|
Post by Emperor AAdmin on Feb 1, 2009 0:14:21 GMT -5
Genetics
The subbranch E3b1-a is present at high frequencies among the Greeks, Serbs and South Italians (up to 25%). Subclade J2f1 is at 2.5% in Serbs and Slavic Macedonians. I1b* is at 29-32% in Serbs, Macedonians and Croats, as low as 3% in Macedonian Roma and Kosovar Albanians, as high as 63% in Herzegovinians. The R1a is the same in Macedonians and Serbs at 15% and close to Herzegovinians at 12%, notable gap between the Albanians (4%) and Croats (35%). Bosnian Serbs are closer to Bosniaks than to Croats, the J haplogroup is 9% in Serbs and 12% in Bosniaks and almost non-existant among Croats. I-P37 is higher in Croats (71%) than in Serbs (31%) and Bosniaks (44%).[29]
Chromosome Y
Y Chromosome HG2 is around 50% in Yugoslavs, Georgians, Ukrainians, with Turks and French at 25%. HG1 is at 10-15% in Serbs, Greeks, Cypriots, Belarusians, Ukrainians and in the Baltic peoples. HG3 is frequent in Central Europe but declines towards Eurasia, 15% in Serbs and Romanians, 8% in Greeks, 50% in Russians and 55% in Poles. HG9 is non-existent in Northern Europe, 10% in Czechs, Slovaks, Slovenes, Serbs, Portuguese, higher concentration in Italy, Greece, Turkey and Caucasus. HG21 is at 13% in Serbs, Italians and Portuguese, higher concentration in Greeks at 30% and as low as 4% in Ukrainians.[30]
Serbs are generally of "Balkan genetics", contributed by people dominating the Balkans before the Slav arrival (Greeks, Illyrians, Thracians, Dacians). en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serbs#Genetics
|
|