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Ancient mitochondrial DNA provides high-resolution time scale of the peopling of the Americas

Authors :
Calogero M. Santoro
Vivien G. Standen
Wolfgang Haak
Ilán Santiago Leboreiro Reyna
Julien Soubrier
Simon Y. W. Ho
Maria Inés Barreto Romero
Cristina Valdiosera
Guido Valverde
Richard L. Burger
Lucía Watson Jiménez
Colin Smith
David Reich
Julio Alejandro Ballivián Torrez
Adam Ben Rohrlach
Elsa Tomasto Cagigao
Alan Cooper
Isabel Flores Espinoza
Mario A. Rivera
R. Spencer Wells
Krzysztof Makowski
Lars Fehren-Schmitz
Nadin Rohland
Gustavo G. Politis
María Constanza Ceruti
Bastien Llamas
Stephen M. Richards
Susanne Nordenfelt
Johan Reinhard
Josefina Mansilla Lory
Swapan Mallick
Source :
Repositorio Institucional de la Consejería de Sanidad de la Comunidad de Madrid, Consejería de Sanidad de la Comunidad de Madrid, CONICET Digital (CONICET), Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas, instacron:CONICET, Science Advances, Science advances, vol 2, iss 4
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Native American population history is reexamined using a large data set of pre-Columbian mitochondrial genomes.<br />The exact timing, route, and process of the initial peopling of the Americas remains uncertain despite much research. Archaeological evidence indicates the presence of humans as far as southern Chile by 14.6 thousand years ago (ka), shortly after the Pleistocene ice sheets blocking access from eastern Beringia began to retreat. Genetic estimates of the timing and route of entry have been constrained by the lack of suitable calibration points and low genetic diversity of Native Americans. We sequenced 92 whole mitochondrial genomes from pre-Columbian South American skeletons dating from 8.6 to 0.5 ka, allowing a detailed, temporally calibrated reconstruction of the peopling of the Americas in a Bayesian coalescent analysis. The data suggest that a small population entered the Americas via a coastal route around 16.0 ka, following previous isolation in eastern Beringia for ~2.4 to 9 thousand years after separation from eastern Siberian populations. Following a rapid movement throughout the Americas, limited gene flow in South America resulted in a marked phylogeographic structure of populations, which persisted through time. All of the ancient mitochondrial lineages detected in this study were absent from modern data sets, suggesting a high extinction rate. To investigate this further, we applied a novel principal components multiple logistic regression test to Bayesian serial coalescent simulations. The analysis supported a scenario in which European colonization caused a substantial loss of pre-Columbian lineages.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Repositorio Institucional de la Consejería de Sanidad de la Comunidad de Madrid, Consejería de Sanidad de la Comunidad de Madrid, CONICET Digital (CONICET), Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas, instacron:CONICET, Science Advances, Science advances, vol 2, iss 4
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e792e97f4ed3d05e4e2657b9b3b35791