Literature DB >> 30628076

Molecular analysis of an ancient Thule population at Nuvuk, Point Barrow, Alaska.

Justin Tackney1, Anne M Jensen2,3, Caroline Kisielinski1, Dennis H O'Rourke1.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The North American archaeological record supports a Holocene origin of Arctic Indigenous peoples. Although the Paleo-Inuit were present for millennia, archaeological and genetic studies suggest that modern peoples descend from a second, more recent tradition known as the Neo-Inuit. Origins of the Neo-Inuit and their relations to the earlier and later Indigenous peoples are an area of active study. Here, we genetically analyze the maternal lineages present at Nuvuk, once the northernmost community in Alaska and located in a region identified as a possible origin point of the Neo-Inuit Thule. The cemetery at Nuvuk contains human remains representing a nearly one thousand year uninterrupted occupation from early Thule to post-contact Iñupiat.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: We selected 44 individuals from Nuvuk with calibrated dates between 981 AD and 1885 AD for molecular analysis. We amplified and sequenced the hypervariable segment I of the mitogenome. We compared the Nuvuk data with previously published sequences from 68 modern and ancient communities from across Asia and North America. Phylogeographic analyses suggest possible scenarios of Holocene Arctic and sub-Arctic population movements.
RESULTS: We successfully retrieved sequence data from 39 individuals. Haplogroup frequencies in Nuvuk were typed as 66.7% A2b1, 25.6% A2a, and 7.7% D4b1a2a1a. These results suggest that the population at Nuvuk was closest to the ancient Thule and modern Inuit of Canada, and to the Siberian Naukan people. We confirm that haplogroups A2a, A2b1, D2a, and D4b1a2a1a appear at high frequency in Arctic and sub-Arctic populations of North America and Chukotka. Sister clades D2b and D4b1a2a1b are present in Asian and Eastern European populations. DISCUSSION: The ancient mitochondrial sequences from Nuvuk confirm the link between the North Slope and the Thule who later spread east, and the maternal discontinuity between the Neo-Inuit and Paleo-Inuit. We suggest haplogroups A2a, A2b, and D4b1a2a1a are linked to the ancestors of the Thule in eastern Beringia, whereas the D2 and D4b1a2a1 clades appear to have Asian Holocene origins. Further Siberian and Alaskan genomes are necessary to clarify these population migrations beyond a simple two-wave scenario of Neo-Inuit and Paleo-Inuit.
© 2019 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Arctic; Neo-Inuit; Thule; ancient DNA; mtDNA

Year:  2019        PMID: 30628076     DOI: 10.1002/ajpa.23746

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


  2 in total

Review 1.  Generations of genomes: advances in paleogenomics technology and engagement for Indigenous people of the Americas.

Authors:  Krystal S Tsosie; Rene L Begay; Keolu Fox; Nanibaa' A Garrison
Journal:  Curr Opin Genet Dev       Date:  2020-07-25       Impact factor: 5.578

2.  Specialized sledge dogs accompanied Inuit dispersal across the North American Arctic.

Authors:  Carly Ameen; Tatiana R Feuerborn; Sarah K Brown; Anna Linderholm; Ardern Hulme-Beaman; Ophélie Lebrasseur; Mikkel-Holger S Sinding; Zachary T Lounsberry; Audrey T Lin; Martin Appelt; Lutz Bachmann; Matthew Betts; Kate Britton; John Darwent; Rune Dietz; Merete Fredholm; Shyam Gopalakrishnan; Olga I Goriunova; Bjarne Grønnow; James Haile; Jón Hallsteinn Hallsson; Ramona Harrison; Mads Peter Heide-Jørgensen; Rick Knecht; Robert J Losey; Edouard Masson-MacLean; Thomas H McGovern; Ellen McManus-Fry; Morten Meldgaard; Åslaug Midtdal; Madonna L Moss; Iurii G Nikitin; Tatiana Nomokonova; Albína Hulda Pálsdóttir; Angela Perri; Aleksandr N Popov; Lisa Rankin; Joshua D Reuther; Mikhail Sablin; Anne Lisbeth Schmidt; Scott Shirar; Konrad Smiarowski; Christian Sonne; Mary C Stiner; Mitya Vasyukov; Catherine F West; Gro Birgit Ween; Sanne Eline Wennerberg; Øystein Wiig; James Woollett; Love Dalén; Anders J Hansen; M Thomas P Gilbert; Benjamin N Sacks; Laurent Frantz; Greger Larson; Keith Dobney; Christyann M Darwent; Allowen Evin
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2019-11-27       Impact factor: 5.349

  2 in total

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