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A Genetic History of the Near East from an aDNA Time Course Sampling Eight Points in the Past 4,000 Years

Haber M, Nassar J, Almarri MA et al.

32470374 PubMed ID
12 Authors
07/02/2020 Published
38 Samples
487 Views
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

HM
Haber M
NJ
Nassar J
AM
Almarri MA
ST
Saupe T
SL
Saag L
GS
Griffith SJ
DC
Doumet-Serhal C
CJ
Chanteau J
SM
Saghieh-Beydoun M
XY
Xue Y
SC
Scheib CL
TC
Tyler-Smith C
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

The Iron and Classical Ages in the Near East were marked by population expansions carrying cultural transformations that shaped human history, but the genetic impact of these events on the people who lived through them is little-known. Here, we sequenced the whole genomes of 19 individuals who each lived during one of four time periods between 800 BCE and 200 CE in Beirut on the Eastern Mediterranean coast at the center of the ancient world's great civilizations. We combined these data with published data to traverse eight archaeological periods and observed any genetic changes as they arose. During the Iron Age (∼1000 BCE), people with Anatolian and South-East European ancestry admixed with people in the Near East. The region was then conquered by the Persians (539 BCE), who facilitated movement exemplified in Beirut by an ancient family with Egyptian-Lebanese admixed members. But the genetic impact at a population level does not appear until the time of Alexander the Great (beginning 330 BCE), when a fusion of Asian and Near Easterner ancestry can be seen, paralleling the cultural fusion that appears in the archaeological records from this period. The Romans then conquered the region (31 BCE) but had little genetic impact over their 600 years of rule. Finally, during the Ottoman rule (beginning 1516 CE), Caucasus-related ancestry penetrated the Near East. Thus, in the past 4,000 years, three limited admixture events detectably impacted the population, complementing the historical records of this culturally complex region dominated by the elite with genetic insights from the general population.

Chapter III

Ancient DNA Samples

38 ancient DNA samples referenced in this publication

38 Samples
Sample ID Date/Era Country Locality Sex mtDNA Y-DNA
SFI-11 151 BCE Lebanon Beirut M N1b1 G-P303
SFI-12 347 BCE Lebanon Beirut M H14a E-V65
SFI-15 170 BCE Lebanon Beirut M I1c-a* G-M3422
SFI-20 175 BCE Lebanon Beirut F H41
SFI-24 52 BCE Lebanon Beirut F H8b
SFI-33 31 CE Lebanon Beirut F T1c*
SFI-34 540 BCE Lebanon Beirut M T1a2* J-Z18216
SFI-35 540 BCE Lebanon Beirut M R0a1a I-P214
SFI-36 540 BCE Lebanon Beirut F R0a1a
SFI-39 540 BCE Lebanon Beirut M I1b8 H-SK1180
SFI-42 542 BCE Lebanon Beirut M H2a J-FGC8223
SFI-43 749 BCE Lebanon Beirut F T2c1-a
SFI-44 539 BCE Lebanon Beirut M T2c1-a3a J-ZS1711
SFI-45 540 BCE Lebanon Beirut M T2a1b1 J-BY69
SFI-47 540 BCE Lebanon Beirut M W6 G-BY45265
SFI-5 354 BCE Lebanon Beirut M K1a5a Q-BZ1462
SFI-50 540 BCE Lebanon Beirut F U1a
SFI-55 1000 BCE Lebanon Beirut M H2a J-Z1842
SFI-56 1000 BCE Lebanon Beirut F U1a1a
SFI-24 52 BCE Lebanon Beirut F H8b
SFI-33 31 CE Lebanon Beirut F T1c*
SFI-15 170 BCE Lebanon Beirut M I1c-a* G-M3422
SFI-11 151 BCE Lebanon Beirut M N1b1 G-P303
SFI-20 175 BCE Lebanon Beirut F H41
SFI-5 354 BCE Lebanon Beirut M K1a5a Q-BZ1462
SFI-12 347 BCE Lebanon Beirut M H14a E-V65
SFI-56 1000 BCE Lebanon Beirut F U1a1a
SFI-55 1000 BCE Lebanon Beirut M H2a J-Z1842
SFI-43 749 BCE Lebanon Beirut F T2c1-a
SFI-44 539 BCE Lebanon Beirut M T2c1-a3a J-ZS1711
SFI-34 540 BCE Lebanon Beirut M T1a2* J-Z18216
SFI-47 540 BCE Lebanon Beirut M W6 G-BY45265
SFI-50 540 BCE Lebanon Beirut F U1a
SFI-36 540 BCE Lebanon Beirut F R0a1a
SFI-39 540 BCE Lebanon Beirut M I1b8 H-SK1180
SFI-45 540 BCE Lebanon Beirut M T2a1b1 J-BY69
SFI-42 542 BCE Lebanon Beirut M H2a J-FGC8223
SFI-35 540 BCE Lebanon Beirut M R0a1a I-P214
Chapter IV

AI-Generated Summary

AI-generated by DNAGENICS

Independent AI summary of ancestry and genetic findings from the published study

Important: This summary is AI-generated by DNAGENICS for informational purposes only. It was not created by, affiliated with, or endorsed by the researchers behind the original publication, and is based solely on that published research. It may contain errors or omissions. DNAGENICS disclaims all liability for any inaccuracies or consequences arising from use of this information. Verify all information against the original publication. This is not professional scientific review or medical advice.

Summary

Key Findings

Ancestry Insights

Traits Analysis

Historical Context