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mtDNA Haplogroup • Maternal Lineage

R1A1

mtDNA Haplogroup R1A1

~18,000 years ago
South Asia
1 subclades
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Chapter I

The Story

The journey of mtDNA haplogroup R1A1

Origins and Evolution

mtDNA haplogroup R1A1 is a downstream branch of haplogroup R1A, itself a regional derivative of haplogroup R that became established in South Asia during the Late Upper Paleolithic. Based on phylogenetic position and the inferred age of the parent clade, R1A1 most likely arose after the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) in a South Asian refugium or locally expanding population roughly in the range of the Late Pleistocene to early Holocene (estimated ~18 kya). Its emergence reflects continued diversification of R-derived maternal lineages within South Asia as hunter-gatherer groups adapted to post-glacial environments and later cultural transitions.

Subclades

As a subclade of R1A, R1A1 may contain further downstream branches defined by private control-region and coding-region mutations identified in population sampling and a small number of ancient DNA contexts. Where sampling density is limited, subclade resolution is incomplete; additional whole-mitochondrial sequencing in South and Central Asia is likely to reveal more internal structure. Current evidence indicates R1A1 is one of several regional offshoots of R that contributed to the maternal diversity of South Asia alongside sister lineages such as R1B/R2.

Geographical Distribution

R1A1 is concentrated in South Asia, especially among populations in the Indian subcontinent (India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka), where it is most commonly sampled. It also occurs at moderate to low frequencies in Central Asia (e.g., Tajik and Uzbek populations and neighboring groups), and at low, sporadic frequencies in parts of Southeast and East Asia — often in coastal or long-distance contact populations. Modern diaspora communities with South Asian ancestry (South Asian diasporas in Europe, North America, and elsewhere) also carry R1A1 at low frequencies due to recent migration. The geographic pattern is consistent with an origin within South Asia followed by limited regional dispersals rather than a major continent-scale expansion.

Historical and Cultural Significance

Because R1A1 is primarily a South Asian maternal lineage that predates many recent cultural complexes, its significance is largely in tracing prehistoric population structure and continuity in the subcontinent. The lineage likely persisted through Mesolithic and Neolithic periods, contributing maternally to populations that later participated in regional cultural developments. In regions where it occurs at low frequency outside South Asia, its presence often reflects historical contacts, trade, migration, or small-scale gene flow rather than mass replacement. Limited ancient DNA hits attributed to R1A1 indicate continuity in at least some archaeological contexts, but the sample size remains small and conclusions should be cautious.

Conclusion

mtDNA R1A1 represents a regional maternal branch of the R macro-haplogroup that diversified in South Asia after the LGM and remains most characteristic of South Asian maternal lineages. It is useful for studies of South Asian prehistory, patterns of maternal continuity versus admixture, and tracing low-frequency dispersals into Central, Southeast and East Asia and modern diasporas. Greater sequencing coverage and ancient DNA sampling across South and Central Asia will refine its internal structure, age estimates, and historical dynamics.

Key Points

  • Origins and Evolution
  • Subclades
  • Geographical Distribution
  • Historical and Cultural Significance
  • Conclusion
Chapter II

Tree & Relationships

Phylogenetic context and subclades

Evolution Path

This haplogroup's evolutionary journey from its earliest ancestor to the present.

Steps Haplogroup Age Estimate Archaeology Era Time Passed Immediate Descendants Tested Modern Descendants Ancient Connections
1 R1A1 Current ~18,000 years ago 🏹 Mesolithic 18,000 years 1 7 0
2 R1A ~25,000 years ago 🦴 Paleolithic 25,000 years 1 8 8
3 R1 ~40,000 years ago 🦴 Paleolithic 40,000 years 4 11 8
4 R ~60,000 years ago 🦴 Paleolithic 60,000 years 12 10,987 57
5 N ~60,000 years ago 🦴 Paleolithic 60,000 years 15 15,452 13
6 L3 ~70,000 years ago 🦴 Paleolithic 70,000 years 11 17,621 6
7 L ~160,000 years ago 🦴 Paleolithic 160,000 years 7 18,987 5
Chapter III

Where in the World

Geographic distribution and modern presence

Place of Origin

South Asia

Modern Distribution

The populations where mtDNA haplogroup R1A1 is found include:

  1. South Asian populations (India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka)
  2. Central Asian populations (e.g., Tajik, Uzbek and neighboring groups)
  3. Southeast Asian populations (low frequency; e.g., mainland SE Asian groups)
  4. East Asian populations (sporadic, low frequency occurrences)
  5. Diaspora communities with South Asian ancestry
CHAPTER IV

When in Time

Your haplogroup in the context of human history

~20k years ago

Last Glacial Maximum

Peak of the last ice age, populations isolated

~18k years ago

Haplogroup R1A1

Your mtDNA haplogroup emerged in South Asia

South Asia
~10k years ago

Neolithic Revolution

Agriculture begins, settled communities form

~5k years ago

Bronze Age

Metalworking, writing, and early civilizations

~3k years ago

Iron Age

Iron tools, expanded trade networks

~2k years ago

Classical Antiquity

Greek and Roman civilizations flourish

Present

Present Day

Modern era

Your Haplogroup
Historical Era
Chapter IV-B

Linked Cultures

Ancient cultures associated with mtDNA haplogroup R1A1

Cultural Heritage

These ancient cultures have been linked to haplogroup R1A1 based on matching ancient DNA samples from archaeological excavations. The presence of this haplogroup in these cultures provides insights into the migrations and population movements of populations carrying this haplogroup.

Bell Beaker Bronze Age Moldovan Caucasus Chalcolithic Corded Ware Early Bronze Age Armenian Maikop-Novosvobodnaya North Caucasus Culture Serbian Bronze Age Unetice Yamnaya Yamnaya Culture
Culture assignments are based on archaeological context of ancient DNA samples and may represent regional associations during specific time periods.
Chapter V

Sample Catalog

Top 50 ancient DNA samples directly related to haplogroup R1A1 or parent clades

50 / 50 samples
Portrait Sample Country Era Date Culture mtDNA Match
Portrait of ancient individual I3614 from Taiwan, dated 1 CE - 800 CE
I3614
Taiwan Iron Age Taiwan 1 CE - 800 CE Taiwanese Iron R Direct
Portrait of ancient individual I3618 from Taiwan, dated 1 CE - 800 CE
I3618
Taiwan Iron Age Taiwan 1 CE - 800 CE Taiwanese Iron R Direct
Portrait of ancient individual I8071 from Taiwan, dated 1 CE - 800 CE
I8071
Taiwan Iron Age Taiwan 1 CE - 800 CE Taiwanese Iron R Direct
Portrait of ancient individual I8076 from Taiwan, dated 1 CE - 800 CE
I8076
Taiwan Iron Age Taiwan 1 CE - 800 CE Taiwanese Iron R30 Direct
Portrait of ancient individual I13697 from Taiwan, dated 1 CE - 800 CE
I13697
Taiwan Iron Age Taiwan 1 CE - 800 CE Taiwanese Iron R Direct
Portrait of ancient individual I3620 from Taiwan, dated 22 CE - 201 CE
I3620
Taiwan Iron Age Taiwan 22 CE - 201 CE Taiwanese Iron R Direct
Portrait of ancient individual I3615 from Taiwan, dated 32 CE - 206 CE
I3615
Taiwan Iron Age Taiwan 32 CE - 206 CE Taiwanese Iron R Direct
Portrait of ancient individual I7714 from Pakistan, dated 45 BCE - 66 CE
I7714
Pakistan Historic Barikot 45 BCE - 66 CE Barikot R30b1 Direct
Portrait of ancient individual I1680 from Cambodia, dated 78 CE - 234 CE
I1680
Cambodia Iron Age Cambodia 78 CE - 234 CE Cambodian Iron Age R30 Direct
Portrait of ancient individual I15519 from Serbia, dated 100 CE - 300 CE
I15519
Serbia Roman Serbia 100 CE - 300 CE Roman Provincial R0a2d Direct
Chapter VI

Carrier Distribution Map

Geographic distribution of 100 ancient DNA samples carrying haplogroup R1A1

Time Period Filter
All Time Periods
Showing all samples
Each marker represents an ancient individual
Chapter VII

Temporal Distribution

Distribution of carriers across archaeological periods

Chapter VIII

Geographic Distribution

Distribution of carriers by country of origin

Chapter IX

Country × Era Distribution

Cross-tabulation of carrier countries and archaeological periods

Data

Data & Provenance

Source information and data quality

Last Updated 2026-02-16
Confidence Score 50/100
Coverage Low
Data Source

We use the latest phylotree for MTDNA haplogroup classification and data.