The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup H28
Origins and Evolution
mtDNA haplogroup H28 is a downstream lineage within the broader H2 branch of mitochondrial haplogroup H. Its deeper parent H2 is inferred to have arisen in the Near East / West Asia during the Late Upper Paleolithic (~18 kya). Based on its phylogenetic position and the geographic pattern of modern and ancient occurrences, H28 most likely diversified in the early Holocene (roughly around 9 kya) during or shortly after the initial spread of Near Eastern agricultural populations into Europe. H28 represents a relatively rare, regionally restricted lineage compared with major H subclades like H1 and H3.
Subclades
At present, H28 shows limited internal diversification in published surveys and databases. A small number of downstream or derivative lineages have been reported in regional sequencing studies, but none reach high frequency or broad geographic breadth. As more full mitogenomes are sampled, additional minor subclades of H28 may be resolved; current data indicate H28 behaves as a shallow Holocene lineage with a few localized branches.
Geographical Distribution
H28 is detected at low to moderate frequencies in parts of Southern and Western Europe and at low frequencies in the Near East and the Caucasus. Reported modern occurrences are most concentrated in:
- Iberian Peninsula (particularly sporadic findings in Spain and Portugal)
- Southern Europe (Italy, parts of the Balkans and Greece)
- Anatolia and the Levant (low-frequency occurrences)
- The Caucasus (rare reports)
- North Africa (isolated, low-frequency findings, likely reflecting Mediterranean gene flow)
The distribution suggests initial Near Eastern derivation followed by westward movement with Neolithic farmers and continued local survival and drift in some European regions. H28 is relatively rare in northern and central Europe and in large continental regions of Asia.
Historical and Cultural Significance
Because of its timing and distribution, H28 is most plausibly associated with Neolithic farmer expansions out of the Near East into Europe, and with subsequent local demographic processes (founder effects, drift, and admixture). Its presence at low frequency in Bronze Age and later contexts in some regional ancient DNA datasets is consistent with continuity of maternal lineages in local populations rather than large-scale population replacement. In regions such as Iberia and parts of the Mediterranean, H28 may mark small-scale maternal continuity from Neolithic or post-Neolithic communities into the historic period.
Conclusion
H28 is a minor but informative branch of H2, best interpreted as an early Holocene Near Eastern-derived maternal lineage that dispersed into Europe with agriculturalists and persisted at low frequencies, especially in Mediterranean Europe and adjacent regions. Its rarity makes it a useful marker for fine-scale studies of regional maternal continuity and migration when full mitogenomes are available.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Conclusion