The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup W6
Origins and Evolution
mtDNA haplogroup W6 is a downstream branch of haplogroup W, itself a West Eurasian maternal lineage. Based on the phylogenetic position of W6 within W and the geographic distribution of closely related W subclades, W6 most likely diversified during the early to mid-Holocene (~8 kya) from ancestral W lineages that were established in the Near East and adjacent regions following the Last Glacial Maximum. Its age and distribution are consistent with demographic processes tied to post-glacial recolonization and the expansion of farming communities originating in Anatolia and the Near East.
Subclades
W6 may contain further internal substructure identifiable with high-resolution complete mitogenomes, but in many published datasets it is treated as a discrete subclade of W with limited branching visible at lower-resolution control-region typing. As more complete mitogenome sequencing is performed, additional subclades of W6 are likely to be resolved, refining its internal phylogeny and geographic signals.
Geographical Distribution
W6 is detected at low to moderate frequencies across a broad West Eurasian corridor. Reported occurrences include the Caucasus and parts of the Iranian Plateau, Anatolia/Turkey, southern and eastern Europe at low frequencies, and occasional finds in South Asia (India, Pakistan). The pattern suggests a Near Eastern/Caucasus focus with later spread into neighboring regions through both Neolithic farmer dispersals and subsequent regional gene flow. W6 is typically rarer than major European haplogroups (H, U, T) but contributes to the matrilineal diversity of several populations in West Eurasia.
Historical and Cultural Significance
While W6 is not associated with a single high-impact archaeological horizon, its distribution is compatible with Neolithic and post-Neolithic demographic processes: the spread of farming from Anatolia and the Near East into southeastern Europe, and later local movements across the Caucasus and into South Asia. In some populations W and its subclades have been observed in ancient DNA samples tied to early farmers and later Bronze Age contexts, indicating continuity of minor maternal lineages alongside major demographic shifts. W6’s presence in diverse populations emphasizes the mosaic nature of maternal ancestry in West Eurasia, where small lineages persisted through multiple cultural transitions.
Conclusion
mtDNA haplogroup W6 is a mid-Holocene West Eurasian maternal lineage derived from W, with a probable origin in the Near East/Caucasus and subsequent low-to-moderate presence across southern and eastern Europe, Anatolia, and parts of South Asia. Further complete-mitogenome sequencing and ancient DNA sampling will better resolve its age, substructure, and finer-scale migration history, but current evidence positions W6 as part of the broader maternal legacy of Holocene population expansions in West Eurasia.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Conclusion