The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup H10*
Origins and Evolution
mtDNA haplogroup H10 is a branch of macro-haplogroup H, one of the most widespread maternal lineages in Europe. The label H10* (the asterisk) denotes individuals who carry H10-defining mutations but do not fall into any currently defined downstream subclade — in other words, basal or unassigned H10 lineages. Based on phylogenetic placement within H and ancient DNA evidence, H10 most likely arose in western or adjacent parts of Eurasia during the early Holocene (around ~12 kya). From that origin H10 diversified into several subbranches over the Neolithic and later periods.
Subclades (if applicable)
Several named subclades derive from H10 (for example H10a and other downstream branches reported in the literature and databases); these subclades show geographically structured distributions and different time depths. H10* specifically refers to lineages that have the defining H10 motif but lack the subsequent mutations used to assign them to a named downstream clade. Because H10* samples represent basal diversity, they are valuable for reconstructing early splitting events and local retention of maternal lineages prior to later subclade expansions.
Geographical Distribution
H10 and H10* are observed at low-to-moderate frequencies across much of Europe and at lower frequencies in parts of the Near East and northwest Africa. Modern and ancient DNA studies detect H10 in Iberia, Western and Southern Europe, Scandinavia and Central/Eastern Europe, with sporadic presence in Anatolia, the Levant and Northwest Africa. The geographic pattern suggests an early western/adjacent Eurasian origin followed by local persistence and patchy spread through Neolithic farmer movements, later Bronze Age/metal-age mobility, and historic-era migrations.
Historical and Cultural Significance
H10 lineages (including H10*) have been found in Mesolithic, Neolithic and later archaeological contexts in published ancient DNA datasets. Their presence in early farmer and later Bronze Age assemblages implies both continuity from pre-farming populations in some regions and incorporation into migrating farming and pastoralist groups in others. In western Europe H10 and its subclades can act as markers of maternal ancestry that complement Y-DNA signals of male-mediated migrations (for example, R1b expansions in later prehistory). H10*'s role as a basal lineage means it can document local maternal continuity where downstream subclade turnovers did not fully replace earlier diversity.
Conclusion
H10* is a scientifically useful designation for basal H10 maternal lineages that have not been assigned to named subclades. It likely reflects early Holocene diversification in western/adjacent Eurasia and a complex history of local continuity and sporadic spread with farming and later cultural expansions. Continued sampling of modern populations and high-resolution ancient mitogenomes will refine the phylogeny of H10 and the geographic history of H10* lineages.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades (if applicable)
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Conclusion