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Research Publication

Life history and ancestry of the late Upper Palaeolithic infant from Grotta delle Mura, Italy.

Higgins Owen Alexander, OA Modi, Alessandra A et al.

39304646 PubMed ID
45 Authors
2024-09-20 Published
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

HO
Higgins Owen Alexander
OM
OA Modi
AA
Alessandra A
CC
Cannariato Costanza
CD
C Diroma
MA
Maria Angela MA
LF
Lugli Federico
FR
F Ricci
SS
Stefano S
ZV
Zaro Valentina
VV
V Vai
SS
Stefania S
VA
Vazzana Antonino
AR
A Romandini
MM
Matteo M
YH
Yu He
HB
H Boschin
FF
Francesco F
ML
Magnone Luigi
LR
L Rossini
MM
Matteo M
DD
Di Domenico Giovanni
GB
G Baruffaldi
FF
Fabio F
OG
Oxilia Gregorio
GB
G Bortolini
EE
Eugenio E
DE
Dellù Elena
EM
E Moroni
AA
Adriana A
RA
Ronchitelli Annamaria
AT
A Talamo
SS
Sahra S
MW
Müller Wolfgang
WC
W Calattini
MM
Mauro M
NA
Nava Alessia
AP
A Posth
CC
Cosimo C
LM
Lari Martina
MB
M Bondioli
LL
Luca L
BS
Benazzi Stefano
SC
S Caramelli
DD
David D
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

The biological aspects of infancy within late Upper Palaeolithic populations and the role of southern refugia at the end of the Last Glacial Maximum are not yet fully understood. This study presents a multidisciplinary, high temporal resolution investigation of an Upper Palaeolithic infant from Grotta delle Mura (Apulia, southern Italy) combining palaeogenomics, dental palaeohistology, spatially-resolved geochemical analyses, direct radiocarbon dating, and traditional anthropological studies. The skeletal remains of the infant - Le Mura 1 - were directly dated to 17,320-16,910 cal BP. The results portray a biological history of the infant's development, early life, health and death (estimated at ~72 weeks). They identify, several phenotypic traits and a potential congenital disease in the infant, the mother's low mobility during gestation, and a high level of endogamy. Furthermore, the genomic data indicates an early spread of the Villabruna-like components along the Italian peninsula, confirming a population turnover around the time of the Last Glacial Maximum, and highlighting a general reduction in genetic variability from northern to southern Italy. Overall, Le Mura 1 contributes to our better understanding of the early stages of life and the genetic puzzle in the Italian peninsula at the end of the Last Glacial Maximum.

Chapter III

Analysis

Comprehensive review of ancestry and genetic findings

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Summary

Key Findings

Ancestry Insights

Traits Analysis

Historical Context

Scientific Assessment