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Ancient mitochondrial genomes from the Argentinian Pampas inform the early peopling of the Southern Cone of South America.

Roca-Rada Xavier, X Politis, Gustavo G et al.

34142055 PubMed ID
18 Authors
2021-06-25 Published
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

RX
Roca-Rada Xavier
XP
X Politis
GG
Gustavo G
MP
Messineo Pablo G
PS
PG Scheifler
NN
Nahuel N
SC
Scabuzzo Clara
CG
C González
MM
Mariela M
HK
Harkins Kelly M
KR
KM Reich
DD
David D
SY
Souilmi Yassine
YT
Y Teixeira
JC
João C JC
LB
Llamas Bastien
BF
B Fehren-Schmitz
LL
Lars L
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

The Southern Cone of South America (SCSA) is a key region for investigations about the peopling of the Americas. However, little is known about the eastern sector, the Argentinian Pampas. We analyzed 18 mitochondrial genomes-7 of which are novel-from human skeletal remains from 3 Early to Late Holocene archaeological sites. The Pampas present a distinctive genetic makeup compared to other Middle to Late Holocene pre-Columbian SCSA populations. We also report the earliest individuals carrying SCSA-specific mitochondrial haplogroups D1j and D1g from Early and Middle Holocene, respectively. Using these deep calibration time points in Bayesian phylogenetic reconstructions, we suggest that the first settlers of the Pampas were part of a single and rapid dispersal ∼15,600 years ago. Finally, we propose that present-day genetic differences between the Pampas and the rest of the SCSA are due to founder effects, genetic drift, and a partial population replacement ∼9,000 years ago.

Chapter III

AI-Generated Summary

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