The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup T2B24
Origins and Evolution
mtDNA haplogroup T2B24 is a downstream branch of T2B2 (itself a subclade of T2B within haplogroup T2). Given the position of T2B24 in the phylogenetic tree and the inferred origin of its parent clade on the Near Eastern / Mediterranean margin after the Last Glacial Maximum, T2B24 most likely arose in that same broad region during the early Holocene. Its estimated time depth (on the order of several thousand years after the T2B2 split) is consistent with a post-glacial—later Neolithic—timeframe for local diversification.
The haplogroup carries derived coding- and control-region mutations that place it as a distinct terminal lineage within T2B. Like many T2 subclades, T2B24 probably expanded in small, localized episodes driven by demographic growth of early farming communities and subsequent historical migrations, and it has remained comparatively rare in modern populations due to drift and founder effects.
Subclades (if applicable)
At present T2B24 appears to be a relatively derived, low-frequency terminal clade with few well-documented downstream branches in public reference trees. Where whole mitogenome sequencing has been available, T2B24 sequences often show a small number of private mutations indicating recent local diversification. The scarcity of large datasets specifically annotated for T2B24 means that further substructure could be revealed with expanded mitogenome sampling from the Mediterranean and Near Eastern regions.
Geographical Distribution
T2B24 is observed at low to low-moderate frequencies where its parental clade is present, with its highest relative prevalence in areas closest to the Near Eastern / Mediterranean origin. Modern occurrences are patchy and include Southern and Central Europe (Italy, Iberia, Balkans), Anatolia and the Levant, parts of North Africa at low levels, and occasional findings in the Caucasus and Central Asia. The pattern is consistent with an origin in the Near East and spread into Europe with Neolithic farmers and later population movements, followed by regional drift and founder effects.
Ancient DNA records for closely related T2B2 lineages show presence in early farmer contexts; T2B24 itself is rare in published ancient datasets but can plausibly be associated with Neolithic and post-Neolithic archaeological contexts where T2 lineages appear.
Historical and Cultural Significance
Because T2 lineages were carried by early Near Eastern farmers, T2B24 is best interpreted as part of the maternal genetic legacy of post-glacial expansions and the Neolithic spread of agriculture into Europe. Its low frequency and localized distribution mean it has not been linked to any single culture as a hallmark lineage, but it is consistent with presence among:
- Neolithic farming communities derived from Anatolian/Levantine sources
- Later Mediterranean coastal populations influenced by Greek, Roman, Byzantine, Arab and North African contacts
- Diaspora communities (including some Jewish maternal lineages) where Near Eastern maternal ancestry was retained
T2B24’s patchy modern distribution likely reflects a mix of early spread with farming, subsequent regional demographic events, and stochastic loss or preservation in specific populations.
Conclusion
T2B24 represents a comparatively rare, derived maternal lineage within the T2B2 clade that exemplifies the pattern of Near Eastern origin, Neolithic dispersal into Europe, and later regional differentiation. Its current rarity and limited representation in ancient DNA highlight the need for expanded whole-mitogenome sampling across the Mediterranean, the Near East and Europe to clarify its internal structure, exact time depth, and historical trajectories.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades (if applicable)
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Conclusion