The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup T2B7
Origins and Evolution
mtDNA haplogroup T2B7 is a downstream lineage within haplogroup T2B, itself a branch of T2 — a clade that emerged after the Last Glacial Maximum and that is commonly associated with post-glacial re-expansions and Neolithic dispersals from the Near East into Europe. Based on the phylogenetic position of T2B7 under T2B and the distribution of related lineages in ancient and modern datasets, T2B7 most plausibly arose in the early Holocene (roughly 7–10 kya) on the Near Eastern / eastern Mediterranean margin and expanded with population movements connected to the spread of agriculture and later regional gene flow.
Genetically, T2B7 is an intermediate, regional subclade: it connects older T2B diversity with younger local branches that formed within Europe and the Near East. Its presence in both ancient farmer-associated contexts and in many modern Mediterranean populations indicates continuity and recurrent gene flow across the Aegean–Anatolian–Mediterranean corridor.
Subclades (if applicable)
As a subclade of T2B, T2B7 may itself contain further downstream branches that show more constrained geographic patterns (for example, narrowly Mediterranean or local European sub-lineages). Published population- and ancient-DNA surveys often reveal that haplogroups at this hierarchical level have modest internal diversity but can form regionally restricted subclades during the Neolithic and Bronze Age as farming groups expanded and later interacted with forager and pastoralist groups.
Geographical Distribution
T2B7 is detected at low-to-moderate frequencies across the Mediterranean basin and into parts of Europe and adjacent regions. It is most frequent and diverse in areas closest to the putative origin (Anatolia and the Levant / eastern Mediterranean), and shows a tapering distribution westward into southern and central Europe and southward into North Africa. Sporadic occurrences are recorded in the Caucasus and at low frequencies in parts of Central Asia. In modern populations, T2B7 and closely related T2B lineages are found among some Jewish communities (including Ashkenazi samples) as well as in general European and Near Eastern populations.
Ancient DNA studies commonly recover T2 (and T2B sublineages) in Early Neolithic farmer remains from Anatolia and southeast Europe, supporting a Neolithic-era movement of these mitochondrial lineages into Europe. Subsequent Bronze Age and historic-era mobility produced additional dispersal and local admixture, distributing T2B7 more widely but usually at low-to-moderate frequencies.
Historical and Cultural Significance
Because T2B7 sits within the broader T2B/T2 phylogeny associated with early farmers, its history is informative for questions about the Neolithic transition in Europe. The lineage is a genetic marker for maternal ancestry tied to the Anatolian / Near Eastern source populations that carried agriculture into Europe during the early Holocene. Its presence in ancient farmer contexts and continuity in some modern Mediterranean and European populations illustrates demographic continuity and admixture rather than wholesale replacement.
T2B7's occurrence in Jewish populations reflects the complex demographic history of these communities, including founder effects, bottlenecks, and gene flow with surrounding populations; lineages of Near Eastern origin persisting within Diaspora groups are expected for matrilineal markers that were already present in source populations.
Conclusion
T2B7 is a regional early-Holocene mtDNA lineage that helps trace maternal ancestry from the Near East into the Mediterranean and Europe, particularly in the context of Neolithic farming expansions and subsequent local demographic processes. Its pattern — moderate diversity near the eastern Mediterranean and lower frequencies across Europe, North Africa, and adjacent regions — is consistent with an origin on the Near Eastern / Mediterranean fringe followed by spread with early farmers and later mobility.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades (if applicable)
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Conclusion