Haplogroups: [human geography]
Noun: branches on the tree of early human migrations and genetic mutations of "markers" found on the Y chromosome (NatGeoEd.org); the study of haplogroups is commonly used to define genetic populations.(Reference.com)
All humans belong to a halpogroup, this enables geneticists to follow the ancestry of ancient humans all the way to the present day. Inspired by the "tree" of human life, National Geographic and partners embarked on the Genographic Project. The Genographic Project studies where our early human ancestors came from and how humans came to populate the entire planet. Following genetic markers through thousands of human generations enables scientists to track our human origins back to Africa and to determine the pattern of routes by which humans migrated around the world. Researching the characteristics and journeys of specific haplogroups can help students understand how people from distant places are genetically related. (www.natgeoed.org)
Noun: branches on the tree of early human migrations and genetic mutations of "markers" found on the Y chromosome (NatGeoEd.org); the study of haplogroups is commonly used to define genetic populations.(Reference.com)
- Using Genetic Markers to Create Lineages
- Designing Haplogroup Crests
- Researching Haplogroups
- All Africans Under the Skin Activity
- Introduction to Genetic Markers
- And many more!
E-mail us with questions, concerns, suggestions or stories of how you have put "Haplogroups" to use in your daily life! NatGeoEd@ngs.org
--Julia from My Wonderful World














Julia,
Have you heard of a geography board game based on mtDNA lineage and haplogroups? I am designing and building one for my family's christmas present this year and am wondering what's out there already.
Dorian