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View Full Version : 'Clovis site' remains were just plain native american not european or something else



curupira
02-13-2014, 11:44 AM
Did you expect it? I did. I've always found those stories more wishful thinking than anything else...

http://i59.tinypic.com/5s5xe.jpg


The genome of a Late Pleistocene human from a Clovis burial site in western Montana

Morten Rasmussen et al.

Clovis, with its distinctive biface, blade and osseous technologies, is the oldest widespread archaeological complex defined in North America, dating from 11,100 to 10,700 14C years before present (BP) (13,000 to 12,600 calendar years BP)1, 2. Nearly 50 years of archaeological research point to the Clovis complex as having developed south of the North American ice sheets from an ancestral technology3. However, both the origins and the genetic legacy of the people who manufactured Clovis tools remain under debate. It is generally believed that these people ultimately derived from Asia and were directly related to contemporary Native Americans2. An alternative, Solutrean, hypothesis posits that the Clovis predecessors emigrated from southwestern Europe during the Last Glacial Maximum4. Here we report the genome sequence of a male infant (Anzick-1) recovered from the Anzick burial site in western Montana. The human bones date to 10,705 ± 35 14C years BP (approximately 12,707–12,556 calendar years BP) and were directly associated with Clovis tools. We sequenced the genome to an average depth of 14.4× and show that the gene flow from the Siberian Upper Palaeolithic Mal’ta population5 into Native American ancestors is also shared by the Anzick-1 individual and thus happened before 12,600 years BP. We also show that the Anzick-1 individual is more closely related to all indigenous American populations than to any other group. Our data are compatible with the hypothesis that Anzick-1 belonged to a population directly ancestral to many contemporary Native Americans. Finally, we find evidence of a deep divergence in Native American populations that predates the Anzick-1 individual.
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v506/n7487/full/nature13025.html#tables


Ancient DNA has consistently managed to surprise us, with pretty much no direct genetic continuity revealed between Pleistocene and modern populations anywhere in the world. So, it is refreshing to see that at least in the case of the Americas the people who lived there ~13 thousand years ago are clearly related to the people who lived there in pre-Columbian times, with no real evidence of subsequent gene flows from Eurasia (at least in the case of Central/South Americans).

Many people suspected this because of the difficulty to access the Americas from Eurasia: this must have limitedgene flow between the two regions to a handful of migrants and a restricted set of time periods where geological and climatic conditions were advantageous. The much reduced genetic diversity of Native Americans also argues in favor of them being a relatively simple population, with low heterozygosity and a handful of unique "founder lineages" in both the Y-chromosome and mtDNA.

Nonetheless, there are also several theories in the realm of alernative history, involving Solutreans from Europe, trans-Pacific boat riders, bearded "White Gods", Minoans/Phoenicians/Atlanteans/Ancient Egyptians, "African" Olmecs, "Caucasoid" Paleo-Indians, lost Israelite tribes, to mention only a few of the most well-known ones.

The new study does not, of course, disprove any of the proposals in the preceding paragraph: one can still claim that diverse groups once inhabited the Americas and Rasmussen et al. (2014) just happened to chance upon one that looked just like modern native Americans. But, this certainly improves the odds of early "Native American simplicity", offering no evidence for the complexity postulated by many of the alternative theories.

Moreover, while the existence of other human groups in the Americas cannot be disproved by the study of a single ancient individual, what can be proved is the antiquity of the ancestors of Native Americans. Rather than being late arrivals arriving from Asia after the initial colonization, perhaps with derived Mongoloid physical morphology, we now know that they were already there as early as ~13 thousand years ago. It is remarkable that a single ancient DNA sample can sweep away much of the nonsense that has been written on the topic in the past.

A piece in Nature News addresses some of the "ethics" debate that seems ever-present in studies involving Native American remains. I don't know how this study will be perceived by living Native Americans: a possibility is that they'll be more receptive to ancient DNA research now that a team of scientists have stretched the time depth of their ancestry in the Americas to the earliest studied sample, revealing themselves not to be the evil-doers that western scientists are generally assumed to be according to a certain kind of mentality. A different -and more alarming- possibility, is that radical anti-science elements will be emboldened by these findings to claim that continuity with the earliest Americans (which in itself seems true enough) adds support to claims of ownership to pretty much all archaeological samples whose relationship to living Amerindians was hitherto uncertain in light of the many alternative theories.

In any case, it is remarkable that this ~13 thousand year old genome now exists while the genomes of modern native Americans that can be had for a fraction of the cost and technical difficulty do not. Indeed, not even genotype data exist from most Amerindian groups from the USA, which creates the rather bizarre state of affairs that the Anzick-1 genome had to be compared with native groups from several countries in the Western hemisphere except the one in which it was found.
http://dienekes.blogspot.com.br/2014/02/ancient-clovis-genome-from-montana.html

Prisoner Of Ice
02-13-2014, 11:51 AM
I already posted a thread about it. The problem is, it is so far from any permanent clovis sites that it could just as easily have been called an aztec site.

The only sites that far west are transitory caches of tools that were built further east before being taken west, then abandoned. So I doubt it's really clovis remains at all.

Now if they found something on east coast in the right time frame....

Argang
02-13-2014, 12:10 PM
The 40k years old Tianyuan from near Beijing seems equidistant to Europeans, Native Americans and East Asians. Looks like true "ENA" is yet to be found, if it really existed at all.

http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v506/n7487/images/nature13025-sf5.jpg

curupira
02-13-2014, 12:53 PM
The 40k years old Tianyuan from near Beijing seems equidistant to Europeans, Native Americans and East Asians.

No he was not:

http://i58.tinypic.com/112etm8.jpg

Ancient DNA has revealed that humans living some 40,000 years ago in the area near Beijing were likely related to many present-day Asians and Native Americans

An international team of researchers including Svante Pääbo and Qiaomei Fu of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, sequenced nuclear and mitochondrial DNA that had been extracted from the leg of an early modern human from Tianyuan Cave near Beijing, China. Analyses of this individual's DNA showed that the Tianyuan human shared a common origin with the ancestors of many present-day Asians and Native Americans. In addition, the researchers found that the proportion of Neanderthal and Denisovan-DNA in this early modern human is not higher than in people living in this region nowadays.

The genetic profile reveals that this early modern human was related to the ancestors of many present-day Asians and Native Americans but had already diverged genetically from the ancestors of present-day Europeans. In addition, the Tianyuan individual did not carry a larger proportion of Neanderthal or Denisovan DNA than present-day people in the region. “More analyses of additional early modern humans across Eurasia will further refine our understanding of when and how modern humans spread across Europe and Asia”, says Svante Pääbo.

http://www.mpg.de/6842535/dna-Tianyuan-cave

Argang
02-13-2014, 01:13 PM
No he was not:



According to the f3 test that was finally performed to compare him in this newer analysis, he indeed was equidistant to both.


Tianyuan individual, which at 40,000-years-old seems equally related to a geographically wide range of Eurasian populations in this analysis (Extended Data Figure 5f and 5g[posted above]).

This wasn't anything unexpected. The story of these ancient samples is subject to revision when more testing is done, Mal'ta is another sample which may be revisited in the future if a better coverage sequence is obtained.