The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup A6B
Origins and Evolution
mtDNA haplogroup A6B is a downstream branch of haplogroup A6, itself a rare lineage within macro-haplogroup A. Based on the phylogenetic position of A6 relative to other A sublineages and the geographic distribution of A6 lineages, A6B most plausibly arose in northeastern Asia or southern Siberia during the Early to Mid Holocene (roughly ~9 kya). Its emergence fits the pattern of Holocene diversification of maternal lineages in northern Eurasia following the Last Glacial Maximum, when human groups expanded and recolonized high-latitude zones.
Genetic evidence is limited because A6B is rare in modern population sampling and appears only sporadically in published datasets and ancient DNA surveys. That scarcity means the estimated coalescence time and internal structure of A6B are provisional and sensitive to new samples.
Subclades
At present, A6B is treated as a single named subclade downstream of A6 with very few well-documented further subdivisions. Sparse sampling and limited whole-mitogenome sequences mean that any internal branching is likely to be under-detected; targeted complete mtDNA sequencing in Siberian, Mongolic and neighboring Central Asian populations may reveal additional subclades or private branches. Because A6 overall is uncommon, A6B is best considered a low-frequency local branch until broader sequencing increases resolution.
Geographical Distribution
A6B is recorded at low to moderate frequencies in parts of southern Siberia, the Altai region and among some Mongolic and Turkic-speaking groups in Central and Northeast Asia. Modern occurrences are concentrated among:
- Indigenous Siberian groups (for example, sampled individuals associated with Evenk- and Yakut-associated populations),
- Southern Siberian / Altai populations (Altaians and neighboring groups),
- Select Mongolic populations in Mongolia and adjacent regions,
- Low-frequency occurrences in Central Asian Turkic-speaking groups (e.g., sporadic Kazakh, Kyrgyz, Uyghur samples),
- Occasional finds in northeastern Chinese groups and rare sporadic occurrences further west likely attributable to historic mobility.
A6B has also been reported in at least one archaeological (ancient DNA) context in available datasets, indicating Holocene antiquity in the region.
Historical and Cultural Significance
Because of its northern Eurasian distribution, A6B is best interpreted as part of the maternal legacy of post-glacial recolonization and Holocene population structure in Siberia and adjacent steppe-forest zones. Its presence in both indigenous Siberian groups and some Turkic- and Mongolic-speaking populations is consistent with long-term local continuity combined with later movements (Bronze Age to Historic-era pastoralist expansions) that redistributed rare maternal lineages across Eurasia.
A6B does not appear to mark any single large-scale migration or cultural horizon by itself; rather, it is a low-frequency lineage that illuminates micro-scale demographic connections: local persistence of Holocene maternal ancestry in southern Siberia and admixture into expanding steppe and nomadic groups during the Bronze Age, Iron Age and historic Turkic/Mongolic eras.
Conclusion
mtDNA haplogroup A6B is a rare, regionally focused maternal clade originating in northeastern Asia / southern Siberia in the early Holocene. Its scarcity in modern and ancient samples limits fine-scale inference, but available evidence points to continuity in Siberia with later incorporation into broader Central and Northeast Asian populations through millennia of mobility and cultural change. Expanded mitogenome sequencing in targeted populations will be required to refine its internal phylogeny, geographic structure and demographic history.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Conclusion