Detection of a population replacement at the Classic–Postclassic transition in Mexico

Author:

González-José Rolando1,Martínez-Abadías Neus2,González-Martín Antonio3,Bautista-Martínez Josefina4,Gómez-Valdés Jorge4,Quinto Mirsha5,Hernández Miquel2

Affiliation:

1. Centro Nacional Patagónico, Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y TécnicasBoulevard Brown 3500, U9120ACV Puerto Madryn, Argentina

2. Unitat d'Antropologia, Facultat de Biologia, Universitat de BarcelonaDiagonal 645, 08028 Barcelona, Spain

3. Departamento de Zoología y Antropología Física, Facultad de Biología, Universidad Complutense de Madrid28040 Madrid, Spain

4. Dirección de Antropología Física, Instituto Nacional de Antropología e HistoriaJuarez 425-431, Colonia Centro, 91700 Veracruz, México

5. Área Académica de Historia y Antropología, Universidad Autónoma del Estado de HidalgoPachuca, Hidalgo 42160, México

Abstract

The Mexica Empire reached an outstanding social, economic and politic organization among Mesoamerican civilizations. Even though archaeology and history provide substantial information about their past, their biological origin and the demographic consequences of their settlement in the Central Valley of Mexico remain unsolved. Two main hypotheses compete to explain the Mexica origin: a social reorganization of the groups already present in the Central Valley after the fall of the Classic centres or a population replacement of the Mesoamerican groups by migrants from the north and the consequent setting up of the Mexica society. Here, we show that the main changes in the facial phenotype occur during the Classic–Postclassic transition, rather than in the rise of the Mexica. Furthermore, Mexica facial morphology seems to be already present in the early phases of the Postclassic epoch and is not related to the northern facial pattern. A combination of geometric morphometrics with Relethford–Blangero analyses of within- versus among-group variation indicates that Postclassic groups are more variable than expected. This result suggests that intense gene exchange was likely after the fall of the Classic and maybe responsible for the Postclassic facial phenotype. The source population for the Postclassic groups could be located somewhere in western Mesoamerica, since North Mexico and Central Mesoamerican Preclassic and Classic groups are clearly divergent from the Postclassic ones. Similarity among Preclassic and Classic groups and those from Aridoamerica could be reflecting the ancestral phenotypic pattern characteristic of the groups that first settled Mesoamerica.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

Reference50 articles.

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