“While the Balti and Malana people discussed in the other thread seem to have no Tibetan Y-DNA to speak of, the Ladakhi have loads of it: 24% D1a1-N1, 9% D1c-P99, 18% O3a2c1-M117, 3% N*-M231(xN1c1-Tat, N1c2a-M128, N1c2b-P43) - this is probably N-F2905 - and 1% Q1a1a1-M120.Other interesting haplogroups: 1.4% C2-M217 (no other C), 0.9% N1c1a-M178, 0.5% N1c2b-P43, 2.3% Q1a2-M346, 0.9% Q1b1,and a surprise appearance of one very rare R1b-M335. We still don't know whether this falls under R1b1 or R1b2, AFAIK.Indian haplogroups include 16% R1a1a1b2-Z93 - but also a single (0.5%) R1a1*-SRY1532(xR1a1a-M198) - yes, there is basal R1a in India. Also a good 9% H1a1-M82, plus 2% H1*-M69, 5% R2a-M124 and a single R2*-M479, 2% L1c-M357 and a single L1a-M76, and 2% J2b2.So roughly 54% Tibetan , 40% Indian , and 6% other . ”