Ancient DNA Reveals a Tragic Genocide Hidden in Humanity's Past

All Hi-Tech Developments for the Military and Civilian Sectors
Post Reply
User avatar
jemhouston
Posts: 6153
Joined: Fri Nov 18, 2022 12:38 am

Ancient DNA Reveals a Tragic Genocide Hidden in Humanity's Past

Post by jemhouston »

https://www.sciencealert.com/ancient-dn ... nitys-past



We are a violent bunch.

Ancient DNA Reveals a Tragic Genocide Hidden in Humanity's Past
Image

Humans
17 February 2024
By Clare Watson
Human skull positioned with jaw open, with an arrow piercing through its nose. The skull of Porsmose man, found in Denmark, who died a violent death in the Neolithic period. (National Museum of Denmark)

The rise of farming in late Stone Age Europe was no smooth transition from hunter-gatherer lifestyles but a bloody takeover that saw nomadic populations wiped out by farmer-settlers in a few generations, a new study has found.

In fact, twice in just a thousand years, the population of southern Scandinavia was entirely replaced by newcomers to the area, whose remains bear next to no trace of their predecessors in DNA profiles, analyzed by an international team of researchers.

"This transition has previously been presented as peaceful," explains study author and palaeoecologist Anne Birgitte Nielsen of Lund University. "However, our study indicates the opposite. In addition to violent death, it is likely that new pathogens from livestock finished off many gatherers."

Using a technique called shotgun sequencing, the team analyzed DNA samples from 100 human remains found in Denmark. The remains spanned 7,300 years of the Mesolithic period (or Middle Stone Age when hunter-gatherer lifestyles started to decline), the Neolithic period (or New Stone Age when humans settled into farming life), and the Early Bronze Age.

Focusing on one specific region – that just so happens to have a climate suitable for both foraging and farming, and preserving human remains – allowed the researchers to map out the gene flows between populations, alongside changes in vegetation that reflect how they used the land.

The analysis shows that around 5,900 years ago, a farmer population drove out the hunters, foragers, and fishers who had previously populated Scandinavia, and lopped forests to make farmland.

Previous research (comparing DNA from a handful of skeletons) had suggested that these first Scandinavian farmers inherited around 30 percent of their genomes from hunter-gatherers, which would mean that their populations mixed – not that one wiped out the other.

Plenty of archeological evidence suggests, instead, that this was a particularly violent time, and the new study shows that hunter-gatherer DNA was essentially erased, hardly detectable in the genomes of Scandinavia's first farmers.

But their dominance was relatively short-lived. The farmers, also known as the Funnelbeaker culture, lived for about another 1,000 years before another wave of new arrivals from the eastern Steppes moved in.

The newcomers carried with them their ancestry from the Yamnaya, a livestock-herding people with origins in southern Russia. They quickly replaced the Funnelbeakers, giving rise to a new cultural group called the Single Grave culture.

"This time there was also a rapid population turnover, with virtually no descendants from the predecessors," Nielsen says, noting how the DNA profile of the first farmers to settle in Denmark has been essentially erased from modern-day Danish populations.

"We don't have as much DNA material from Sweden, but what there is points to a similar course of events," Nielsen adds.

Extensive archeological evidence unearthed before this study had chronicled this transition from the Funnelbeakers to the Single Grave culture, but the relationship between the two groups was often debated.

Now, by better understanding the ancestry of Danish and Swedish people, researchers hope they may be able to uncover genetic markers in ancient DNA that could explain modern-day health patterns – in the same way that scientists just pinpointed why multiple sclerosis is more common among white, northern Europeans than their southern counterparts.

"Our results help to enhance our knowledge of our heredity and our understanding of the development of certain diseases. Something that in the long term could be beneficial, for example in medical research," concludes Nielsen.

T
Johnnie Lyle
Posts: 3888
Joined: Thu Nov 17, 2022 2:27 pm

Re: Ancient DNA Reveals a Tragic Genocide Hidden in Humanity's Past

Post by Johnnie Lyle »

We are.

We’re also working on controlling it.
User avatar
Sukhoiman
Posts: 1040
Joined: Sun Nov 20, 2022 5:09 am

Re: Ancient DNA Reveals a Tragic Genocide Hidden in Humanity's Past

Post by Sukhoiman »

Basically had to go sedentary for quite some time before you get enough fat and rich to contemplate things like the golden rule....and then slowly applying that in some basic measure....likely in large measure compelled to develop given populations themselves become weightier and entrenched around you...i.e the costs really not being worth it once your power-guys have understanding of taking over the other-power at the top being largely sufficient.

Not having this brings severe late-stage mismatch like the absolute hellish wildfire of a thing coming from steppe mongols much later....literally zero golden rule....dog eat dog psyche like was there in the pre-civ and farming-civ transition periods of the neolithic to bronze age.
Micael
Posts: 6477
Joined: Thu Nov 17, 2022 10:50 am

Re: Ancient DNA Reveals a Tragic Genocide Hidden in Humanity's Past

Post by Micael »

Yeah I think there’s been some hints along these lines previously. My impression from looking at genetic ancestry in Sweden is that it seems that the percentage of hunter-gatherer in modern day Swedes go up in people who have their ancestral background far inland and more north. Suggesting that the replacement ratio by farmer-settlers drops the further away from fertile agricultural lands you get, and the hunter-gatherers managed to cling on to a greater degree the deeper into the forested parts away from the sea that you get.

If my personal DNA ancestry analysis is accurate, it appears to show a higher percentage of hunter-gatherer in my background than the average in Sweden, and my known ancestral background in the geographic sense is almost exclusively from Värmland, which seems to have been very predominantly a forest region rather than an agricultural one well into the Viking era. (It still is heavily forested but it has more farming now than it had before then.)

So point being that I think the farmer-settlers overpowered the hunter-gatherers in those areas which they found that they wanted to settle in, but it was a slower process and to a lesser extent in the areas where they didn’t really want to settle in. Hunter-gatherer hold out areas if you will.
Post Reply