The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup H2
Origins and Evolution
mtDNA haplogroup H2 is a daughter lineage of haplogroup H, which itself derives from HV. Based on the phylogenetic position of H2 within H and the distribution of derived mutations observed in modern and ancient mitogenomes, H2 probably arose in the Near East or adjacent West Asian regions in the Late Upper Paleolithic (roughly ~18 kya), after the initial diversification of H. Like other H subclades, H2 shows a pattern of persistence in West Asia and dispersal into Europe during post‑glacial re-expansions and the Neolithic demographic transitions.
Subclades
H2 includes several downstream lineages that have been recognized in mitogenome sequencing projects (often annotated as H2a, H2b, etc., with further fine structure depending on dataset resolution). Some subclades show more restricted geographic affinities (for example, lineages more common in the Caucasus or Anatolia), while others are detected sporadically across Europe. Ongoing full mitogenome surveys continue to refine the internal branching order and age estimates of these subclades.
Geographical Distribution
H2 has a broad but generally low-to-moderate frequency distribution. It is observed across Western and Eastern Europe (often at lower frequency than the dominant H1 and H3 subclades), in the Caucasus, in Anatolia and the Levant, and at low frequencies in North Africa, parts of Central Asia and South Asia. Ancient DNA studies have recovered H2 in Neolithic farmer contexts as well as in later prehistoric and historical samples, indicating that H2 lineages were part of both early farming communities and subsequent population movements in Europe and adjacent regions.
Historical and Cultural Significance
H2 is not typically associated with a single archaeological culture but appears in multiple contexts. It is represented in Neolithic farmer assemblages (consistent with a Near Eastern origin and farmer-mediated dispersal into Europe), and it also persists into Bronze Age and later contexts in Europe and the Caucasus. Because H2 co-occurs with both farmer-associated mtDNA lineages (e.g., certain J and K lineages) and with haplogroups more characteristic of indigenous European hunter-gatherers in mixed assemblages, it illustrates the complex maternal ancestry of prehistoric Eurasian populations.
Conclusion
As a subclade of the highly successful haplogroup H, H2 reflects a Near Eastern Late Upper Paleolithic origin with subsequent involvement in the Neolithic spread of farming and later prehistoric movements across Europe and West Asia. Though not as frequent as H1 or H3 in modern Western Europe, H2 contributes important maternal diversity to studies of population history and is increasingly documented in high-resolution ancient DNA and mitogenome datasets.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Conclusion