Serotyping of group A rotaviruses obtained from stools of 158 diarrheic patients in Chiang Mai, Thailand, by ELISA with monoclonal antibodies revealed a yearly change in the prevalence of individual serotypes. Three unusual human rotavirus strains were isolated. Strain Mc35 had subgroup I-serotype 10 antigen and a long RNA electrophoretic type, a property hitherto found only in bovine rotaviruses. RNA-RNA hybridization tests showed that the strain is more closely related genetically to bovine than to human rotaviruses. Strain Mc323, although serologically closely related to serotype 9, had subgroup I specificity and a long RNA electrophoretic type, a characteristic common to nonhuman rotaviruses. Strain Mc345, with an aberrant RNA pattern possibly due to genome rearrangement, had the same antigenic specificity as Mc323. These 2 strains were genetically very closely related to each other and were more related to porcine than to human rotaviruses. These results provide insights into the evolutionary mechanisms of human rotaviruses.