| Literature DB >> 27514818 |
Stephen J Lycett1, Noreen von Cramon-Taubadel1.
Abstract
The transmission of genes and culture between human populations has major implications for understanding potential correlations between history, biological, and cultural variation. Understanding such dynamics in 19th century, post-contact Native Americans on the western Great Plains is especially challenging given passage of time, complexity of known dynamics, and difficulties of determining genetic patterns in historical populations for whom, even today, genetic data for their descendants are rare. Here, biometric data collected under the direction of Franz Boas from communities penecontemporaneous with the classic bison-hunting societies, were used as a proxy for genetic variation and analyzed together with cultural data. We show that both gene flow and "culture flow" among populations on the High Plains were mediated by geography, fitting a model of isolation-by-distance. Moreover, demographic and cultural exchange among these communities largely overrode the visible signal of the prior millennia of cultural and genetic histories of these populations.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27514818 PMCID: PMC4981875 DOI: 10.1038/srep25695
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Schematic depiction of the late nineteenth century geographic distributions of the nine ethno-linguistic tribes considered in our analyses, alongside illustrations representing the combination of cultural and biometric data we use in our study.
The nine tribes are distributed from present-day Texas in the south (Comanche) to Canada in the north (Sarcee, Blackfoot, Assiniboine). (Figure drawn by the authors, modified and redrawn after the originals contained in refs 10,29,47).
Results of matrix correlation analyses (significant values in bold).
| Geographic distances | Language | Inter-tribal relations | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cultural data | 0.326/ | −0.227/0.102 | −0.433/ |
| Biometric data | 0.382/ | −0.225/0.083 | 0.030/0.481 |
Description of biometric data used.
| Tribe | Sample size ( | Average year of birth |
|---|---|---|
| Arapaho | 62 | 1854‒1869 |
| Assiniboine | 26 | 1851‒1866 |
| Blackfoot (Blood/Piegan) | 60 | 1856‒1871 |
| Cheyenne | 32 | 1858‒1873 |
| Comanche | 82 | 1857‒1872 |
| Crow | 299 | 1851‒1866 |
| Teton Dakota | 622 | 1850‒1865 |
| Kiowa | 101 | 1856‒1871 |
| Sarcee | 12 | 1860‒1875 |
Tribal names in parentheses indicate the names used in the Boas database, where different from the nomenclature used in the present study.