Haplogroup K2b (Y-DNA)


Haplogroup K2b , also known as MPS is a human y-chromosome haplogroup that is thought to be less than 3,000 years younger than K, and less than 10,000 years younger than F, meaning it probably is around 50,000 years old, according to the age estimates of Tatiana Karafet et al. 2014.
Basal K2b* has been found only in the remains of an individual known as Tianyuan man, who was alive some time between 42,000 and 39,000 years BP, during the upper paleolithic era, near the future site of Beijing, China. The basal clade has been erroneously attributed to another individual, known as RISE94, who lived 3,000 years before BP in Sweden; RISE94 is now known to belong to as R1a. K2b* has not been not been identified in living males.
K2b1 known previously as Haplogroup MS, and Haplogroup P, also known as K2b2 are the only primary clades of K2b. The population geneticist Tatiana Karafet and other researchers point out that K2b1, its subclades and P* are virtually restricted geographically to South East Asia and Oceania. Whereas, in a striking contrast, P1 and its primary subclades Q and R now make up "the most frequent haplogroup in Europe, the Americas, and Central Asia and South Asia". According to Karafet et al., the estimated dates for the branching of K, K2, K2b and P point to a "rapid diversification" within K2 "that likely occurred in Southeast Asia", with subsequent "westward expansions" of P*, P1, Q and R.

Phylogenetic structure

Basal K2b* was found in Upper Paleolithic Tianyuan man from China, modern populations with living members of the immediate subclades K2b1* and P* appear to be polarized between Oceania, South Asia and eastern Siberia.
Some Negrito populations of South-East Asia carry very high levels of K2b at the subclade level. It is carried, for instance, by more than 83% of males among the Aeta people of the Philippines, in the form of K2b1, P* and P2.

K2b1

K2b1 is found in 83% of males of Papua New Guinea, and up to 60% in the Aeta people of the Philippines. It is also found among other Melanesian populations, as well as indigenous Australians, and at lower levels amongst Polynesians.
Major studies of indigenous Australian Y-DNA, published in 2014 and 2015, suggest that about 29% of indigenous Australian males belong to subclades of K2b1. That is, up to 27% indigenous Australian males carry haplogroup S1a1a1, and one study found that approximately 2.0% – i.e. 0.9% of the sample in a study in which 45% of the total was deemed to be non-indigenous – belonged to haplogroup M1. All of these males carrying M1 were Torres Strait Islanders.
PopulationK2b1
Papua New Guinea82.76%
Maori03.82%
Fiji60.75%
Solomon Islands71.9%
French Polynesia08%
Vanuatu76.5%
New Caledonia
Guam33.3%
Samoa08.04%
Kiribati00%
Tonga20.69%
Micronesia FDR66.67%
Marshall Islands63.64%
American Samoa
Northern Mariana Islands
Palau61.5%
Cook Islands03.9%
Wallis and Futuna26%
Tuvalu36%
Nauru28.6%
Norfolk Island
Niue00%
Tokelau50%
Hawaii20%
Aboriginal Australians29%
Timor25%
Aeta60%
Malay02.4%
Flores35%
Sulawesi11.3%
East Indonesia 25.9%
Java Indonesia00%
Bali Indonesia00.9%
Sumatra Indonesia00%
Borneo Indonesia05.8%
West Papua 52.6%
West Papua 82.6%
Sumba Indonesia25.2%
Chukkese people Micronesia76.5%
Pohnpeian people Micronesia70%

P (K2b2)

Apart from the basal paragroup P*, it has only one subclade: P1, also known as K2b2a – which is also the parent of the major haplogroups Q and R.
P descendant haplogroups Q and R is widely distributed among males of Native American, Central Asian, South Asian and European ancestry.

Basal P* (K2b2*)

P-P295* is found among 28% of males among the Aeta, as well as in Timor at 10.8%, and one case may have been found in Papua New Guinea although this has not been verified.
PopulationRate of P* Notes
Papua New Guinea0.69assumed from Kayser et al. 2006, i.e. one P* found
New Zealand0
Fiji0
Solomon Islands0
French Polynesia0
Vanuatu0
New Caledonia
Guam0
Samoa0
Kiribati
Tonga0
Federated States of Micronesia0
Marshall Islands0
American Samoa
Northern Mariana Islands
Palau
Cook Islands0
Wallis and Futuna0
Tuvalu0
Nauru
Norfolk Island
Niue0small sample size
Tokelau0small sample size
Hawaii0small sample size from FTDNA
Australia0
Timor10.8
Aeta28
Filipino Austronesian0
Malay0
Flores0
Sulawesi0.6
East Indonesia0
Java Indonesia0
Bali Indonesia0
Sumatra Indonesia0
Borneo Indonesia0
West Papua Province0
Papua Province0
Sumba Indonesia3.2-

P1 (K2b2a)

P1, also known as K2b2a, is hundreds of times more common than P*, as it includes haplogroups Q and R, is estimated as being 14,300 years younger than K2b.
Many ethnic groups with high frequencies of P1 are located in Central Asia and Siberia: 35.4% among Tuvans, 28.3% among Altaian Kizhi, and 35% among Nivkh males.
Modern South Asian populations also feature P1 at low to moderate frequencies. In South Asia it is most frequent among the Muslims of Manipur, but this may be due to a very small sample size. Cases of P1 reported in South Asia may be unresolved cases or R2 or Q.
Population group PaperNPercentageSNPs Tested
Tuvinian Darenko 200511335.40P-M45
Nivkh Lell 20011735P-M45
Altai-Kizhi Darenko 20059228.3P-M45
Todjin Darenko 20053622.2P-M45
Chukchi Lell 20012420.8P-M45
Koryak Lell 20012718.5P-M45
Yupik Lell 20013318.2P-M45
Uighur Xue 20067017.1P-M45
Kalmyk Darenko 20056811.8P-M45
Turkmen Wells 20013010P-M45
Soyot Darenko 2005348.8P-M45
Uriankhai Katoh 2004608.3P-M45
Khakas Darenko 2005537.6P-M45
Kazakh Wells 2001545.6P-M45
Uzbek Wells 20013665.5P-M45
Khasi-Khmuic Reddy 20093535.40P-M45 §
Mundari Reddy 20096410.90P-M45 §
Nicobarese Reddy 2009110.00P-M45 §
Southeast Asia Reddy 20092571.60P-M45 §
Garo Reddy 2009711.40P-M45 §
India Reddy 20092263.10P-M45 §
East Asia Reddy 20092140.00P-M45 §
Eastern India Reddy 20095418.50P-M45 §
Iran Nasidze 2009504.00P-M45
Azerbaijan Nasidze 2009405.00P-M45
Mazandarani Nasidze 2009504.00P-M45
Gilaki Nasidze 2009500.00P-M45
Tehran Nasidze 2004804.00P-M45
Isfahan Nasidze 2004506.00P-M45
Bakhtiari Nasidze 2008532.00P-M45
Iranian Arabs Nasidze 2008472.00P-M45
North Iran Regueiro 2006339.00P-M45
South Iran Regueiro 20061173.00P-M45
South Caucacus Nasidze and Stoneking 2001773.00P-M45
South Caucacus Nasidze and Stoneking 20011002.00P-M45
Hvar 14
Korčula 6

§ These may include members of haplogroup R2.
Population groupNP QRPaper
Count%Count%Count%
Gope1616.4Sahoo 2006
Oriya Brahmin2414.2Sahoo 2006
Mahishya17317.6Sahoo 2006
Bhumij15213.3Sahoo 2006
Saora13323.1Sahoo 2006
Nepali7228.6Sahoo 2006
Muslims of Manipur9333.3Sahoo 2006
:Category:Rajput clans of Himachal Pradesh|Himachal Pradesh Rajput1516.7Sahoo 2006
Lambadi18422.2Sahoo 2006
Gujarati Patel9222.2Sahoo 2006
Katkari1915.3Sahoo 2006
Madia Gond1417.1Sahoo 2006
Kamma Chowdary150016.71280Sahoo 2006