The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup M28B
Origins and Evolution
mtDNA haplogroup M28B sits beneath haplogroup M28, itself a downstream branch of macro-haplogroup M (linked ultimately to M2 in the South Asian phylogeny). Based on the phylogenetic position of M28 and the geographic patterning of related lineages, M28B most plausibly arose on the Indian subcontinent in the early Holocene (after the Last Glacial Maximum), at an estimated time depth on the order of ~12 kya. Its emergence reflects a local diversification event of deeply rooted South Asian maternal lineages, consistent with post-LGM population fragmentation and later regional persistence.
Paleogenetic and modern mtDNA survey data from South Asia show many low-frequency, regionally restricted M subclades; M28B fits this pattern, exhibiting limited haplotype diversity and geographically patchy distribution suggestive of founder effects, genetic drift in small populations, or long-term isolation in tribal and indigenous groups.
Subclades (if applicable)
At present, M28B appears to be a relatively narrow clade with few well-documented downstream sublineages in public databases and the literature. Where subclades are reported, they tend to be private or locally restricted haplotypes observed in single or a small number of samples. The low internal diversity of M28B suggests either a recent origin relative to deeper M branches or demographic processes (bottlenecks, small effective population sizes) that have limited diversification.
Geographical Distribution
M28B is concentrated in South Asia with very low to sporadic frequencies across adjoining regions. It is primarily reported from indigenous and tribal populations in peninsular and central India, with lower-frequency occurrences among Dravidian- and Indo-Aryan-speaking groups. Sri Lanka (including indigenous Veddah and other communities) records some instances, and occasional detections appear in Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal and Himalayan foothill groups. Modern diaspora samples (Middle East, Europe, etc.) sometimes carry isolated M28B haplotypes reflecting recent migration from South Asia. The overall geographic picture is one of a locally rooted maternal lineage maintained at low frequency by long-term regional continuity.
Historical and Cultural Significance
M28B is best interpreted as part of the indigenous maternal substrate of South Asia rather than as a marker of later large-scale migrations (for example, Bronze Age steppe expansions). Its associations with tribal and Adivasi communities imply continuity from pre-Neolithic or early-Neolithic populations into later cultural horizons. While not diagnostic of a single archaeological culture, M28B likely persisted through Mesolithic-to-Neolithic transitions in the subcontinent and contributed to the maternal ancestry of both rural and some urbanizing groups over millennia.
From a cultural-genetic perspective, M28B helps illuminate microevolutionary processes in South Asia: localized lineage survival, drift in small or endogamous groups, and limited dispersal beyond the subcontinent until modern times. It thus is a useful marker in studies of regional maternal continuity and the deep structure of South Asian population history.
Conclusion
M28B is a narrow, low-frequency mtDNA subclade of M28 centered on the Indian subcontinent, reflecting early Holocene diversification within South Asia. Its restricted distribution and low diversity make it most informative for regional studies of indigenous maternal lineages and demographic processes (founder effects, drift, and long-term continuity) rather than for tracing major prehistoric migrations across Eurasia.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades (if applicable)
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Conclusion