HAPLOGROUP STUDIES 2 © Edited by Robert Hedges VIIII
Hg I1a (M170, M253) is composed of Haplotype # 112-115. (old sort method)
M89 -> M170 = Hg I (with M258) accounts on average for 18% of total paternal lineage in Europe. It is virtually absent elsewhere, making it a strictly European Y chromosome. M170 seems to be 37% in a study of 16 Y chromosomes in Germany. Hg I is 38+% in a study of 194 Y chromosomes of Danes, 40+% in studies of 168 Swedes and 72 Norwgians. Hg I accounts for more than 33% of paternal lines in Scandinavian populations, and in the north-west Balkans. Slovinians and Macedonians are statistically significantly Hg I while their near neighbors the Italians and Greeks are not. Croations, Bosnians, and Herzegovians are Hg I descendants in many cases.
Hg I occurs as 22% of the Ukrane and 11% in France, of which Hg I1a is 5%, with a relatively higher frequency in southern France.
Hg I is 23.8% and Hg I1a is 11.9% ((near half) in Low Normandy. (Low refers to elevation, with mountains being high land.)
SubHaplogroup I1a (with M307 or M253) is found mostly in northern Europe, with it's highest frequencies in Scandinavian populations, where it accounts for 88%-100% of Norwegian, Swedish, and Saami (Lapp reindeer herdsmen) Hg I (M170) lineages.
SubHg I1b (P 37) is virtually absent in Scandinavia.
One source says the mutations P19 and M170 which define haplogroup I, occurred about 5,950 years ago, with a standard deviation of 2,450 yrs. The secondary mutations should not be allowed to confuse you.
A study in Iceland with it's inbred "scandia" population (and high proportion of slave genes - mostly female) resulted in: (lost paragraph)
A control group of 222 Irish tested for five DYS values yielded only (2) matches to I1*.
No family tree's male line can safely be "proven" by a single member's blood test. I, (RH9) have a close match to a local settler named in a deed dated 1805. The male line of this neighboring settler is traced back to Kilmarnock, Scotland, before emigrating to the colonies, and moving to Prince William VA at one time and then to Nelson Co. KY. I need results from several Hedges descendants to determine the absolute Hedges haplotype. The web sites FamilyTreeDNA and Y_ Search represent the groups doing the science that demands accuracy. The twenty-five loci and the STRs that follows are my test results.
| 393 = 12 | 390 = 22 | 19* = 14 | 391 = 10 | 385a = 13 | 385b = 14 | 426 = 11 |
| 388 = 14 | 439 = 11 | 389-1 = 12 | 392 = 11 | 458 = 15 | 459a = 8 | 459b = 9 |
| 455 = 8 | 454 = 11 | 447 = 23 | 437 = 16 | 448 = 19 | 449 = 28 | 464a** = 12 |
| 464b** = 14 | 464c** = 15 | 464d** = 15 | 389-2 = 28 (16) | 0 | 0 | 0 |
The Saxon standard has a DYS 393=13. This is called I1aAS, which has five small varieties.
The Saxon standard has DYS 390=22 while the Dane standard has DYS 390=23. Dane is known as I1aN
Thus this subclade differs by one from Saxon and two from Dane. Additional DYS values will clarify further. DYS 455__8 will be I1a, while DYS 455__11 will be I1b or I1c.
There have been twelve subclades identified within hg "I". (old data?- this research moves quickly)
Last modified: May 2008