“…To confirm this HVS-based haplogroup classification, all individuals assigned to a specific haplogroup were additionally tested by restriction analysis of the diagnostic coding-region mutations (Supplementary Table S1), proposed to unambiguously classify sequences into haplogroups (Richards et al, 2000). In addition, 236 individuals belonging to the H haplogroup were further assorted into 1 of 19 different H subgroups (Supplementary Table S2), using diagnostic restriction fragment length polymorphisms (Ennafaa et al, 2009). We compiled 5436 sequences from the literature for total haplogroup statistical analysis (Supplementary Table S3), 1369 for H subgroup general comparisons (Supplementary Table S4), 1628 for the specific subgroups H1 and H3 analysis (Supplementary Table S5) and 724, 408, 189, 292 and 134, belonging to haplogroups K, T2b, W, V and HV0, respectively, for diversity analysis (Supplementary Tables S6 and S7).…”