by Cosmos editorial
team
08 May 2020
from
CosmosMagazine Website
Italian version
The ancient Andes we all recognize:
Machu
Picchu in Peru.
Craig Hastings / Getty Images
New
genomic portrait
of pre-Columbian
civilizations...
An international team has
conducted what it says is the first in-depth, wide-scale study of
the genomic history of ancient civilizations in the central Andes
mountains and coast before European contact.
The findings (A
Paleogenomic Reconstruction of the Deep Population History of the
Andes), published in the journal Cell, reveal
early genetic distinctions between groups in nearby regions,
population mixing within and beyond the Andes, surprising genetic
continuity amid cultural upheaval, and ancestral cosmopolitanism
among some of the region's most well-known ancient civilizations.
Source
Led by Harvard Medical School and the University of California,
Santa Cruz, the study team was drawn from a number of disciplines
and countries, including,
-
Argentina
-
Australia
-
Bolivia
-
Chile
-
Germany
-
Peru
-
the UK
-
the US
A detail from the
Tiwanaku
Gate of
the Sun in Bolivia.
Miguel Angel López
Together they analyzed genome-wide data from 89 individuals who
lived between 500 and 9000 years ago.
Of these, 64 genomes,
ranging from 500 to 4500 years old, were newly sequenced - more than
doubling the number of ancient individuals with genome-wide data
from South America.
Their analysis included representatives of civilizations in the
Andes from whom no genome-wide data had been reported before,
including the,
-
Moche
-
Nasca
-
Wari
-
Tiwanaku
-
Inca
And it represents,
"a major step toward
redressing the global imbalance in
ancient DNA data",
according to Harvard’s David Reich, a professor of genetics.
"The great majority of published ancient DNA studies to date
have focused on western Eurasia," he says.
"This study in South
America allows us to begin to discern at high resolution the
detailed history of human movements in this extraordinarily
important part of the world."
The analyses revealed
that by 9000 years ago, groups living in the Andean highlands became
genetically distinct from those that eventually came to live along
the Pacific coast.
The effects of this early
differentiation are still seen today.
By 5800 years ago,
the population of the north also developed distinct genetic
signatures from populations that became prevalent in the south,
the team found.
Again, these
differences can be observed today.
After that time, gene flow occurred among all regions in the
Andes, although it dramatically slowed after 2000 years ago.
The team discovered genetic exchanges both within the Andes and
between Andean and non-Andean populations.
Ancient people moved
between south Peru and the Argentine plains and between the
north Peru coast and the Amazon, largely bypassing the
highlands.
Analysis revealed that multiple regions have maintained genetic
continuity over the past 2000 years, despite clear cultural
transformations.
This contrasts with many
other world regions, says David Reich, where ancient DNA
studies often document substantial genetic turnover during this
period.
The population structures that arose early on persisted through
major social changes and on into modern societies.
"To our surprise, we
observed strong genetic continuity during the rise and fall of
many of the large-scale Andean cultures, such as the Moche, Wari
and Nasca," says Harvard’s Nathan Nakatsuka, the paper’s first
author.
"Our results suggest that the fall of these cultures was not due
to massive migration into the region; for example, from an
invading military force, a scenario which had been documented in
some other regions of the world."
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