Paleo-Eskimo mtDNA Genome Reveals Matrilineal Discontinuity in Greenland

Author:

Gilbert M. Thomas P.12345,Kivisild Toomas12345,Grønnow Bjarne12345,Andersen Pernille K.12345,Metspalu Ene12345,Reidla Maere12345,Tamm Erika12345,Axelsson Erik12345,Götherström Anders12345,Campos Paula F.12345,Rasmussen Morten12345,Metspalu Mait12345,Higham Thomas F. G.12345,Schwenninger Jean-Luc12345,Nathan Roger12345,De Hoog Cees-Jan12345,Koch Anders12345,Møller Lone Nukaaraq12345,Andreasen Claus12345,Meldgaard Morten12345,Villems Richard12345,Bendixen Christian12345,Willerslev Eske12345

Affiliation:

1. Center for Ancient Genetics, Department of Biology, Universitetsparken 15, DK-2100 Copenhagen, Denmark.

2. Leverhulme Centre for Human Evolutionary Studies, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 1QH, UK.

3. SILA (The Greenland Research Centre at the National Museum of Denmark), Frederikisholms Kanal 12, DK1220 Copenhagen, Denmark.

4. Department of Genetics and Biotechnology, Faculty of Agricultural Sciences, University of Aarhus, Post Office Box 50, DK-8830 Tjele, Denmark.

5. Department of Evolutionary Biology, University of Tartu and Estonian Biocentre, Riia 23B, Tartu, 51010 Estonia.

Abstract

The Paleo-Eskimo Saqqaq and Independence I cultures, documented from archaeological remains in Northern Canada and Greenland, represent the earliest human expansion into the New World's northern extremes. However, their origin and genetic relationship to later cultures are unknown. We sequenced a mitochondrial genome from a Paleo-Eskimo human by using 3400-to 4500-year-old frozen hair excavated from an early Greenlandic Saqqaq settlement. The sample is distinct from modern Native Americans and Neo-Eskimos, falling within haplogroup D2a1, a group previously observed among modern Aleuts and Siberian Sireniki Yuit. This result suggests that the earliest migrants into the New World's northern extremes derived from populations in the Bering Sea area and were not directly related to Native Americans or the later Neo-Eskimos that replaced them.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference32 articles.

1. D. E. Damas, in Handbook of North American Indians, Vol. 5: Arctic, D. Damas, Ed. (Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC, 1984), pp. 72–79.

2. Materials and methods are available on Science Online.

3. G. F. Shieldset al., Am. J. Hum. Genet.53, 549 (1993).

4. mtDNA Variation among Greenland Eskimos: The Edge of the Beringian Expansion

5. mtDNA variation in Inuit populations of Greenland and Canada: Migration history and population structure

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