| Literature DB >> 29304377 |
Nicolas Brucato1, Veronica Fernandes2, Stéphane Mazières3, Pradiptajati Kusuma4, Murray P Cox5, Joseph Wainaina Ng'ang'a6, Mohammed Omar7, Marie-Claude Simeone-Senelle8, Coralie Frassati9, Farida Alshamali10, Bertrand Fin11, Anne Boland11, Jean-Francois Deleuze11, Mark Stoneking6, Alexander Adelaar12, Alison Crowther13, Nicole Boivin14, Luisa Pereira2, Pascal Bailly9, Jacques Chiaroni9, François-Xavier Ricaut15.
Abstract
At the dawn of the second millennium, the expansion of the Indian Ocean trading network aligned with the emergence of an outward-oriented community along the East African coast to create a cosmopolitan cultural and trading zone known as the Swahili Corridor. On the basis of analyses of new genome-wide genotyping data and uniparental data in 276 individuals from coastal Kenya and the Comoros islands, along with large-scale genetic datasets from the Indian Ocean rim, we reconstruct historical population dynamics to show that the Swahili Corridor is largely an eastern Bantu genetic continuum. Limited gene flows from the Middle East can be seen in Swahili and Comorian populations at dates corresponding to historically documented contacts. However, the main admixture event in southern insular populations, particularly Comorian and Malagasy groups, occurred with individuals from Island Southeast Asia as early as the 8th century, reflecting an earlier dispersal from this region. Remarkably, our results support recent archaeological and linguistic evidence-based suggestions that the Comoros archipelago was the earliest location of contact between Austronesian and African populations in the Swahili Corridor.Keywords: Comoros; East Africa; Madagascar; admixture; migration; population genetics
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29304377 PMCID: PMC5777450 DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2017.11.011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hum Genet ISSN: 0002-9297 Impact factor: 11.025