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Ancient DNA reveals 4000 years of grapevine diversity, viticulture and clonal propagation in France.

Noraz Rémi, R Chauvey, Lorelei L et al.

41876516 PubMed ID
63 Authors
2026-03-24 Published
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

NR
Noraz Rémi
RC
R Chauvey
LL
Lorelei L
WS
Wagner Stefanie
SE
S Estrada
OO
Oscar O
WN
Wales Nathan
NB
N Bonnaire
EE
Emmanuelle E
CM
Cabanis Manon
MD
M Derreumaux
MM
Marie M
FI
Figueiral Isabel
IH
I Hallavant
CC
Charlotte C
MP
Marinval Philippe
PM
P Matterne
VV
Véronique V
RJ
Ros Jérôme
JR
J Rovira
NN
Nuria N
TM
Tillier Margaux
MB
M Bovagne
MM
Marilyne M
CJ
Chausserie-Laprée Jean
JN
J Nicolas
CC
Clément C
DI
Daveau Isabelle
ID
I Delassus
DD
David D
GE
Gailledrat Eric
EG
E Ginouvez
OO
Olivier O
HB
Houix Bertrand
BJ
B Jung
CC
Cécile C
KP
Kuchler Philippe
PL
P Leroux
LL
Laure L
MR
Macario Raphaël
RM
R Marlière
EE
Elise E
PM
Pasqualini Michel
MP
M Piques
GG
Gaël G
PH
Pomaredes Hervé
HR
H Robert
JJ
Justine J
RC
Roms Cédric
CR
C Roth-Zehner
MM
Muriel M
SM
Scrinzi Maxime
MT
M Taras-Thomas
MM
Maryanick M
TC
Torres Costa Josep
JB
J Besnard
GG
Guillaume G
TJ
Terral Jean-Frédéric
JB
JF Bacilieri
RR
Roberto R
BL
Bouby Laurent
LO
L Orlando
LL
Ludovic L
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Wine production has deep historical roots in France, yet the biological foundations of early viticulture remain elusive. We report genome-wide ancient DNA data from 49 archaeological grape pips spanning ~4000 years, from the Bronze Age to the Medieval period, primarily focusing on France. Population genetic analyses reveal the genetic makeup of wild local grapevines in the Bronze Age and the early use of domesticated grapevines by ~625-500 BCE. Roman-era genomes reflect long-distance exchange from Iberian, Balkan, Levantine, and Caucasian domesticated varieties. Vegetative propagation, evidenced by genetically identical clones across sites and centuries, emerged by the mid-Iron Age and became a pillar of viticultural practice. Remarkably, one Medieval sample from Valenciennes is genetically identical to modern 'Pinot Noir', demonstrating clonal continuity over nearly 600 years. This study traces the introduction, integration and spread of diverse grapevine ancestries that have contributed to shape the varietal landscape of French viticulture.

Chapter III

Analysis

Comprehensive review of ancestry and genetic findings

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Summary

Key Findings

Ancestry Insights

Traits Analysis

Historical Context

Scientific Assessment