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Genome of a middle Holocene hunter-gatherer from Wallacea

Cited 24 time in Web of Science Cited 26 time in Scopus
Authors

Carlhoff, Selinaf; Duli, Akin; Naegele, Kathrin; Nur, Muhammad; Skov, Laurits; Sumantri, Iwan; Oktaviana, Adhi Agus; Hakim, Budianto; Burhan, Basran; Syahdar, Fardi Ali; McGahan, David P.; Bulbeck, David; Perston, Yinika L.; Newman, Kim; Saiful, Andi Muhammad; Ririmasse, Marlon; Chia, Stephen; Hasanuddin; Pulubuhu, Dwia Aries Tina; Suryatman; Supriadi; Jeong, Choongwon; Peter, Benjamin M.; Pruefer, Kay; Powell, Adam; Krause, Johannes; Posth, Cosimo; Brumm, Adam

Issue Date
2021-08
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Citation
Nature, Vol.596 No.7873, pp.543-547
Abstract
The palaeogenomic analysis of a pre-Neolithic skeleton associated with a Toalean burial context from Wallacea. Much remains unknown about the population history of early modern humans in southeast Asia, where the archaeological record is sparse and the tropical climate is inimical to the preservation of ancient human DNA(1). So far, only two low-coverage pre-Neolithic human genomes have been sequenced from this region. Both are from mainland Hoabnhian hunter-gatherer sites: Pha Faen in Laos, dated to 7939-7751 calibrated years before present (yr cal bp; present taken as ad 1950), and Gua Cha in Malaysia (4.4-4.2 kyr cal bp)(1). Here we report, to our knowledge, the first ancient human genome from Wallacea, the oceanic island zone between the Sunda Shelf (comprising mainland southeast Asia and the continental islands of western Indonesia) and Pleistocene Sahul (Australia-New Guinea). We extracted DNA from the petrous bone of a young female hunter-gatherer buried 7.3-7.2 kyr cal bp at the limestone cave of Leang Panninge(2) in South Sulawesi, Indonesia. Genetic analyses show that this pre-Neolithic forager, who is associated with the 'Toalean' technocomplex(3,4), shares most genetic drift and morphological similarities with present-day Papuan and Indigenous Australian groups, yet represents a previously unknown divergent human lineage that branched off around the time of the split between these populations approximately 37,000 years ago(5). We also describe Denisovan and deep Asian-related ancestries in the Leang Panninge genome, and infer their large-scale displacement from the region today.
ISSN
0028-0836
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/205668
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-021-03823-6
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  • School of Biological Sciences
Research Area Bioinformatics, Ecology, Evolutionary Biology, 생물정보학, 생태학, 유전체

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