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mtDNA Haplogroup • Maternal Lineage

L0A1B2

mtDNA Haplogroup L0A1B2

~8,000 years ago
Eastern Africa (Horn and adjacent regions)
1 subclades
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Chapter I

The Story

The journey of mtDNA haplogroup L0A1B2

Origins and Evolution

mtDNA haplogroup L0A1B2 is a subclade of L0A1B, itself nested within the deep African lineage L0A. The parent clade L0A1B has been dated to the Late Pleistocene (~25 kya) and is concentrated in eastern Africa; L0A1B2 represents a later branching event, plausibly in the early Holocene (roughly 6–10 kya). Its emergence likely reflects local differentiation within eastern African maternal gene pools after the Last Glacial Maximum, during a period of climatic amelioration and demographic change that included increased mobility, localized expansions of pastoralism, and the beginnings of more intensive interregional contact.

Subclades (if applicable)

As a relatively derived subclade, L0A1B2 may itself contain further downstream lineages characterized by private control-region and coding-region mutations observed in modern and ancient mitogenomes. Published phylogenies for L0 lineages often show several named subbranches under L0A1B; L0A1B2 should be treated as an intermediate node linking the diagnostic mutations of L0A1B to more recent local variants found in Horn and eastern African populations. Because sampling in some regions remains sparse, additional substructure within L0A1B2 may be revealed as more whole-mtDNA sequences are analyzed.

Geographical Distribution

L0A1B2 is concentrated in eastern Africa, especially in the Horn (e.g., Oromo, Somali, Amhara) and neighbouring Cushitic and Nilotic groups, where frequencies are highest relative to other regions. Secondary occurrence is seen in central and southern Africa at low-to-moderate frequencies, reflecting Holocene movements such as Bantu-speaking expansions and historic admixture with forager and pastoralist communities. Sporadic instances occur in North Africa, the Near East, and among African-descended populations in the Americas where they can be traced to the transatlantic slave trade.

Historical and Cultural Significance

The geographic and temporal placement of L0A1B2 links it to demographic processes important in Holocene eastern Africa: localized population growth after the Pleistocene, the spread and intensification of pastoralism in the Pastoral Neolithic, and later contacts with expanding Bantu-speaking agriculturalists. Where present at higher frequencies in the Horn, L0A1B2 contributes to the deep maternal genetic continuity observed in Cushitic and Semitic-speaking groups. In regions where it is rare, its presence frequently reflects historic gene flow rather than primary demographic replacement.

Conclusion

L0A1B2 is a regionally informative maternal lineage for eastern Africa that documents mid-Holocene maternal differentiation within the L0A clade. While abundant sampling and whole-mtDNA sequencing have clarified its placement as a descendant of L0A1B, further population-level sequencing—particularly from under-sampled eastern African and adjacent southern African groups—will better resolve its internal structure, precise date estimates, and the finer-scale migration events that distributed it beyond the Horn.

Note: age estimates and distributional statements are based on current phylogenetic placement within L0A and published population-genetic patterns; confidence increases with denser full mitogenome sampling.

Key Points

  • Origins and Evolution
  • Subclades (if applicable)
  • Geographical Distribution
  • Historical and Cultural Significance
  • Conclusion
Chapter II

Tree & Relationships

Phylogenetic context and subclades

Evolution Path

This haplogroup's evolutionary journey from its earliest ancestor to the present.

Steps Haplogroup Age Estimate Archaeology Era Time Passed Immediate Descendants Tested Modern Descendants Ancient Connections
1 L0A1B2 Current ~8,000 years ago 🌾 Neolithic 8,000 years 1 3 0
2 L0A1B ~25,000 years ago 🦴 Paleolithic 25,000 years 2 13 0
3 L0A1 ~35,000 years ago 🦴 Paleolithic 35,000 years 5 92 0
4 L0A ~70,000 years ago 🦴 Paleolithic 70,000 years 2 166 13
5 L0 ~170,000 years ago 🦴 Paleolithic 170,000 years 4 245 6
6 L ~160,000 years ago 🦴 Paleolithic 160,000 years 7 18,987 5

Siblings (1)

Other branches from the same parent haplogroup

Chapter III

Where in the World

Geographic distribution and modern presence

Place of Origin

Eastern Africa (Horn and adjacent regions)

Modern Distribution

The populations where mtDNA haplogroup L0A1B2 is found include:

  1. Horn of Africa groups (e.g., Oromo, Somali, Amhara)
  2. Cushitic- and Nilotic-speaking populations of eastern Africa
  3. Bantu-speaking populations in central and southern Africa (via admixture)
  4. Central African forager groups (low-to-moderate frequencies)
  5. Khoe‑San and southern African groups (low frequencies, typically historical admixture)
  6. African-descended populations in the Americas (low frequency, via the transatlantic slave trade)
  7. Sporadic occurrences in North Africa and the Near East (historical/recent admixture)
CHAPTER IV

When in Time

Your haplogroup in the context of human history

~10k years ago

Neolithic Revolution

Agriculture begins, settled communities form

~8k years ago

Haplogroup L0A1B2

Your mtDNA haplogroup emerged in Eastern Africa (Horn and adjacent regions)

Eastern Africa (Horn and adjacent regions)
~5k years ago

Bronze Age

Metalworking, writing, and early civilizations

~3k years ago

Iron Age

Iron tools, expanded trade networks

~2k years ago

Classical Antiquity

Greek and Roman civilizations flourish

Present

Present Day

Modern era

Your Haplogroup
Historical Era
Chapter IV-B

Linked Cultures

Ancient cultures associated with mtDNA haplogroup L0A1B2

Cultural Heritage

These ancient cultures have been linked to haplogroup L0A1B2 based on matching ancient DNA samples from archaeological excavations. The presence of this haplogroup in these cultures provides insights into the migrations and population movements of populations carrying this haplogroup.

Elmenteitan Culture Hora Culture Makwasinyi Modern Period Mtwapa Nubian Christian Pemba Phase I St. Helena Colonial Tanzanian Prehistoric
Culture assignments are based on archaeological context of ancient DNA samples and may represent regional associations during specific time periods.
Chapter V

Sample Catalog

2 subclade carriers of haplogroup L0A1B2 (no exact L0A1B2 samples sequenced yet)

2 / 2 samples
Portrait Sample Country Era Date Culture mtDNA Match
Portrait of ancient individual I17413 from Kenya, dated 1250 CE - 1650 CE
I17413
Kenya Swahili Culture of Mtwapa 1250 CE - 1650 CE Mtwapa L0a1b2a Downstream
Portrait of ancient individual STH_245 from St. Helena, dated 1840 CE - 1940 CE
STH_245
St. Helena St. Helena 1840 CE - 1940 CE St. Helena Colonial L0a1b2a Downstream
Chapter VI

Carrier Distribution Map

Geographic distribution of 2 ancient DNA samples (direct and subclade carriers of L0A1B2)

Subclade carrier
Time Period Filter
All Time Periods
Showing all samples
Chapter VII

Temporal Distribution

Distribution of carriers across archaeological periods

Chapter VIII

Geographic Distribution

Distribution by country of origin (direct and subclade carriers shown by default)

Chapter IX

Country × Era Distribution

Cross-tabulation of carrier countries and archaeological periods (direct and subclade carriers shown by default)

Data

Data & Provenance

Source information and data quality

Last Updated 2026-02-16
Confidence Score 50/100
Coverage Low
Data Source

We use the latest phylotree for MTDNA haplogroup classification and data.