\name{haplogroups} \alias{haplogroups} \docType{data} \title{ Haplogroups data. } \description{ Distribution of European Y-chromosome DNA (Y-DNA) haplogroups by region in percentage. } \usage{data(haplogroups)} \format{ A data frame with 38 observations on the following 12 variables. \describe{ \item{\code{I1}}{pre-Germanic (Nordic)} \item{\code{I2b}}{pre-Celto-Germanic} \item{\code{I2a1}}{Sardinian, Basque} \item{\code{I2a2}}{Dinaric, Danubian} \item{\code{N1c1}}{Uralo-Finnic, Baltic, Siberian} \item{\code{R1a}}{Balto-Slavic, Mycenaean Greek, Macedonia} \item{\code{R1b}}{Italic, Celtic, Germanic; Hitite, Armenian} \item{\code{G2a}}{Caucasian, Greco-Anatolien} \item{\code{E1b1b}}{North and Eastern Afrika, Near Eastern, Balkanic} \item{\code{J2}}{Mesopotamian, Minoan Greek, Phoenician} \item{\code{J1}}{Semitic (Arabic, Jewish)} \item{\code{T}}{Near-Eastern, Egyptian, Ethiopian, Arabic} } } \details{ Human Y-chromosome DNA can be divided in genealogical groups sharing a common ancestor, called haplogroups. } \source{ Eupedia: \url{http://www.eupedia.com/europe/european_y-dna_haplogroups.shtml} } \examples{ data(haplogroups) } \keyword{datasets}