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Wednesday, July 3, 2019

Evidence of European ancestry in the Philistines


The abstract below has just appeared at the European Nucleotide Archive (see here), so I'm guessing that the relevant paper and accompanying ancient genome-wide data will be published within weeks if not days. Emphasis is mine:

The ancient Mediterranean port-city of Ashkelon, identified as “Philistine” during the Iron Age, underwent a dramatic cultural change between the Late Bronze- and the early Iron- Age. It has been long debated whether this change was driven by a substantial movement of people, possibly linked to a larger migration of the so-called “Sea Peoples”. Here, we report genome-wide data of ten Bronze- and Iron- Age individuals from Ashkelon. We find that the early Iron Age population was genetically distinct due to a European related admixture. Interestingly, this genetic signal is no longer detectible in the later Iron Age population. Our results support that a migration event occurred during the Bronze- to Iron- Age transition in Ashkelon but did not leave a long-lasting genetic signature.

Update 4/7/2019: The paper is now available at Science Advances [LINK]. One of the Ashkelon ancients, who also shows a relatively high level of European ancestry, belongs to Y-Chromosome haplogroup R1 (probably R1b-M269). I've updated my Global25 datasheets with the new samples. Look for the Levant_ISR_Ashkelon prefix. Same links as always...

Global25 datasheet ancient scaled

Global25 pop averages ancient scaled

Global25 datasheet ancient

Global25 pop averages ancient

This is how they cluster in my Principal Component Analysis (PCA) of ancient West Eurasian genetic variation. The relevant datasheet is available here. Based on these results, it's tempting to think that the European ancestry in the Philistines may have been of Greek provenance. But keep in mind that this is just a two dimensional view and a simplification of reality. I'll have more to say about the ancestry of these individuals and the origins of the Philistines in future blog posts.

See also...

Five foot Philistines

How did steppe ancestry spread into the Biblical-era Levant?

202 comments:

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Erikl86 said...

@Matt and @PF,
We can always debate the issue via emails or another website (or when there will be Eurogenes blog entry on European Jews). :)

Andrzejewski said...

@Sam where do you think the Burushu people came from?

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