(Number of individual cell lines shown within parentheses)
|
|
S. W. Asia |
|
N. W. Asia |
|
Biaka (70)† |
Yemenite Jews (43) |
Adygei (54) |
Komi Zyriane (47) |
|
Mbuti (39) |
Druze (106) |
|
Khanty (50) |
|
Yoruba (78) |
Samaritans (41)† |
Russians, |
|
|
Ibo (48) |
Russians, Archangelsk (34) |
N. E. Asia/Siberia | |
|
Hausa (39) |
Ashkenazi Jews (83) |
Yakut (51) |
|
|
Masai (22) |
Hungarians (92) |
||
|
Chagga (45) |
Finns (36) |
S. Central |
|
|
Sandawe (40) |
Danes (51) |
Keralites (30) | |
|
Zaramo (40) |
Irish (118) | ||
|
Ethiopian Jews (32) |
European Americans (92) |
||
|
African Americans (90) |
|
||
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chinese, SF (60) |
Nasioi Melanesians (23)† |
|
|
|
Chinese, TW (49) |
Micronesians (37) |
Pima, |
Ticuna (65)† |
|
Hakka (41) |
|
Rondonian Surui (47)† |
|
|
Koreans (54) |
Maya, |
Karitiana (57)† |
|
|
Japanese (51) |
For more details on each population and sample consult ALFRED ---ALlele FRequency Database--- http://alfred.med.yale.edu† indicates samples that may contain related individuals |
||
|
Ami (40) |
|||
|
Atayal (42) |
|||
|
Cambodians (25) |
|||
|
Laotians (119) |
|||