| Literature DB >> 31721774 |
Sally Wasef1,2, Sankar Subramanian1, Richard O'Rorke1, Leon Huynen1, Samia El-Marghani3, Caitlin Curtis1, Alex Popinga4, Barbara Holland5, Salima Ikram6,7, Craig Millar8, Eske Willerslev9,10,11, David Lambert1.
Abstract
The ancient catacombs of Egypt harbor millions of well-preserved mummified Sacred Ibis (Threskiornis aethiopicus) dating from ~600BC. Although it is known that a very large number of these 'votive' mummies were sacrificed to the Egyptian God Thoth, how the ancient Egyptians obtained millions of these birds for mummification remains unresolved. Ancient Egyptian textual evidences suggest they may have been raised in dedicated large-scale farms. To investigate the most likely method used by the priests to secure birds for mummification, we report the first study of complete mitochondrial genomes of 14 Sacred Ibis mummies interred ~2500 years ago. We analysed and compared the mitogenomic diversity among Sacred Ibis mummies to that found in modern Sacred Ibis populations from throughout Africa. The ancient birds show a high level of genetic variation comparable to that identified in modern African populations, contrary to the suggestion in ancient hieroglyphics (or ancient writings) of centralized industrial scale farming of sacrificial birds. This suggests a sustained short-term taming of the wild migratory Sacred Ibis for the ritual yearly demand.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31721774 PMCID: PMC6853290 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0223964
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Mummified Sacred Ibis.
A Scene from the Books of the Dead (The Egyptian museum) showing the ibis-headed God Thoth recording the result of the final judgement. B and D Example of the millions of votive mummies presented as offerings by pilgrims to the God Thoth. C Pottery jars containing ‘votive’ mummies stacked in the North Ibis catacomb at Saqqara.
Fig 2A Location of ancient catacombs sampled. Modern populations sampled; brown shading indicates the current distribution of Sacred Ibis. We thank Vivian Ward for drawing this figure. B Median-joining network derived from modern (orange shades) and ancient (purple shades) mitochondrial genome sequences. Circle size indicates number of samples. REF represents the Sacred Ibis mitochondrial reference genome shown in pink. Samples taken from captive Ibis at the Cairo Zoo are shown in red. C Principal Coordinates Analysis of distances between aligned mitogenomes of ancient (triangles) and modern (circles) Ibis. The ordination captures a very high proportion of variance in genetic distances (78.4%), with axis 1(horizontal) representing 63.2% and 15.2% for axis 2 (vertical). The asterisk denotes the reference sequence and the crosses denote Cairo Zoo. Colours in B and C correspond to the locations in A.
Fig 3Ancient inscriptions on a pottery jar of a mummified Ibis from Tuna el-Gebel.
This inscription recorded the date the mummy was offered to Thoth, by whom, where it was bought from and the name of the priest. From Mahmoud Ebeid, BIFAO 106 (2006), p. 57–74.
Sacred Ibis samples.
Details of the location, tissue type and estimated ages of both modern and ancient Sacred Ibis samples sequenced in this research project. Age reported in the table is an estimated age based on the samples reported in Wasef et al., 2015 [13] from same locations.
| Source | Place of origin | Sample type | Estimated Age (cal yr BP) | Sequencing method | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | |||||
| South Ibis catacomb | Saqqara- Egypt | Bone, tissue and feathers | 450–250 cal BC | Targeted hybridization | |
| South Ibis catacomb | Saqqara- Egypt | Bone | 450–250 cal BC | Targeted hybridization | |
| Sacred Ibis catacomb, Tuna el-Gebel | Tuna el-Gebel | Bone | 450–250 cal BC | Targeted hybridization | |
| Abydos | Abydos, Egypt | Toe pad | 450–250 cal BC | Targeted hybridization | |
| Abydos | Abydos, Egypt | Feather | 450–250 cal BC | Targeted hybridization | |
| Smithsonian institute | Abydos, Egypt | Bone | 450–250 cal BC | Targeted hybridization | |
| British Museum collection | Thebes, Egypt | Bone | 450–250 cal BC | Targeted | |
| The Musée des Confluences | Kom Ombo, Egypt | Bone | 450–250 cal BC | Targeted hybridization | |
| The Musée des Confluences | Rodah, Egypt | Bone | 450–250 cal BC | Targeted hybridization | |
| | |||||
| Mount Kenya Safari Club, (on Equator) | Kenya | Feathers | Wild population | Targeted hybridization | |
| Gambia | Gambia | Feathers | Wild population | Targeted hybridization | |
| Lake Zeekoeivlei | South Africa | Blood | Wild population | Targeted hybridization | |
| Robben Island | South Africa | Blood | Wild population | Targeted hybridization | |
| Cairo Zoo | Cairo | Feathers | Zoo captivated birds | Targeted hybridization | |
| American Museum of Natural History | Chinchoua, Gabon | Toe pad | Modern museum samples | Shotgun sequencing | |
| ANS Drexel University | Tanzania | Toe pad | Modern museum samples | Shotgun sequencing | |
| American Museum of Natural History | Zimbabwe | Toe pad | Modern museum samples | Shotgun sequencing | |
| American Museum of Natural History | Upper Shire, Nyasaland, British Central Africa | Toe pad | Modern museum samples | Shotgun sequencing | |
| American Museum of Natural History | Madagascar | Toe pad | Modern museum samples | Shotgun sequencing | |
Fig 4A Bayesian summary tree.
The x-axis is years before present, and the edges are labelled with posterior clade probability. M_ indicates modern samples from Africa. A_ indicates Ancient Sacred Ibis mummies. Samples’ code used in the tree are listed in Table 1.
Intra and inter population pairwise comparisons of mitogenomic variation in ancient and modern Sacred Ibis.
P-values > 0.05 indicate no significant difference between modern and ancient Sacred Ibis populations. Standard deviations (SD) are in brackets. A Z-test was used to obtain P-values.
| Modern | Ancient | Significance ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Overall Genome diversity | 0.001030 (0.000149) | 0.001304 (0.000176) | 0.2348 |
| Among Populations | 0.000160 (0.000073) | 0.000077 (0.000052) | 0.3544 |
| Within Populations | 0.000870 (0.000114) | 0.001227 (0.000166) | 0.0763 |
| | 0.0019 (0.00064) | 0.0026 (0.001) | 0.56 |
| | 0.0127 (0.0029) | 0.0166 (0038) | 0.41 |
| | 0.147 (0.0656) | 0.159 (0.0724) | 0.90 |
| | 0.155 (0.065) | 0.059 (0.039) | 0.2005 |