Wing Genealogist
10-21-2019, 12:47 AM
Many Ancient DNA papers utilize a 1240K panel (roughly 12 million nuclear DNA SNPs) rather than the more comprehensive (and more expensive) shotgun approach.
The David Reich Lab of the Harvard Medical School has posted a listing of all the SNPs included in this panel https://reich.hms.harvard.edu/downloadable-genotypes-present-day-and-ancient-dna-data-compiled-published-papers
I have extracted the 32,670 Y-SNPs (called Chromosome 24 in the original spreadsheet) and created a Google Docs spreadsheet at:https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1wCWqyy8-jWU5-ZtNjKXXU1k-rTh8TZNO4tl6W2mE-pQ/edit?usp=sharing
Unfortunately, the original spreadsheet did not include the actual SNP name for the vast majority of Y-SNPs. Most are listed under their Reference Sequence (rs) name, or even by a label combining the SNP "number" (24) with the position on the Y Chromosome.
I have quickly tried to identify the R1b-U106 Y-SNPs and would like to grant Editor access to individuals who would be willing to identify SNPs for other clades.
The David Reich Lab of the Harvard Medical School has posted a listing of all the SNPs included in this panel https://reich.hms.harvard.edu/downloadable-genotypes-present-day-and-ancient-dna-data-compiled-published-papers
I have extracted the 32,670 Y-SNPs (called Chromosome 24 in the original spreadsheet) and created a Google Docs spreadsheet at:https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1wCWqyy8-jWU5-ZtNjKXXU1k-rTh8TZNO4tl6W2mE-pQ/edit?usp=sharing
Unfortunately, the original spreadsheet did not include the actual SNP name for the vast majority of Y-SNPs. Most are listed under their Reference Sequence (rs) name, or even by a label combining the SNP "number" (24) with the position on the Y Chromosome.
I have quickly tried to identify the R1b-U106 Y-SNPs and would like to grant Editor access to individuals who would be willing to identify SNPs for other clades.