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Avotaynu DNA Project Discovers ~11,000 Year Old Neolithic Lineage

Filed Under Collaboration, DNA Studies By Adam Brown, Raquel Levy-Toledano, Wim Penninx, Bennett Greenspan and Michael Waas on June 18, 2024

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The Neolithic yDNA Haplogroup J-P58 has been a topic of research interest since its discovery over 15 years ago (Hammer & Behar, et al, 2009[1]; Chiaroni, et al, 2010[2]; Sahakyn, et al, 2021[3]). Amplified by a little understood population bottleneck that occurred between 10,000 and 7,500 BCE, J-P58 is ancestral to numerous yDNA branches found in current world populations and Bronze Age gravesites throughout the Middle East.

The Avotaynu DNA Project is pleased to announce that one of its freshly analyzed study samples from a man in the Romaniote Jewish community of Greece represents the yDNA equivalent of a living fossil, a previously undiscovered yDNA branch tentatively described as J-Z1874* that separated from the direct ancestor of J-P58 over 11,000 years ago (~9000 BCE) during the Neolithic era.  According to the dating[4] provided by FamilyTreeDNA, the mean dating is 11,023 years before present (YBP) with a range of 9,659 – 12,570 YBP (95% CI). No other sample from this new branch has ever been reported.

The new sample parallels the 67 Jewish branches from the J-P58 genetic family discovered thus far by the Avotaynu study, each of which separately date back to the Bronze Age or earlier. These results, confirmed by Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) technology, demonstrate that the Jewish people like the Druze are a “genetic refugium of the Near East” that dates back thousands of years (Shlush, Behar, et al, 2008[5]). A paper is forthcoming detailing the Avotaynu Project’s numerous discoveries connecting the modern Jewish population to its remarkably diverse ancient origins.

J-P58 is particularly well-known in the Jewish world as it is ancestral to the celebrated “Cohen Modal Haplotype” discovered by Dr. Karl Skorecki and published in the seminal article, “Y chromosomes of Jewish priests” (Skorecki, et al, 1997[6]). As part of the overall Avotaynu study, a new worldwide NGS survey of men with reported Cohen ancestry has been conducted and a separate publication is forthcoming.

An independent J-P58 study in which the Avotaynu Project played a supporting role was the groundbreaking research that utilized then-new NGS to uncover the complex inheritance of the Bronze Age J-P58 variant known as J-Z640 that is found today among Ashkenazi and Sephardi Jews as well as other populations originating in the Middle East (see Waas, Yacobi, et al, 2019[7]).

The Avotaynu Project: The Genetic Census of the Jewish People is an independent team of academics and community historians that has compiled over 10,000 donated DNA results largely from the Ashkenazi community since 2000 and has methodically sought out and tested 2,000 individuals from far-flung non-Ashkenazi Jewish communities since 2016. Active testing continues. As part of its process, the Avotaynu study starts with an initial Y37 panel on each of its participants in an effort to detect possible new lineages and then re-runs representative samples within each prospective lineage utilizing NGS to define ancestral connections with specificity.

All of the Avotaynu Project’s DNA samples were processed at the Houston, Texas laboratory of Family Tree DNA; Goran Runfeldt, Michael Sager, and Paul Maier of the FTDNA staff participated in the identification and dating of Y chromosome variants. Further information about the study can be found at www.AvotaynuOnline.com;. The study administrators welcome inquiries via Adam.Brown@AvotaynuDNA.org.


[1] Hammer, M.F., Behar, D.M., Karafet, T.M. et al. Extended Y chromosome haplotypes resolve multiple and unique lineages of the Jewish priesthood. 2009; Hum Genet 126: 707–717. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00439-009-0727-5

[2] Chiaroni J, King RJ, Myres NM, Henn BM, Ducourneau A, Mitchell MJ, Boetsch G, Sheikha I, Lin AA, Nik-Ahd M, Ahmad J, Lattanzi F, Herrera RJ, Ibrahim ME, Brody A, Semino O, Kivisild T, Underhill PA. The emergence of Y-chromosome haplogroup J1e among Arabic-speaking populations. Eur J Hum Genet. 2010 Mar 18(3):348-53. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2987219/ Epub 2009 Oct 14. PMID: 19826455; PMCID: PMC2987219.

[3] Sahakyan H, Margaryan A, Saag L, et al. Origin and diffusion of human Y chromosome haplogroup J1-M267. 2021 Sci Rep. 11(1):6659. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33758277/

[4] For a description of the methodology used to date the sample described in this study, see Begg T, et al., Genomic analyses of hair from Ludwig van Beethoven 2023 Current Biology 33(8):1431-1447.e22, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2023.02.041

[5] Shlush LI, Behar DM, Yudkovsky G, Templeton A, Hadid Y, et al., The Druze: A Population Genetic Refugium of the Near East. 2008. PLOS ONE 3(5): e2105. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0002105

[6] Skorecki, K., Selig, S., Blazer, S. et al. Y chromosomes of Jewish priests. 1997 Nature 385, 32. https://doi.org/10.1038/385032a0

[7] Waas, M., Yacobi, D., Kull, L., Urasin, V., Magoon, G., Penninx, W., Brown, A., Nogueiro, I. Haplogroup J-Z640-Genetic Insight into the Levantine Bronze Age. 2019 Journal of Phylogenetics & Evolutionary Biology 7:1 https://www.hilarispublisher.com/open-access/haplogroup-jz640genetic-insight-into-the-levantine-bronze-age.pdf

Related posts:

  1. Guiding Principles of the Avotaynu DNA Project
  2. The Avotaynu DNA Project Advances to Its Second Phase
  3. Announcing the Avotaynu DNA Project!
  4. The Avotaynu DNA Global Census of the Jewish People – March 2020 Update

About Adam Brown

Adam Brown is the founder and director of the Avotaynu DNA Project, an academic multi-disciplinary study of the origins and migrations of the Jewish people with over 12,000 participants.

Adam is a lawyer is a graduate of the University of Michigan and the University of Chicago Law School, and serves on numerous government, scientific research, and academic non-profit boards and commissions.

He has spoken widely on the subject of Jewish history and migrations at conferences, in publications, and online. He was the Co-Chair of the 2017 Conference of the International Association of Jewish Genealogical Societies (IAJGS) in Orlando.

Adam worked two seasons at a remote field camp deep in the interior of Antarctica. He returned to the region during 2016 as part of a multi-national scientific expedition that traveled 5,800 miles by sea to and from ice-covered yet volcanic Heard Island, a rarely visited pristine habitat in the stormy Southern Indian Ocean halfway between Australia and South Africa.

Adam lives seasonally in Englewood NJ and on Martha's Vineyard Island.

About Raquel Levy-Toledano

Raquel Levy-Toledano est médecin, gynécologue, et est titulaire d’une thèse de sciences en biologie moléculaire. Elle est volontaire dans l’équipe d’Adam Brown à Avotaynu et dirige le projet sur l’ADN du chromosome Y des juifs marocains.
Depuis quelques années, Raquel travaille activement sur la généalogie des juifs marocains avec comme objectif de rétablir les liens entre les familles juives marocaines sur Geni. Aujourd’hui, l’arbre des juifs marocains sur Geni contient plus de 70 000 individus. Par ailleurs, Raquel est passionnée de génétique généalogique qu’elle utilise pour retrouver les liens entre les juifs marocains et les autres juifs sépharades.

About Wim Penninx

Wim Penninx is born in a small village in the south-east of the Netherlands and did an astronomy PhD on radio and X-ray observations of low-mass X-ray binaries in Amsterdam with the assistance prof. Jan van Paradijs (Amsterdam) and Walter Lewin (MIT). About 40 articles were published in scientific journals, including Nature, 1988.

Wim worked for many years as an IT consultant, partly at the Technische Universiteit Delft, which resulted in several Dutch IT-publications and
presentations.

After collecting the genealogy of the Pennings/x-families in the Netherlands, he started to study DNA genealogy in different
contexts. This resulted in a variety of articles and presentations on DNA measurements and history. It started in 2012 on the relation between
population growth and Y-DNA variability in Flanders, Brabant and Limburg at the XXXth Internation Congress of Genealogical and Heraldic Sciences.
Later reports were given on Y-DNA in the Dutch genealogy journal Gen (published by Centraal Bureau Genealogie) and on Regional Endogamy (in a MyHeritage webinar).

Wim created, after an early statistical analysis on Jewish Ashkenazi Y-DNA, the website jewishdna.net. With Rachel Unkefer and J.B. Royal he wrote
an article on the Y-DNA Evidence for an Ashkenazi Lineage's Iberian Origin. In 2016, Wim joined the Avotaynu project.

About Bennett Greenspan

Bennett Greenspan, an entrepreneur and life-long genealogy enthusiast, founded Family Tree DNA in 2000, turning a hobby into a full-time vocation. His effort and innovation created the burgeoning field now known as genetic genealogy. Family Tree DNA and other cooperative ventures, including the National Geographic Society’s Genographic Project and AfricanDNA.com, now constitute the largest non-medical DNA testing program in the world. A serial entrepreneur , Greenspan’ s business career has spanned photographic equipment and supplies, real estate, the pro- college website GoCollege.com and Family Tree DNA. He now also is involved in GeneByGene.com, a new medical genetic testing company. Greenspan lives in Houston, Texas.

About Michael Waas

Michael Waas is a Historical Archaeologist specializing in site research and evaluation and three-dimensional modeling for Historical Preservation. He received his Bachelors Degree in Anthropology with a specialization in Historical Archaeology from New College of Florida, and the subject of his Senior Thesis was "The Archaeology of Ethnogenesis of the Seminole People of Florida." Currently, Michael is a Masters Degree Candidate in the Department of Jewish History at the University of Haifa under the direction of Dr. Ido Shahar.

Professionally, he interned with the Seminole Tribe of Florida Tribal Historic Preservation Office in the Research Department (Summer 2009) and the International Conservation Center – Cittá di Roma located in Old Acre, Israel, where he received professional training and experience in the field of Historic Preservation and Conservation (Summer 2010, October 2012 – July 2013).

Michael worked as a field archaeologist on the Looking for Angola project in Bradenton, Florida, under Dr. Uzi Baram, the Live Oak site in Sarasota, Florida, under Dr. George Luer, and on the Tel Akko project under Dr. Ann Killebrew. He also worked as a surveyor on the Galilee Cemetery project, a Historic Black cemetery, documenting graves. In addition to working in the field of Historic Preservation and Research, he is an avid photographer.

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