2023
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2209475119
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Genomic perspectives on human dispersals during the Holocene

Abstract: Nearly 20 y ago, Jared Diamond and Peter Bellwood reviewed the evidence for the associated spread of farming and large language families by the demographic expansions of farmers. Since then, advances in obtaining and analyzing genomic data from modern and ancient populations have transformed our knowledge of human dispersals during the Holocene. Here, we provide an overview of Holocene dispersals in the light of genomic evidence and conclude that they have a complex history. Even when there is a demonstrated c… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…Our study primarily examines the agricultural expansion in Europe. In the global context, Neolithic expansions exhibited considerable variability in their replacement of native HG ancestry, challenging the notion that agricultural spread always was accompanied by significant genetic turnover 58 . In fact, the agricultural expansion within southwest Asia, before its spread into Europe, is not associated with ancestry turnover, which has led to the conclusion that this initial expansion was propelled more by the dissemination of ideas and farming technology than by the movement of people 6 .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Our study primarily examines the agricultural expansion in Europe. In the global context, Neolithic expansions exhibited considerable variability in their replacement of native HG ancestry, challenging the notion that agricultural spread always was accompanied by significant genetic turnover 58 . In fact, the agricultural expansion within southwest Asia, before its spread into Europe, is not associated with ancestry turnover, which has led to the conclusion that this initial expansion was propelled more by the dissemination of ideas and farming technology than by the movement of people 6 .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…After the division into the F and H lineages, genotype F began its diversification 2,500 years before genotype H, indicating that the TMRCA of genotype F is older than the TMRCA of genotype H. This might be explained by several reasons, one hypothesis is that the genotype F could have emerged in the first waves of human migration ( Waters, 2019 ), while the genotype H emerged in a more recent migration. It is also possible that carriers of the genotype F may have taken faster migratory routes ( Stoneking et al, 2023 ) than ancestors of the genotype H, leading them to experience a variety of environmental conditions that impacted the rate of evolution of the genotype F ( Rasche et al, 2019 ; Lindo and Degiorgio, 2021 ). This factor together with geographic isolation could have originated the current F sub-genotypes ( Mojsiejczuk et al, 2020 ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These questions, once unresolvable, are now tractable, via genetic analyses. In Perspective 2, Stoneking and collaborators ( 22 ) develop a broad genomic survey of Africa, Europe, Central and South Asia, East Asia and Mainland Southeast Asia, Island Southeast Asia and Oceania, and the Americas, documenting a complex picture of Holocene human dispersals. Although much remains to be learned, migration and dispersal analyses are becoming increasingly informed by large-scale genomic analyses.…”
Section: This Special Featurementioning
confidence: 99%