The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup T2H3
Origins and Evolution
T2H3 is a derived subclade of mtDNA haplogroup T2H, itself a branch of the broader T2 lineage associated with early farmers stemming from the Near East. Based on the phylogenetic position of T2H3 beneath T2H and on comparative coalescence estimates for neighbouring subclades, T2H3 most likely arose during the late Chalcolithic to early Bronze Age (roughly 4–5 kya) in the Near East or eastern Mediterranean region. Its origin post-dates the main post-Last Glacial Maximum T2 expansions, but it derives from maternal lineages that were already established in the Near East during the Neolithic.
Subclades
At present T2H3 is a relatively narrowly distributed subclade in public databases and published literature, with limited documented internal substructure compared with older branches of T2. A few reports note minor downstream branches or private mutations within T2H3 in modern and ancient samples, but the subclade has not (yet) been shown to split into widely recognized named sublineages at scale. As more full mitogenomes are published, additional internal branches (e.g., T2H3a, T2H3b in private nomenclature) may be defined.
Geographical Distribution
T2H3 is observed at low to moderate frequencies across the Mediterranean and parts of Europe and the Near East. The highest relative densities occur in southern European populations (Italy, Greece, parts of the western Balkans) and in some Near Eastern coastal and island populations, consistent with a maritime and coastal-biased dispersal. Lower frequencies are found in Central and Eastern Europe, the northern Mediterranean coast of North Africa, and pockets of the Caucasus and parts of Central Asia. T2-derived lineages, including T2H and its subclades, are also found in various Jewish populations at low frequencies, reflecting shared Near Eastern maternal ancestry and subsequent diasporic movements.
Historical and Cultural Significance
Because T2H3 is nested within a lineage associated with Neolithic farmers, its presence in Europe reflects the long-term demographic impact of Near Eastern maternal lineages. However, the timing of T2H3's emergence suggests that much of its geographic spread occurred later than the first Neolithic agricultural dispersals—during the Chalcolithic and Bronze Age and through historical-era maritime and trade expansions in the Mediterranean (for example Phoenician, Greek and Roman periods can account for some local enrichments). T2-type haplogroups frequently co-occur with Y-chromosome lineages associated with early farmers (notably G2a in early Neolithic contexts), and in later periods may appear alongside a wider mix of paternal lineages (R1b, I2, etc.) as populations admixed.
Conclusion
T2H3 is a geographically focussed, relatively young branch of the T2H maternal clade that likely originated in the Near East / eastern Mediterranean in the late Chalcolithic to early Bronze Age and subsequently dispersed into Mediterranean Europe, parts of Central and Eastern Europe, North Africa and neighboring regions. Its distribution and frequencies today reflect layered prehistoric and historic movements—initial Neolithic substrate from which it derived, followed by later regionally-specific expansions and maritime-mediated gene flow. Continued mitogenome sequencing from modern and ancient samples will refine its internal structure and precise phylogeographic history.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Conclusion