I1 I2*/I2a I2b R1a R1b G J2 J*/J1 E1b1b T Q N
Italy 4.5 3 2.5 4 39 9 15.5 3 13.5 2.5 0 0 North Italy 7 1 3.5 4.5 49.5 7.5 10 1.5 11 2 0 0 Tuscany 4 1.5 2.5 4 52.5 9 11.5 2 9 2 0 0 Central Italy 2.5 2 1.5 3 36 11 23 5 11.5 3 0 0 South Italy 2.5 3.5 1 3 27.5 10.5 21.5 4 18.5 2.5 0 0 Sicily 3.5 3 1 4.5 26 8.5 23 3.5 20.5 4 1 0 Sardinia 0 37.5 2 1 18.5 12 9 4 9.5 1.5 0 0
Mesolithic Europeans
I1 pre-Germaic (Nordic)
I2b pre-Celto-Germanic
I2a1 Sardinian, Iberian
I2a2 Dinaric. Danubian
Neolithic immigrants
N1c1 Uralo-Finnic, Baltic, Siberian
G2a Caucasian, Greco-Anatolian
E1b1b North African, Near Eastern, Balkanic
T Middle Eastern, East African
Bronze Age immingrants
R1a Balto-Slavic, Germanic, Indo-Iranian
R1b Italo-Celtic, Germanic; Hittite, Armenian, Tocharian
J1 Caucasian, Mesopotamiam, Semitic (Arabic, Jewish)
J2 Greco-Anatolian, Mesopotamiam, Caucasian
Human Y-chromosome DNA can be divided in genealogical groups sharing a common ancestor. These are calledhaplogroups. To know what ancient ethnic group is associated with each haplogroup, please check European Haplogroups : origins, geographic spread and relation to ethnic groups.Note that figures are only indicative. Several sources were used and averages recalculated by merging the data available. Being approximations, numbers were rounded up to 0.5%. Frequencies inferior to 0.25% are indicated as 0%. A non-exhaustive list of the sources used for this page can be found here.
Ho cercato, da questa tabella (http://www.eupedia.com/europe/europe...logroups.shtml) di tirar fuori i dati sull'Italia, ma mi sembra che è venuto fuori uno sbrodego.
Comunque con un po' di pazienza qualcosa si capisce...