I haven't read this properly yet, but the results appear to be very similar to those I obtained with some of the same ancient genomes (see here), which must be very heartening for the authors (j/k). By the way, it's interesting to note that the word Celtic doesn't appear anywhere in the paper. I wonder why?
British population history has been shaped by a series of immigrations and internal movements, including the early Anglo-Saxon migrations following the breakdown of the Roman administration after 410CE. It remains an open question how these events affected the genetic composition of the current British population. Here, we present whole-genome sequences generated from ten ancient individuals found in archaeological excavations close to Cambridge in the East of England, ranging from 2,300 until 1,200 years before present (Iron Age to Anglo-Saxon period). We use present-day genetic data to characterize the relationship of these ancient individuals to contemporary British and other European populations. By analyzing the distribution of shared rare variants across ancient and modern individuals, we find that today’s British are more similar to the Iron Age individuals than to most of the Anglo-Saxon individuals, and estimate that the contemporary East English population derives 30% of its ancestry from Anglo-Saxon migrations, with a lower fraction in Wales and Scotland. We gain further insight with a new method, rarecoal, which fits a demographic model to the distribution of shared rare variants across a large number of samples, enabling fine scale analysis of subtle genetic differences and yielding explicit estimates of population sizes and split times. Using rarecoal we find that the ancestors of the Anglo-Saxon samples are closest to modern Danish and Dutch populations, while the Iron Age samples share ancestors with multiple Northern European populations including Britain.
Schiffels et al., Iron Age and Anglo-Saxon genomes from East England reveal British migration history, bioRxiv, Posted July 17, 2015. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/022723
23 comments:
Excellent study. Certainly will help refine theories on the cultural change and migration in post-Roman England.
But that 'today’s British are more similar to the Iron Age individuals than to most of the Anglo-Saxon individuals," suggests that there was some 'revival' of 'Brittonic' ancestry, again (like in post-Neolithic Europe) by a completion of admixture between 'natives' and 'newcomers'.
But I wonder how fitting in the BB, Unetice & BA Scandinavian Samples we have will affect the conclusions. As they might serve better proxies for "Anglo-Saxons' than modern Norweigans, Dutch.
Regarding proxy for Anglo-Saxons, we have RISE174 from Allentoft. It's from Malmo, 427-611 AD.
it's interesting to note that the word Celtic doesn't appear
Probably because the geneticists should stay out of cultural interpretations for the most part. Of course they use terms like iron age but that is pretty basic...
from the abstract
Using rarecoal we find that the ancestors of the Anglo-Saxon samples are closest to modern Danish and Dutch populations
I wonder why the eastern English have an estimated 30 percent anglo saxon, a component which is closest to Danish and Dutch, but the recent fine scale study on only modern samples estimates that the danish contribution to enland was small.
So the Early Anglo-Saxons are closest to the modern ( North?) Dutch & the Mid Anglo Saxons in England are closer to the Danish.
The 3 Iron Aged Brythonics have a North European base. Probably something like WHG which shows on Hinxon4's Eurogenes K8.
My initial impression is that actual A-S migration was more in the order of 50% +.
Certainly, unless one falls back onto ken Dark's arguements of "archaeological invisibility", a case of mass migration from Nth Europe cannot be denied, more so by the contemporous abandonement of setlements in coastal Netherlands, and the north Sea littoral generally.
I suspect, only direct comparison of ROman and post-Roman aDNA from both England and north Europe will aproximate true figures. Why ? Becuase modern Dutch & Danes might bare some ancestry of more southern arrivals in the post-400 AD period
Agreed, excellent paper.
This should answer the questions Apostatesimpressions was longing for: The British are predominantly of Insular Celtic descent, with the Germanic contribution being in the minority, though still substantial in certain places and individuals (up to 40% in East English individuals).
To me it's surprising that the Anglo-Saxon ancestry is quite evenly distributed in Britain, around 30% in eastern England, but still around 20% in Wales and Scotland. This certainly suggests a high amount of internal migration and mixture after the Anglo-Saxon incursions. Perhaps this occured rather recently, after the industrialisation.
The different affiliations of Anglo-Saxon individuals, with some being closer to the Dutch and others to the Danes, might perhaps reflect different tribal affiliations, the former Saxon, the latter Angles.
@ Rozenfag
RISE174 as a proxy for Anglo-Saxons? I don't think so. He's too eastern! The Angles and Saxons were from Jutland and the North Sea area of Germany. RISE174 may rather serve as a proxy for the early ethnic Danes who moved to Jutland after part of the Angles had left for England.
Indeed, this is what the Eurogenes K15 oracle suggests: Judging from the oracle, the Hinxton Anglo-Saxons resemble Orcadians, West Norwegians and the Northern Dutch. While RISE174 resembles modern Danes, or a West Scottish + Swedish/Estonian mix, clearly bearing testimony to its more eastern origin. On the other hand, RISE71, who is from Late Neolithic Jutland, resembles a mix of 67% West Norwegian + 33% Orcadian, exactly like some of the Anglo-Saxons at Hinxton. So, concluding from this, there was an east-west structure among these Germanics, and Jutland was already Anglo-Saxon-like in the Late Neolithic.
But anyway, we don't need a proxy for Anglo-Saxons, because according to this new paper it's possible to spot the Anglo-Saxons with local British ancestry and to tell them apart from the pure ones.
BTW, North Germans have not been included in the comparisons in the paper, but I've noticed before that the Northern Dutch and the Danes are better proxies for my East Prussian grandmother's Medieval Northwest German ancestry than the Eurogenes North German sample, while Hinxton Anglo-Saxons make the best fit. With 4mix, using K15 data:
0% North_German + 71% North_Dutch + 6% Polish + 23% Lithuanian @ D = 5.6414
0% North_Dutch + 74% Danish + 0% Polish + 26% Lithuanian @ D = 5.0612
27% Hinxton2 + 42% Hinxton5 + 12% Polish + 19% Lithuanian @ D = 4.0359
@Simon_W
Ok, I should have said differently. Basically RISE174 is closest in time and space to Iron Age Britons and Anglo-Saxons. Here is the map with available samples from Iron Age Europe:
https://img-fotki.yandex.ru/get/11/54029168.5b/0_9b486_1418807a_orig.png
As you can see RISE174 is closest geographically to Britain.
A larger proportion of the Anglo Saxon in the Scots 20% may have actually came from the Norse.. Whereas the 30% in Eastern England literally is Anglo Saxon.
Some good news. Y-full is updating their tree in the next 1-3 days. 468 new SNPs, 97 new subclades. 72 and 35 respectively, for R1b.
@Chad: (psst... that adds up to 107 :P)
I am surprised they didn't use any Irish samples.
I wonder how the widely insinuated post-Roman Dutch or Frisian 'extinction' could hold against this new evidence brought forward of an effective
population being 'highest in the Netherlands (~210,000).' Indicates a pretty solid local continuity to me. Actually, I am not surprised at all that especially the earliest Anglo-Saxons seem to relate to the Dutch - whatever happened next, this order must have been critical to the linguistic direction of Anglo-Saxon.
Rokus
-Coastal Netherlands has near total abandonment of the landscape. More continuity further inland
@Mike,
'Coastal Netherlands has near total abandonment of the landscape. More continuity further inland'
In that case the inland Dutch were attested in the Anglo-Saxon genes rather than the coastal Dutch? This doesnot make sense.
According to absence of evidence, for a landscape where rivers often changed their courses and floods and subduction changed sedimentation patterns. Some natural 'donks' or river dunes in the middle of flood plains show habitation back to the Beaker times. In other words: I think archeologists should restrain from hasty conclusions.
Of course they should
But the region has been extensively investigated. The "absence of evidence ..." arguement, in this case, is a non one.
But that's not my point. My pojnt was that the coastal Dutch "disappear " because they all ended up in England !
@Mike,
Actually the current archaeological evidence suggests that the depopulation of parts (but not all) of the Netherlands (e.g. many terp sites)occurs too early to relate to post-Roman population movements into Britain. Referring to Nieuwhof's recent article in the Journal of the Archaeology of the Low Countries, for example, that refers to sites being abandoned by 300 AD, and re-occupation occurring in the 5th century AD, with Anglo-Saxon pottery. So Anglo-Saxons, if one can use a pots=people equation, are moving into the coastal area of the Netherlands in the C5 AD, not out of it.
Nick you're right about the earlier commencement of depopulation, but I thought the max flux was in late 4th. And I think AS type pottery in the 5th was still small in amount. Also *continental* Saxon pottery begins to appear. But I certainly take your points. Perhaps I need to revisit the latest datings, and see what they've come up with dendrodates..
@rozenfag, I guess you've got a point here with the reference to RISE174
I'am of North Dutch stock, and a polish guy plotted me very well: "You plot on my PCA very close to "Germanic" average as well as to RISE174 (Iron Age Sweden), RISE61 (Early Bronze Denmark) and RISE94 (Early Bronze Sweden). In fact you plot closer to Early Bronze Age Swedes, than that modern Southern Swede."
@Simon W and here are my K13 and K15 results:
K13
Using 1 population approximation:
1 Danish @ 1.742467
2 North_Dutch @ 2.503399
3 Norwegian @ 2.936815
4 North_German @ 4.368844
5 Orcadian @ 4.697951
6 Swedish @ 4.926437
7 Irish @ 5.600447
8 West_Scottish @ 6.118611
9 Southeast_English @ 6.190817
10 Southwest_English @ 7.859173
Using 2 populations approximation:
1 50% Danish +50% Norwegian @ 1.723689
Using 3 populations approximation:
1 50% Danish +25% Danish +25% Norwegian @ 1.494796
K15
Using 1 population approximation:
1 North_Dutch @ 2.662666
2 Danish @ 3.078913
3 West_Scottish @ 4.199471
4 Orcadian @ 4.770091
5 Norwegian @ 4.771307
6 Irish @ 4.923634
7 West_Norwegian @ 5.078017
8 Southeast_English @ 6.210367
9 Swedish @ 6.318136
10 North_German @ 6.876086
Using 2 populations approximation:
1 50% Norwegian +50% West_Scottish @ 1.545855
Using 3 populations approximation:
1 50% Irish +25% Norwegian +25% West_Norwegian @ 1.528969
Using 4 populations approximation:
1 Swedish + West_Norwegian + West_Scottish + West_Scottish @ 1.415054
I am related to RISE174, as I share 320.8 total cM's, and have 182 total matching segments >1 cM, 16.3 segments >2 cM, 3.3 segments greater than 3 cM, with largest segment showing as 4.5 cM (RISE174 Gedmatch Kit# F999943). And although I am also part British Isles and mainland Europe, my mother is half Swedish, and my father, is 1/4 Scandinavian, and both sides of my Swedish ancestry are from this same area in Sweden, where this sample was taken from in Scane. My ancestors lived in neighboring towns of Vellinge, Ostra Grevie, Malmo, et al. Thus I'm fairly certain this is an ancient relative of mine on my Swedish side based on all this.
@Ellejay
The chances that you share so much IBD with this ancient individual are very slim. I suspect that you may have used a dodgy algorithm.
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