The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup H24B
Origins and Evolution
H24B is a downstream subclade of mtDNA haplogroup H24, itself derived from the broader H phylogeny. H24 likely formed after the Last Glacial Maximum in the Near East / West Asia and diversified during the early Holocene; H24B represents one of the rarer daughter branches that probably emerged in the early to middle Holocene (on the order of several thousand years after the parent clade). Its time depth and geographic placement indicate a Near Eastern or Caucasus origin with subsequent localized dispersals.
Phylogenetically, H24B sits within the H2→H24 lineage, meaning it shares deeper ancestry with other H-subclades that expanded in the post-glacial and Neolithic periods. Because H24 and its sublineages are uncommon in large modern surveys, H24B shows relatively low internal diversity in published datasets, which is consistent with a geographically constrained distribution and limited demographic expansion compared with some high-frequency H subclades (e.g., H1, H3).
Subclades (if applicable)
At present, H24B is treated as a distinct subclade of H24 with few well-characterized downstream branches in the public literature. Limited sample numbers and sparse sampling across some regions mean that further sequencing of modern and ancient mtDNA could reveal additional internal structure (for example named H24B1, H24B2, etc.) or show that H24B comprises a small set of closely related sequences deriving from a single early expansion.
Geographical Distribution
Modern and ancient occurrences of H24B are concentrated around the Near East and adjacent zones:
- The highest relative incidence is in Near Eastern populations (Anatolia, Levant) and the Caucasus, where H24 and H24B lineages have been documented in modern genetic surveys and in some ancient individuals.
- Southern Europe (particularly parts of the Mediterranean such as Italy, Greece and the Balkans) shows low-frequency occurrences consistent with gene flow from Anatolia and the Near East during the Neolithic and later historical periods.
- South Asia and parts of Pakistan/India display occasional H24/H24B hits at low frequency, plausibly reflecting prehistoric or historic eastward movements from West Asia.
- North Africa (Maghreb) contains very rare occurrences, likely reflecting Mediterranean and historic connections.
Ancient DNA hits attributed to H24/H24B are uncommon but informative: small numbers of Neolithic and Bronze Age individuals from Anatolia and neighboring regions have carried H24-lineage mitogenomes, supporting a long-standing presence in that core area.
Historical and Cultural Significance
Although H24B is not a high-frequency lineage, its distribution is informative for reconstructing maternal ancestry in West Asia and adjacent regions. Its presence in Anatolia, the Caucasus and scattered Mediterranean and South Asian samples ties H24B to post-glacial re-expansion within West Asia and to Neolithic farmer dispersals that moved genes (and crops/technologies) out of Anatolia into Europe and, in some cases, eastwards into South Asia.
In historically mobile communities (including certain Jewish diasporic groups with Near Eastern ancestry), rare H24 subclades like H24B can persist at low frequency and serve as markers of deeper regional maternal ancestry. Because H24B is rare, each recovery in modern or ancient samples can provide disproportionate phylogeographic information about local maternal lineages and migration events.
Conclusion
H24B is a low-frequency, regionally concentrated maternal lineage derived from H24, reflecting a Near Eastern/Caucasus origin in the early to mid-Holocene. Its rarity and limited substructure make it a marker of localized maternal ancestry tied to post-glacial and Neolithic demographic processes; more targeted sequencing of modern and archaeological samples in the Near East, Caucasus and adjacent zones will clarify its internal diversification and historical movements.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades (if applicable)
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Conclusion