Haplogroup C-F3393

Other subclades are found, at very low frequencies, in isolated locations throughout the Eurasian landmass and adjoining islands.

[6] Among the most interesting findings of recent genetic research is that living members of C1a are also rare and distributed geographically in an extremely bifurcated pattern.

[13] La Braña 1 was part of the so-called Villabruna cluster, named after a site in northeast Italy.

(And the balance was again altered by the mass migrations into Europe of Neolithic Middle Eastern farmer and Bronze Age Indo-Europeans.

)[14][15] further: a male from the Great Hungarian Plain, approximately contemporaneous to the La Braña man also carried it,[7][16] as did the 30,000-year-old remains of a Vestonice Cluster hunter-gatherer from the Pavlov-Dolní Věstonice area (Czech Republic),[17] as well as a 34,000 years old Russian hunter gatherers from Sungir (Sunghir 1/2/3/4).

[18] Basal C1b* (F1370) has been identified in the remains of an individual known as Kostenki-14 who died circa 37,000 years BP (Upper Paleolithic) that was found at the Kostyonki archaeological site in western Russia.

[24] The TMRCA of C-B67 has been estimated to be 17,007 (95% CI 19,608 <-> 14,627) years before present, with the Lebbo' individuals from Borneo belonging to a branch that is basal to the rest.

Migration of Haplogroup C (Y-DNA)