2021
DOI: 10.1101/2021.06.19.449013
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New insights from the combined discrimination of modern/ancient genome-wide shared alleles and haplotypes: Differentiated demographic history reconstruction of Tai-Kadai and Sinitic people in South China

Abstract: Southern China was a region with mixed rice-millet farming during the Middle Neolithic period and also suggested to be the homeland of Tai-Kadai-speaking (TK) people. The archaeological evidence of animal and plant domestication has demonstrated that southern Chinese rice agriculturalists dispersed from the Yangtze River basin with the dissemination of TK, Austroasiatic (AA), Austronesian (AN) and Hmong-Mien (HM) languages. However, the formations of the inland TK-speaking people, central/southern Han Chinese … Show more

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“…The strong correlation between the population structure and linguistic classifications/geographic locations in East Asia has been reported in several genome-wide SNP-based studies (He et al, 2020;Huang et al, 2020;Kutanan et al, 2021;Wang C. C. et al, 2021). The population expansion with the extensive gene flow among populations which belong to the different linguistic classifications also drives the formation of the complex population genetic structure in East Asia (Huang et al, 2020;Liu D. et al, 2020;Kutanan et al, 2021;Wang M. et al, 2021;Wang C. C. et al, 2021;Yang et al, 2020). Yang et al (2020) recently reconstructed the genetic structure and admixture history of Neolithic ancient NEAs and SEAs, demonstrating that the population structure in East Asia had existed early in the Neolithic; the spread of the NEA-related ancestry led to more genetic homogeneity in present-day EAs than in Neolithic EAs.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 78%
“…The strong correlation between the population structure and linguistic classifications/geographic locations in East Asia has been reported in several genome-wide SNP-based studies (He et al, 2020;Huang et al, 2020;Kutanan et al, 2021;Wang C. C. et al, 2021). The population expansion with the extensive gene flow among populations which belong to the different linguistic classifications also drives the formation of the complex population genetic structure in East Asia (Huang et al, 2020;Liu D. et al, 2020;Kutanan et al, 2021;Wang M. et al, 2021;Wang C. C. et al, 2021;Yang et al, 2020). Yang et al (2020) recently reconstructed the genetic structure and admixture history of Neolithic ancient NEAs and SEAs, demonstrating that the population structure in East Asia had existed early in the Neolithic; the spread of the NEA-related ancestry led to more genetic homogeneity in present-day EAs than in Neolithic EAs.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 78%