Publication | Open Access
The genomic formation of First American ancestors in East and Northeast Asia
24
Citations
97
References
2020
Year
Unknown Venue
Ancient BeringiansGeneticsFirst American AncestorsNortheast AsiaArchaeologyUnique BurialGenomicsGenomic FormationPhylogeneticsPaleolithic ArchaeologyHuman OriginDenali TraditionPaleoanthropologyBiochronologyGenetic VariationPopulation GeneticsHuman EvolutionNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyAnthropologyPopulation GenomicsMedicine
Abstract Upward Sun River 1, an individual from a unique burial of the Denali tradition in Alaska (11500 calBP), is considered a type representative of Ancient Beringians who split from other First Americans 22000–18000 calBP in Beringia. Using a new admixture graph model-comparison approach resistant to overfitting, we show that Ancient Beringians do not form the deepest American lineage, but instead harbor ancestry from a lineage more closely related to northern North Americans than to southern North Americans. Ancient Beringians also harbor substantial admixture from a lineage that did not contribute to other Native Americans: Amur River Basin populations represented by a newly reported site in northeastern China. Relying on these results, we propose a new model for the genomic formation of First American ancestors in Asia. One Sentence Summary Ancient Beringians do not form the deepest American lineage, but harbor admixture from Amur River Basin populations.
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