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Research Publication

The genetic origins and impacts of historical Papuan migrations into Wallacea.

Purnomo Gludhug A, GA Kealy, Shimona S et al.

39689173 PubMed ID
13 Authors
2024-12-24 Published
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

PG
Purnomo Gludhug A
GK
GA Kealy
SS
Shimona S
OS
O'Connor Sue
SS
S Schapper
AA
Antoinette A
SB
Shaw Ben
BL
B Llamas
BB
Bastien B
TJ
Teixeira Joao C
JS
JC Sudoyo
HH
Herawati H
TR
Tobler Raymond
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

The tropical archipelago of Wallacea was first settled by anatomically modern humans (AMH) by 50 thousand years ago (kya), with descendent populations thought to have remained genetically isolated prior to the arrival of Austronesian seafarers around 3.5 kya. Modern Wallaceans exhibit a longitudinal countergradient of Papuan- and Asian-related ancestries widely considered as evidence for mixing between local populations and Austronesian seafarers, though converging multidisciplinary evidence suggests that the Papuan-related component instead comes primarily from back-migrations from New Guinea. Here, we reconstruct Wallacean population genetic history using more than 250 newly reported genomes from 12 Wallacean and three West Papuan populations and confirm that the vast majority of Papuan-related ancestry in Wallacea (~75 to 100%) comes from prehistoric migrations originating in New Guinea and only a minor fraction is attributable to the founding AMH settlers. Mixing between Papuan and local Wallacean lineages appears to have been confined to the western and central parts of the archipelago and likely occurred contemporaneously with the widespread introduction of genes from Austronesian seafarers-which now comprise between ~40 and 85% of modern Wallacean ancestry-though dating historical admixture events remains challenging due to mixing continuing into the Historical Period. In conjunction with archaeological and linguistic records, our findings point to a dynamic Wallacean population history that was profoundly reshaped by the spread of Papuan genes, languages, and culture in the past 3,500 y.

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