The Demographic Development of the First Farmers in Anatolia
2016; Elsevier BV; Volume: 26; Issue: 19 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1016/j.cub.2016.07.057
ISSN1879-0445
AutoresGülşah Merve Kılınç, Ayça Omrak, Füsun Özer, Torsten Günther, Ali Metin Büyükkarakaya, Erhan Bıçakçı, Douglas Baird, Handan Melike Dönertaş, Ayshin Ghalichi, Reyhan Yaka, Dilek Koptekin, Sinan Can Açan, Poorya Parvizi, Maja Krzewińska, Evangelia Daskalaki, Eren Yüncü, Nihan D. Dagtas, Andrew Fairbairn, Jessica Pearson, Gökhan Mustafaoğlu, Yılmaz Selim Erdal, Yasin Gökhan Çakan, İnci̇ Togan, Mehmet Somel, Jan Storå, Mattias Jakobsson, Anders Götherström,
Tópico(s)Linguistics and Cultural Studies
ResumoThe archaeological documentation of the development of sedentary farming societies in Anatolia is not yet mirrored by a genetic understanding of the human populations involved, in contrast to the spread of farming in Europe [1Bramanti B. Thomas M.G. Haak W. Unterlaender M. Jores P. Tambets K. Antanaitis-Jacobs I. Haidle M.N. Jankauskas R. Kind C.-J. et al.Genetic discontinuity between local hunter-gatherers and central Europe's first farmers.Science. 2009; 326: 137-140Crossref PubMed Scopus (363) Google Scholar, 2Skoglund P. Malmström H. Raghavan M. Storå J. Hall P. Willerslev E. Gilbert M.T.P. Götherström A. Jakobsson M. Origins and genetic legacy of Neolithic farmers and hunter-gatherers in Europe.Science. 2012; 336: 466-469Crossref PubMed Scopus (381) Google Scholar, 3Lazaridis I. Patterson N. Mittnik A. Renaud G. Mallick S. Kirsanow K. Sudmant P.H. Schraiber J.G. Castellano S. Lipson M. et al.Ancient human genomes suggest three ancestral populations for present-day Europeans.Nature. 2014; 513: 409-413Crossref PubMed Scopus (750) Google Scholar]. Sedentary farming communities emerged in parts of the Fertile Crescent during the tenth millennium and early ninth millennium calibrated (cal) BC and had appeared in central Anatolia by 8300 cal BC [4Baird D. The Late Epipaleolithic, Neolithic, and Chalcolithic of the Anatolian Plateau, 13,000–4000 BC.in: Potts D. A Companion to the Archaeology of the Ancient Near East. Wiley-Blackwell, 2012: 431-466Crossref Scopus (40) Google Scholar]. Farming spread into west Anatolia by the early seventh millennium cal BC and quasi-synchronously into Europe, although the timing and process of this movement remain unclear. Using genome sequence data that we generated from nine central Anatolian Neolithic individuals, we studied the transition period from early Aceramic (Pre-Pottery) to the later Pottery Neolithic, when farming expanded west of the Fertile Crescent. We find that genetic diversity in the earliest farmers was conspicuously low, on a par with European foraging groups. With the advent of the Pottery Neolithic, genetic variation within societies reached levels later found in early European farmers. Our results confirm that the earliest Neolithic central Anatolians belonged to the same gene pool as the first Neolithic migrants spreading into Europe. Further, genetic affinities between later Anatolian farmers and fourth to third millennium BC Chalcolithic south Europeans suggest an additional wave of Anatolian migrants, after the initial Neolithic spread but before the Yamnaya-related migrations. We propose that the earliest farming societies demographically resembled foragers and that only after regional gene flow and rising heterogeneity did the farming population expansions into Europe occur.
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