Literature DB >> 15197817

Horse-mounted invaders from the Russo-Kazakh steppe or agricultural colonists from western Central Asia? A craniometric investigation of the Bronze Age settlement of Xinjiang.

Brian E Hemphill1, J P Mallory.   

Abstract

Numerous Bronze Age cemeteries in the oases surrounding the Täklamakan Desert of the Tarim Basin in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, western China, have yielded both mummified and skeletal human remains. A dearth of local antecedents, coupled with woolen textiles and the apparent Western physical appearance of the population, raised questions as to where these people came from. Two hypotheses have been offered by archaeologists to account for the origins of Bronze Age populations of the Tarim Basin. These are the "steppe hypothesis" and the "Bactrian oasis hypothesis." Eight craniometric variables from 25 Aeneolithic and Bronze Age samples, comprising 1,353 adults from the Tarim Basin, the Russo-Kazakh steppe, southern China, Central Asia, Iran, and the Indus Valley, are compared to test which, if either, of these hypotheses are supported by the pattern of phenetic affinities possessed by Bronze Age inhabitants of the Tarim Basin. Craniometric differences between samples are compared with Mahalanobis generalized distance (d2), and patterns of phenetic affinity are assessed with two types of cluster analysis (the weighted pair average linkage method and the neighbor-joining method), multidimensional scaling, and principal coordinates analysis. Results obtained by this analysis provide little support for either the steppe hypothesis or the Bactrian oasis hypothesis. Rather, the pattern of phenetic affinities manifested by Bronze Age inhabitants of the Tarim Basin suggests the presence of a population of unknown origin within the Tarim Basin during the early Bronze Age. After 1200 B.C., this population experienced significant gene flow from highland populations of the Pamirs and Ferghana Valley. These highland populations may include those who later became known as the Saka and who may have served as "middlemen" facilitating contacts between East (Tarim Basin, China) and West (Bactria, Uzbekistan) along what later became known as the Great Silk Road. Copyright 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15197817     DOI: 10.1002/ajpa.10354

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Phys Anthropol        ISSN: 0002-9483            Impact factor:   2.868


  6 in total

1.  Ancient DNA provides new insights into the history of south Siberian Kurgan people.

Authors:  Christine Keyser; Caroline Bouakaze; Eric Crubézy; Valery G Nikolaev; Daniel Montagnon; Tatiana Reis; Bertrand Ludes
Journal:  Hum Genet       Date:  2009-05-16       Impact factor: 4.132

2.  Evidence that a West-East admixed population lived in the Tarim Basin as early as the early Bronze Age.

Authors:  Chunxiang Li; Hongjie Li; Yinqiu Cui; Chengzhi Xie; Dawei Cai; Wenying Li; Victor H Mair; Zhi Xu; Quanchao Zhang; Idelisi Abuduresule; Li Jin; Hong Zhu; Hui Zhou
Journal:  BMC Biol       Date:  2010-02-17       Impact factor: 7.431

3.  Analysis of ancient human mitochondrial DNA from the Xiaohe cemetery: insights into prehistoric population movements in the Tarim Basin, China.

Authors:  Chunxiang Li; Chao Ning; Erika Hagelberg; Hongjie Li; Yongbin Zhao; Wenying Li; Idelisi Abuduresule; Hong Zhu; Hui Zhou
Journal:  BMC Genet       Date:  2015-07-08       Impact factor: 2.797

4.  The Genetic Structure and East-West Population Admixture in Northwest China Inferred From Genome-Wide Array Genotyping.

Authors:  Bin Ma; Jinwen Chen; Xiaomin Yang; Jingya Bai; Siwei Ouyang; Xiaodan Mo; Wangsheng Chen; Chuan-Chao Wang; Xiangjun Hai
Journal:  Front Genet       Date:  2021-12-21       Impact factor: 4.599

5.  The genomic origins of the Bronze Age Tarim Basin mummies.

Authors:  Fan Zhang; Chao Ning; Ashley Scott; Qiaomei Fu; Rasmus Bjørn; Wenying Li; Dong Wei; Wenjun Wang; Linyuan Fan; Idilisi Abuduresule; Xingjun Hu; Qiurong Ruan; Alipujiang Niyazi; Guanghui Dong; Peng Cao; Feng Liu; Qingyan Dai; Xiaotian Feng; Ruowei Yang; Zihua Tang; Pengcheng Ma; Chunxiang Li; Shizhu Gao; Yang Xu; Sihao Wu; Shaoqing Wen; Hong Zhu; Hui Zhou; Martine Robbeets; Vikas Kumar; Johannes Krause; Christina Warinner; Choongwon Jeong; Yinqiu Cui
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2021-10-27       Impact factor: 69.504

6.  Contrasting maternal and paternal genetic histories among five ethnic groups from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan.

Authors:  Muhammad Tariq; Habib Ahmad; Brian E Hemphill; Umar Farooq; Theodore G Schurr
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-01-19       Impact factor: 4.379

  6 in total

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