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Friday, September 13, 2024

Pre-Colombian New World Admixture In Ancient Easter Island Genomes

Polynesian people reached Easter Island around 1250 CE and were the first humans there. Europeans first reached the island in 1722 CE, at which time there were 1,500 to 3,000 people living there. European diseases, Europeans killing them, and Portuguese slave traders brought the Polynesian population down to a low point of 110 people some time after the 1860s. This paper's introduction suggested that as many as 15,000 people were living on the island on its pre-European peak, but later studies and this paper suggest that this peak population was greatly overestimated. The best fit to the genetic data shows a steady but slow population increase on the island after it was settled until European first contact, and the ecological collapse theory is rejected.

About 10% of Easter Island ancestry comes from pre-Columbian admixture with the indigenous peoples of the Americas as a result of admixture events in the time period from 1250-1430 CE, with a best fit timing in the late 1300s. This date also strongly favors admixture with indigenous Americans after, and not before the ancestors for the sampled individuals arrived on Easter Island. In particular, "the Native American component in Ancient Rapanui to be most closely related to Pacific Coast South Americans and not North Americans or populations east of the Andes further substantiates trans-Pacific contacts between Polynesians and Native Americans."

This further corroborates prior evidence of pre-Columbian contact between Polynesians and the pre-Columbian peoples of the Americas, and is also consistent the with expected time frame of these contacts from prior data.
we reconstructed the genomic history of the Rapanui on the basis of 15 ancient Rapanui individuals that we radiocarbon dated (1670–1950 CE) and whole-genome sequenced (0.4–25.6×). We find that these individuals are Polynesian in origin and most closely related to present-day Rapanui, a finding that will contribute to repatriation efforts. Through effective population size reconstructions and extensive population genetics simulations, we reject a scenario involving a severe population bottleneck during the 1600s, as proposed by the ecocide theory. Furthermore, the ancient and present-day Rapanui carry similar proportions of Native American admixture (about 10%). Using a Bayesian approach integrating genetic and radiocarbon dates, we estimate that this admixture event occurred about 1250–1430 CE.
From here. The body text of the article provides some background:
several pieces of evidence suggest that Rapa Nui did not constitute the easternmost point of long sea voyages and that Polynesian peoples eventually reached the Americas before Columbus. 
Genetic studies on present-day individuals have supported such contact. Present-day Rapanui were found to harbour Native American and European admixture in their genomes. Notably, in that work, Native American admixture (dated 1280–1495 CE) was estimated to pre-date European admixture (dated 1850–1895 CE). 
More recently, Native American admixture was detected not only in present-day individuals from Rapa Nui, but also from Rapa Iti, Tahiti, Palliser, Nuku Hiva (North Marquesas), Fatu Hiva (South Marquesas) and Mangareva. In that study, the Native American gene flow in the different islanders was dated between 1150 (South Marquesas) and 1380 CE (Rapa Nui), in line with the date estimated in ref. 5
However, the only two ancient DNA studies of ancient Rapanui so far did not find evidence for Native American admixture. The first study focused on mitochondrial DNA from 12 individuals, whereas the second analysed low-depth (0.0004–0.0041×) whole-genome data from 5 individuals dating before and after European contact. In the latter, downstream population genetic analyses confirmed that the five ancient individuals were Polynesian. However, even though the analysed human remains were post-dating the inferred Native American admixture time, no Native American ancestry was reported in these ancient genomes, casting doubt on the findings based on data from present-day populations.

The admixture and Native American contract dates cited above are also just in the right time frame to explain the geographic distribution and lack of fixation of "Paleo-Asian" ancestry in modern South American populations, although that scarce Paleo-Asian component is very small and is seemingly not a very close match to Polynesian ancestry. 

The geographic spread and lack of fixation of the Paleo-Asian component in South America is inconsistent and irreconcilable with a time depth greater than that of the primary founding population of the Americas for that genetic ancestry component.

2 comments:

  1. DNA of 'Thorin,' one of the last Neanderthals, finally sequenced, revealing inbreeding and 50,000 years of genetic isolation

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