See the separate entry for phylogenetic trees in the glossary. This is simply a sub-category to list the various sites providing phylogenetic trees.
Table of contents:
The following do not appear (exclusively) in the list above because they are categorized as being primary in another way.
Table of contents:
The following do not appear (exclusively) in the list above because they are categorized as being primary in another way.
- FamilyTreeDNA
- The FamilyTreeDNA has provided a major tree for several years. Initially as part of the NGG test service support and cooperation. But then dramatically expanded in both mtDNA and yDNA after they introduced their BigY Sequencing yDNA and full sequencing mtDNA tests.. Historically, the tree has been private to testers in their site only and limited to listing the SNP-named haplogroups in a tree format. In Fall 2018, they introduced a public-face to their tree that provides some additional information such as the number of BigY test results,surnames and country of origin in each haplogroup, See the FTDNA page for the link to their tree.. Or the Internet Archive capture of the public FTDNA tree from 2008-2015.
- ISOGG
- The ISOGG tree is an early, major yDNA tree that took over the effort of the YCC that maintained a tree made from the published, refereed journal articles. ISOGG provides much more than just a tree with their site; especially covering the genetic genealogy topic in their Wiki and keeping a SNP database with their yBrowse application. See the ISOGG page for the link to their tree.
- NGG
- The NGG project maintained a tree extended from YCC and FTDNAs work. The tree was an Adobe Flash presentation and thus archive copies are no longer useful to view, See archives of FTDNA's tree above for the closest capture and approximation to this early, most extensive tree development beyond the YCC original. The project has since been abandoned and is no longer available.
- YCC
- As mentioned in ISOGG above, the YCC was the original yDNA Tree and mostly existed on their now defunct website maintained at the University of Arizona. For much of its early years, FTDNA used Arizona's lab and technology for developing STR test panels and the tree. You can get to a capture of the last YCC tree from an InternetArchive capture of the historic, public FTDNA tree from 2008-2015 and then select the "base" YCC tree at the top.