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Research Publication

Northeastern Asian and Jomon-related genetic structure in the Three Kingdoms period of Gimhae, Korea

Gelabert P, Blazyte A, Chang Y et al.

35732180 PubMed ID
21 Authors
08/08/2022 Published
8 Samples
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

GP
Gelabert P
BA
Blazyte A
CY
Chang Y
FD
Fernandes DM
JS
Jeon S
HJ
Hong JG
YJ
Yoon J
KY
Ko Y
OV
Oberreiter V
CO
Cheronet O
ÖK
Özdoğan KT
SS
Sawyer S
YS
Yang S
GE
Greytak EM
CH
Choi H
KJ
Kim J
KJ
Kim JI
JC
Jeong C
BK
Bae K
BJ
Bhak J
PR
Pinhasi R
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

The genetic history of prehistoric and protohistoric Korean populations is not well understood because only a small number of ancient genomes are available. Here, we report the first paleogenomic data from the Korean Three Kingdoms period, a crucial point in the cultural and historic formation of Korea. These data comprise eight shotgun-sequenced genomes from ancient Korea (0.7×-6.1× coverage). They were derived from two archeological sites in Gimhae: the Yuha-ri shell mound and the Daesung-dong tumuli, the latter being the most important funerary complex of the Gaya confederacy. All individuals are from between the 4th and 5th century CE and are best modeled as an admixture between a northern China Bronze Age genetic source and a source of Jomon-related ancestry that shares similarities with the present-day genomes from Japan. The observed substructure and proportion of Jomon-related ancestry suggest the presence of two genetic groups within the population and diversity among the Gaya population. We could not correlate the genomic differences between these two groups with either social status or sex. All the ancient individuals' genomic profiles, including phenotypically relevant SNPs associated with hair and eye color, facial morphology, and myopia, imply strong genetic and phenotypic continuity with modern Koreans for the last 1,700 years.

Chapter III

Ancient DNA Samples

8 ancient DNA samples referenced in this publication

8 Samples
Sample ID Date/Era Country Locality Sex mtDNA Y-DNA
AKG_10203 300 CE South Korea Gyeongsangnam-do. Daeseong-dong M D4e2
AKG_10204 300 CE South Korea Gyeongsangnam-do. Daeseong-dong M D4e2a
AKG_10207 300 CE South Korea Gyeongsangnam-do. Daeseong-dong F B4c1a1a1a
AKG_10209 300 CE South Korea Gyeongsangnam-do. Daeseong-dong F M10a1b
AKG_10210 300 CE South Korea Gyeongsangnam-do. Daeseong-dong F F1b1a1a1
AKG_10218 300 CE South Korea Gyeongsangnam-do. Daeseong-dong M D4a1
AKG_3421 300 CE South Korea Gyeongsangnam-do. Daeseong-dong F D5a2a1a1
AKG_3420 300 CE South Korea Gyeongsangnam-do. Yuha-ri F D4a1
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of ancestry and genetic findings

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Summary

Key Findings

Ancestry Insights

Traits Analysis

Historical Context

Scientific Assessment