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Portrait reconstruction of MARC481
Ancient Individual

A man buried in Canada in the Pre-Columbian North America era

MARC481
1 CE - 800 CE
Male
Middle Dorset Culture, Canada
Canada
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Chapter I

Identity

The biological and cultural markers that define this ancient individual

Sample ID

MARC481

Date Range

1 CE - 800 CE

Biological Sex

Male

mtDNA Haplogroup

Not available

Y-DNA Haplogroup

F-M89

Cultural Period

Middle Dorset Culture, Canada

Chapter II

Place

Where this individual was discovered

Country Canada
Locality Newfoundland. Port aux Choix
Chapter III

Time

When this individual lived in the broader context of human history

MARC481 1 CE - 800 CE
Chapter IV

Story

The narrative of this ancient life

The Middle Dorset culture, flourishing approximately between 500 and 1000 AD, represents a distinctive era within the broader Dorset cultural tradition, which occupied the Arctic regions of Canada. This indigenous culture was part of the Arctic Small Tool tradition and has been identified primarily through archaeological evidence found across the eastern Canadian Arctic and Greenland.

Geographic Distribution:

The Middle Dorset culture was widely spread across the Canadian Arctic, with significant sites found in areas such as Labrador, Newfoundland, the Ungava Peninsula, Hudson Bay, and the High Arctic islands. Their presence extended as far as the eastern Canadian coastlines and sometimes inland, indicating their adaptability to different Arctic environments.

Environmental Context:

The landscape inhabited by the Middle Dorset people was characterized by harsh Arctic conditions, including tundra plains, icy waters, and a predominantly cold climate. Despite these challenges, the vast sea ice and coastal areas supported a bio-diverse environment which included marine mammals like seals, walrus, and whales, as well as terrestrial animals such as caribou.

Subsistence and Economy:

The Middle Dorset culture maintained a robust subsistence strategy primarily focused on hunting sea mammals. The presence of seal bones in many Dorset archaeological sites underscores their reliance on these animals for food, materials, and possibly even the structuring of social life. They utilized ingenious hunting techniques, including ice-edge hunting and seal-breathing hole tactics, to efficiently harvest marine resources.

In addition to marine hunting, the Dorset people also pursued caribou during its seasonal migrations. The diversity in diet is evident in their remains, showcasing their adaptability to both marine and terrestrial ecosystems.

Tools and Technology:

Innovative tool-making is a hallmark of the Middle Dorset culture. Skilled in working with available materials like bone, ivory, and stone, the Dorset people created a variety of tools and artifacts. Their toolkit included harpoons, knives, scrapers, and needles. Particularly notable is their crafting of burins, a type of chisel, essential in the manufacturing of various implements.

Interestingly, the Dorset people lacked the bow and arrow, which was common in other contemporary cultures, relying instead on lances or spears for hunting. Their artistic expressions included carved ivory items, many of which had intricate and stylized animal forms that might have had spiritual or symbolic significance.

Housing and Settlement:

The Middle Dorset typically settled in semi-permanent communities, living in sod houses with stone foundations or temporary structures like skin tents depending on the season and hunting travel needs. Archaeological evidence suggests that Dorset groups could have assembled in sizable gatherings, possibly driven by collective hunting or social purposes.

Social Structure and Beliefs:

While specific details of their social organization remain obscure, it is presumed that the Dorset society was organized at the family or small community level. Artifacts such as carved masks and drumming platforms hint at a rich ceremonial life possibly involving shamanistic practices and ancestral worship, though these interpretations are speculative.

Decline and Legacy:

By around 1000 AD, the Middle Dorset culture began to decline, likely due to several factors including climatic changes, diminishing sea ice, and the arrival of new cultural groups such as the Thule people, who migrated from Alaska and brought with them new technologies like dog sleds and more advanced hunting methods.

The legacy of the Middle Dorset culture is preserved in the archaeological record and continues to be a significant focus of Arctic anthropological study, offering valuable insights into the adaptability and ingenuity of indigenous cultures in extreme environments. Artifacts, settlement patterns, and ecological adaptations all contribute to our understanding of how the Dorset people survived and thrived in Canada's Arctic regions.

Chapter V

Genetics

The genetic ancestry of this ancient individual

Ancient Genetic Admixture

This analysis compares the DNA profile of MARC481 with ancient reference populations, showing the genetic composition in terms of prehistoric ancestral groups.

European Hunter-Gatherers 41.6%
Western Steppe Pastoralists 26.8%
Ancient Asians 25.4%
Neolithic Farmers 6.2%

Modern Genetic Admixture

This analysis compares the DNA profile with present-day reference populations, showing what percentage of genetic makeup resembles modern populations from different regions.

Europe 55.2%
Southern European 24.0%
Sardinian 18.5%
Italian 5.5%
Eastern European 18.6%
Eastern European 18.6%
Northwestern European 12.7%
Northwestern European 12.4%
Asia 36.8%
Northern Asian 21.2%
Siberian 13.4%
Mongolian 7.8%
Chinese & Southeast Asian 5.7%
Chinese 5.7%
Central Asian, Northern Indian & Pakistani 5.6%
Central Asian 5.6%
Northern West Asian 2.2%
Anatolian 2.2%
Arab, Egyptian & Levantine 2.0%
Arabian 2.0%
Africa 8.0%
North African 8.0%
Egyptian 4.8%
North African 3.2%

Closest Modern Populations

These are the modern populations showing the closest statistical alignment to A man buried in Canada in the Pre-Columbian North America era, ranked by genetic distance. Lower distance values indicate closer statistical similarity.

1
Tatar Mishar
7.3645
2
Tatar Kazan
7.4595
3
Komi A
9.2042
4
Tatar Lipka
9.3496
5
Besermyan
9.6210
6
Turkish Rumeli
9.7001
7
Turkish Deliorman
9.9826
8
Russian Leshukonsky
10.2433
9
Saami Kola
10.2769
10
Roma Barcelona
10.3278
Chapter VI

Context

Other ancient individuals connected to this sample

Sources

References

Scientific publications and genetic data

Scientific Publication

The genetic prehistory of the New World Arctic

Authors Raghavan M, DeGiorgio M, Albrechtsen A
Abstract

The New World Arctic, the last region of the Americas to be populated by humans, has a relatively well-researched archaeology, but an understanding of its genetic history is lacking. We present genome-wide sequence data from ancient and present-day humans from Greenland, Arctic Canada, Alaska, Aleutian Islands, and Siberia. We show that Paleo-Eskimos (~3000 BCE to 1300 CE) represent a migration pulse into the Americas independent of both Native American and Inuit expansions. Furthermore, the genetic continuity characterizing the Paleo-Eskimo period was interrupted by the arrival of a new population, representing the ancestors of present-day Inuit, with evidence of past gene flow between these lineages. Despite periodic abandonment of major Arctic regions, a single Paleo-Eskimo metapopulation likely survived in near-isolation for more than 4000 years, only to vanish around 700 years ago.

G25 Coordinates

The G25 coordinates for sample MARC481 can be used for detailed admixture analysis in our G25 Studio tool.

MARC481,0.09904052,0.03759496,0.06551214,0.02130974,0.01447132,-0.00725366,-0.00745628,0.00117138,0.01882952,0.01595298,0.01143884,0.00172882,-0.00178066,-0.02358526,-0.00250614,-0.00430332,-0.00855696,-0.00252068,-0.00501082,-0.00371164,-0.00108748,0.00985374,0.0012348,-0.00903278,-0.00207987
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