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Research Publication

The genomic history of East Asian Middle Neolithic millet- and rice-agricultural populations

Jianxue Xiong, Yu Xu, Guoke Chen et al.

21 Authors
2025-10-08 Published
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

JX
Jianxue Xiong
YX
Yu Xu
GC
Guoke Chen
LY
Liping Yang
YZ
Yawei Zhou
YP
Yiling Pan
ZW
Zhiyou Wang
JB
Jiujiang Bai
BZ
Baoshuai Zhang
GD
Guanghui Dong
JP
Jingrong Pei
XY
Xiaomin Yang
LC
Liang Chen
NK
Ningwu Kang
YW
Yangyang Wu
BW
Bangyan Wang
KZ
Kongyang Zhu
PD
Panxin Du
XL
Xiaolong Li
HW
Hetong Wen
SW
Shaoqing Wen
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

The Yellow and Yangtze river basins in China are among the world’s oldest independent agricultural centers, known for the domestication of millet and rice, respectively, yet their genetic history is poorly understood. Here, we present genome-wide data from 74 Middle Neolithic genetic samples from these regions, showing marked genetic differentiation but bidirectional gene flow, supporting a demic diffusion model of mixed farming. Yellow River populations exhibit distinct genetic substructures resulting from interactions with surrounding groups during the mid-Neolithic expansion of millet agriculture. Upper Yellow River populations are genetically linked to Tibetan Plateau populations and possess the earliest adaptive EPAS1 haplotype (∼5,800 BP) among modern humans. Meanwhile, Yangtze River rice farmers show genetic affinity with Neolithic to present-day southeast coastal China and Austronesian populations, tracing the origins of proto-Austronesians farther north to the Yangtze River. These findings offer new insights into the impact of mid-Neolithic agricultural expansion on human genetic history.

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