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Wednesday, January 27, 2021
The great shift
Here's a Principal Component Analysis (PCA) featuring some of the ancients from the recent Saag et al. paper at Science Advances. To see an interactive version of the plot paste the Global25 coordinates here into the relevant field here.
Note that the Fatyanovo culture agropastoralists, who are rich in Y-haplogroup R1a and steppe ancestry, cluster with present-day Eastern Europeans. On the other hand, the Volosovo culture singleton sits near the European hunter-gatherer cline that no longer exists.
This Volosovo individual belongs to Y-haplogroup Q1a. However, most of the Volosovo males whose genomes are soon to be published belong to Y-haplogroup R1b.
Thus, in much of Eastern Europe during the Bronze Age, agropastoralists rich in R1a and steppe ancestry replaced hunter-gatherers rich in R1b and with no steppe ancestry. Of course, that's not where the story ends, but I'll get back to that later this year.
By the way, the relatively high coverage Fatyanovo Y-chromosome sequences are being analyzed at YFull. You can check out the results here.
See also...
Labels:
ancient DNA,
Bronze Age,
Eastern Europe,
Fatyanovo,
Fatyanovo-Balanovo culture,
Indo-Aryan,
Indo-European,
Indo-Iranian,
Pontic-Caspian steppe,
Q1a,
R1a,
R1a-Z93,
R1b,
steppe ancestry,
Volosovo culture
Sunday, January 17, 2021
A tantalizing link
A new paper at PLoS ONE reports on the first human genomes reliably associated with the Single Grave culture (SGC). They were sequenced from remains in a burial at Gjerrild, Denmark, roughly dating to 2,500 BCE.
Surprisingly, one of the male genomes belongs to Y-haplogroup R1b-V1636, which is an exceedingly rare marker both in ancient and present-day populations.
However, the results do make sense, because the earliest instances of R1b-V1636 are in three Eneolithic males from burial sites on the Pontic-Caspian (PC) steppe in Eastern Europe, which is precisely where one would expect to find the paternal ancestors of the SGC population. The SGC, of course, is the westernmost variant of the Corded Ware culture (CWC), and there's very little doubt nowadays that the CWC had its roots on the PC steppe.
A Copper Age individual from Arslantepe in central Anatolia also belongs to R1b-V1636, which suggests that Northern Europe shared a very specific link with Anatolia via Eastern Europe during a period generally regarded to have been the time of early Indo-European dispersals.
Numerous SGC barrows or kurgans dot the landscape in what are now the Netherlands, northwestern Germany and Denmark. Unfortunately, most SGC human remains have been eaten up by the acidic soils that exist in this area.
Citation: Egfjord AF-H, Margaryan A, Fischer A, Sjögren K-G, Price TD, Johannsen NN, et al. (2021) Genomic Steppe ancestry in skeletons from the Neolithic Single Grave Culture in Denmark. PLoS ONE 16(1): e0244872. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0244872
See also...
Maykop ancestry in Copper Age Arslantepe
That old chestnut: Northeast vs Northwest Euros
In the last comment thread reader Greg put forth this question:
David, when are you going to explain the genetic discrepancy between Northeastern and Northwestern Europeans? You know, the one that people believe is due to Baltic Hunter-Gatherer admixture, whereas you believe it is due to genetic drift? You ought to make a post about this issue at some point, because a lot of people are wondering what's causing the differences.Well, Greg, this issue has been discussed to the proverbial death here and elsewhere. In fact, there were two posts and rather lengthy comment threads on the same topic at this blog just a few months ago. See here and here. Nevertheless, it seems that a fair number of people are still befuddled, so I'm going to try to explain this one last time, as briefly as a I can using just a handful of f4-stats. Admittedly, Northeast Europeans generally do pack higher levels of indigenous European hunter-gatherer ancestry than Northwest Europeans. This is especially true of Balts, who show more of this type of ancestry than even Scandinavians in practically every type of analysis. The f4-stats below back this up unambiguously. Note the significantly positive (>3) Z scores, which suggest that Latvians and Lithuanians harbor more Baltic hunter-gatherer-related ancestry than Norwegians and Swedes.
Chimp Baltic_HG Norwegian Latvian 0.001301 7.114 Chimp Baltic_HG Swedish Latvian 0.001017 4.205 Chimp Baltic_HG Norwegian Lithuanian 0.001023 7.341 Chimp Baltic_HG Swedish Lithuanian 0.000763 3.408Greg, I know what you're thinking: the naysayers are right! But wait, because there's a twist to this tale. Check out these f4-stats:
Chimp Baltic_HG Norwegian Belarusian 0.000265 1.934 Chimp Baltic_HG Swedish Belarusian 0.000152 0.7 Chimp Baltic_HG Norwegian Polish 6.4E-05 0.519 Chimp Baltic_HG Swedish Polish -0.000235 -1.074Please note, Greg, that none of the Z scores reach significance, which means that these Northwest Europeans and Slavs are symmetrically related to Baltic_HG. They're also symmetrically related to other relevant ancient groups such as the Yamnaya steppe herders. This, of course, suggests that they harbor very similar levels of basically the same ancient genetic components.
Chimp Karelia_HG Norwegian Belarusian 0.000136 0.844 Chimp Karelia_HG Swedish Belarusian 7.9E-05 0.32 Chimp Karelia_HG Norwegian Polish -4.7E-05 -0.304 Chimp Karelia_HG Swedish Polish -0.000134 -0.54 Chimp Yamnaya_Samara Norwegian Belarusian -0.000134 -1.085 Chimp Yamnaya_Samara Swedish Belarusian -6.6E-05 -0.34 Chimp Yamnaya_Samara Norwegian Polish -0.000225 -1.995 Chimp Yamnaya_Samara Swedish Polish -0.000311 -1.574 Chimp Barcin_N Norwegian Belarusian -0.000335 -2.809 Chimp Barcin_N Swedish Belarusian -0.000284 -1.491 Chimp Barcin_N Norwegian Polish -0.000222 -2.057 Chimp Barcin_N Swedish Polish -0.000318 -1.662 Chimp Baikal_N Norwegian Belarusian 0.000186 1.3 Chimp Baikal_N Swedish Belarusian -7E-05 -0.33 Chimp Baikal_N Norwegian Polish -4.6E-05 -0.351 Chimp Baikal_N Swedish Polish -0.000477 -2.277Interestingly, pairing up Ukrainians with English samples from Cornwall and Kent produces similar outcomes. But that's because most ancient ancestry proportions in Europe show a closer correlation with latitude than longitude.
Chimp Baltic_HG English_Cornwall Ukrainian 0.000282 2.242 Chimp Baltic_HG English_Kent Ukrainian 0.000225 1.748 Chimp Karelia_HG English_Cornwall Ukrainian 0.000323 2.175 Chimp Karelia_HG English_Kent Ukrainian 0.000239 1.634 Chimp Yamnaya_Samara English_Cornwall Ukrainian -6.6E-05 -0.569 Chimp Yamnaya_Samara English_Kent Ukrainian -0.000112 -0.977 Chimp Barcin_N English_Cornwall Ukrainian -0.000519 -4.641 Chimp Barcin_N English_Kent Ukrainian -0.000598 -5.232 Chimp Baikal_N English_Cornwall Ukrainian 0.000385 2.874 Chimp Baikal_N English_Kent Ukrainian 0.00036 2.836Now, Greg, if at least in terms of genetic ancestry, Latvians, Lithuanians, Belarusians, Poles and Ukrainians all qualify as Northeast Europeans, then what makes them different, as a group, from Northwest Europeans? Do you believe that the key factor is admixture from Baltic hunter-gatherers? Or is it genetic drift? Of course, considering all of the f4-stats above, logic dictates that it must be relatively recent genetic drift. Keep in mind, however, that this only applies to Balto-Slavic speaking Northeast Europeans without significant Uralian ancestry. Overall, Uralic speakers have a more complex population history, and indeed genetic differences between them and Northwest Europeans are in large part due to somewhat different ancestry proportions and also Siberian admixture. See also... So who's the most (indigenous) European of us all?
Thursday, January 14, 2021
David Anthony on Y-haplogroup R1a
Archeologist David Anthony has a new theory which attempts to explain why Y-haplogroup R1a hasn't yet been found in any Yamnaya graves. Basically, he thinks that it was carried by Yamnaya men who weren't buried in kurgans, because they were part of a social underclass, and so their remains are now difficult to locate. See here.
This is an interesting attempt to find a socio-archeological solution to a genetic question, but it's unnecessarily complicated and, in fact, also unnecessary.
The important thing to understand about R1a is that it's rarely seen in the ancient DNA record before the rise of the Corded Ware culture (CWC). Moreover, the vast majority of the R1a lineages in the world today belong to the R1a-M417 subclade, which is a relatively young (Eneolithic era?) marker and closely associated with the CWC population and its rapid expansion.
Indeed, modern R1a lineages show a very strong star-like phylogeny indicative of a series of rapid and massive expansions starting from a handful of lineages only a few thousand years ago.
So if R1a was actually present in the Yamnaya population, then the obvious reason why it hasn't yet been found in any Yamnaya remains is because it was only carried by a very small group of Yamnaya men. Simple as that.
Its expansions from the Pontic-Caspian (PC) steppe, predominantly via the highly successful R1a-M417, may have coincidentally and rather ironically started in a socially disenfranchised Yamnaya clan.
But my view is that R1a-M417 just happened to be present in a small group of early Yamnaya or Yamnaya-related males who came up with an economic package that allowed them to expand out of the PC steppe like no one else before them, and so they did just that.
Anthony is currently collaborating on a new paper about the Eneolithic era on the PC steppe with scientists from Harvard's David Reich Lab (see here). I'm really hoping that they get this right.
See also...
Fatyanovo as part of the wider Corded Ware family
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