The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup T2F
Origins and Evolution
T2F is a downstream subclade of mitochondrial haplogroup T2, itself a branch of the broader JT lineage. Haplogroup T2 is thought to have originated in the Near East and diversified during the Late Glacial and early Holocene; T2F appears to be one of the later-branching lineages within T2, plausibly arising in the early Holocene (roughly the early Neolithic period, on the order of ~9 kya). As with other T2 subclades, T2F represents a maternal lineage that expanded both within the Near East and into Europe during the Neolithic transition and subsequent population movements.
Subclades
T2F is generally described as a relatively low-diversity, low-frequency subclade of T2. Where genetic surveys have sufficient resolution, T2F may show limited internal substructure (for example, localized sub-branches defined by one or a few private mutations), but it is not among the large, widely diversified T2 subclades. Because T2F is uncommon, many published datasets group it with other rare T2 lineages unless full mitogenome sequencing is available to resolve its internal branches.
Geographical Distribution
Modern and ancient DNA evidence places T2F primarily around the Near East and Mediterranean, with spillover into Southern, Central and Eastern Europe, lower-frequency presence in North Africa and scattered occurrences in the Caucasus and parts of Central Asia. Modern frequencies are generally low (typically well under a few percent in most populations) but detectable in population-level surveys of southern European and Levantine groups. T2F has been reported in archaeological samples as well — the dataset referenced includes 8 ancient DNA occurrences, indicating that T2F was present in past populations and contributed to maternal diversity in Neolithic and later contexts.
Historical and Cultural Significance
Given its phylogenetic placement and geographic pattern, T2F most plausibly spread into Europe with the early farmers from the Near East (the Neolithic expansion) and persisted at low frequency through later demographic events. It is therefore associated with the broad archaeological phenomenon of agricultural dispersal across the Mediterranean and into continental Europe (e.g., Cardial/Impressed Ware and LBK-related expansions), and it can be found in modern populations that trace maternal ancestry to those regions. T2 lineages, including T2F, are also observed at low frequencies in some Jewish populations, consistent with shared maternal ancestries linking the Levant and diasporic communities.
Conclusion
T2F is a minor but informative maternal lineage within the T2 clade that reflects Near Eastern/ Mediterranean origins and Neolithic dispersals into Europe. Its low frequency and limited diversity mean it often requires full mitogenome analysis to identify and place accurately, but when detected it contributes to reconstructions of female-mediated migrations and regional maternal continuity from the early Holocene to the present.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Conclusion