker of the Arab expansion in the early medieval period (Semino et al. 2004). Researchers believe that marker DYS388=17 (Y DNA tests forSTR - Short Tandem Repeater) is linked with the later expansion of Arabian tribes in the southern Levant and northern Africa (Di Giacomo et al. 2004).Haplogroup J1 is found almost exclusively among modern populations of the
Southwest Asia ,North Africa , and theHorn of Africa , essentially delineating the region popularly known as theMiddle East and associated with speakers ofSemitic languages andDagestani languages . The distribution of J1 outside of the Middle East may be associated with Arabs and Phoenicians who traded and conquered in Sicily, southern Italy, Spain, Azerbaijan, Turkey, and Pakistan, or withJew s, who have historical origins in the Middle East and speak (or historically spoke) a Semitic language, though typically Haplogroup J2 is more than twice as common among Jews. In Jewish populations overall, J1 constitutes 19.0% of the Ashkenazim results and 11.9% of the Sephardic results (Semino et al. 2004)(Behar et al. 2004). Haplogroup J1 with marker DYS388=13 is a distinctive type found in eastern Anatolia (Cinnioglu et al. 2004).Y-chromosomal Aaron
A subset of Haplogroup J1 and J2 is found in a high proportion (about 65%) of Jewish males with the surname
Cohen or its variants, less frequently among other Jews (25%) and other Middle-Eastern people (22% or less) [cite journal | last = Ekins | first = JE | coauthors = E.N. Tinah, N.M. Myres, K.H. Ritchie, U.A. Perego, J.B. Ekins, L.A.D. Hutchison, L. Layton, M.L. Lunt, S.S. Masek, A.A. Nelson, M.E. Nelson, K.L. Pennington, J.L. Peterson, T. Tolley, S.R. Woodward | year = 2005 | url = http://www.smgf.org/resources/papers/ASHG2005_Jayne.pdf | title = An Updated World-Wide Characterization of the Cohen Modal Haplotype | journal = ASHG meeting October 2005 ] . This J1 variant was called the Cohen modal haplotype. This discovery confirms the Biblical and priestly claim of a common patrilineal descent, namely fromAaron , hence the nicknameY-chromosomal Aaron .References
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