The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup A2AB
Origins and Evolution
mtDNA haplogroup A2AB sits as a downstream branch of the A2A lineage, itself a subclade of the Indigenous American founding haplogroup A2. Given the parentage and known chronology for A2A (originating in Beringia/Northeast Asia around the end of the Last Glacial Maximum and into the early Holocene), A2AB most plausibly arose during the early post‑glacial period as human groups moved through Beringia into Arctic and sub‑Arctic North America. Its time depth is therefore likely several thousand years after the initial A2 diversification, consistent with a range in the Early Holocene (~10 kya), when localized differentiation and rapid northward expansions were common.
Subclades (if applicable)
A2AB behaves as a localized terminal or near‑terminal branch within many published and community phylogenies. As with many fine‑scale mtDNA subclades in the Americas, additional internal structure can be discovered when more high‑coverage mitochondrial genomes from northern and circumpolar populations are sampled. At present, A2AB is best understood as a named subbranch under A2A; further sampling could reveal named downstream subclades or regional variants.
Geographical Distribution
The distribution of A2AB is primarily northern and circumpolar. Contemporary detections and reasonable phylogeographic inference place the highest frequencies and greatest diversity in:
- Arctic and sub‑Arctic North America (Inuit, Yup'ik, Aleut and related groups)
- Northern North American Indigenous populations (some Na‑Dene and Algonquian groups, especially in high‑latitude regions)
- Selected Indigenous Siberian and circumpolar Eurasian groups at low frequencies (reflecting prehistoric and historic connections across Beringia)
- Modern admixed populations in the Americas that retain Indigenous maternal ancestry
Ancient DNA evidence for A2AB is currently limited but consistent with an early Holocene presence in northern archaeological contexts; more aDNA sampling will refine its antiquity and paleogeographic range.
Historical and Cultural Significance
Because A2AB is concentrated in northern and circumpolar populations, it is informative for reconstructing post‑glacial coastal and interior migrations, the peopling of the Arctic, and maternal line continuity in Paleo‑Arctic and later Neo‑Eskimo cultural sequences. Its presence alongside other Indigenous American mtDNA lineages in Arctic archaeological contexts helps track population continuity versus replacement events (for example, between Paleo‑Eskimo groups such as Saqqaq/Dorset and later Neo‑Eskimo Thule expansions). When found in Na‑Dene or northern Algonquian groups, A2AB contributes to models of regional gene flow and contact between northern hunter‑gatherer networks.
Conclusion
A2AB represents a geographically and historically informative subclade of A2A reflecting early Holocene maternal differentiation in Beringia and the Arctic margins of North America. While currently a relatively localized lineage with limited published ancient DNA occurrences, it is valuable for tracing northern Indigenous maternal ancestries, patterns of Arctic settlement, and post‑glacial demographic processes. Continued high‑resolution mtDNA sequencing from northern archaeological sites and modern Indigenous communities is likely to clarify its internal structure, age estimates, and finer geographic patterning.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades (if applicable)
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Conclusion