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Research Publication

Local agricultural transition, crisis and migration in the Southern Andes.

Barberena Ramiro, R Luisi, Pierre P et al.

41851452 PubMed ID
58 Authors
2026-03-18 Published
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

BR
Barberena Ramiro
RL
R Luisi
PP
Pierre P
NP
Novellino Paula
PT
P Tessone
AA
Augusto A
GD
Guevara Daniela
DG
D García
AA
Angelina A
NE
Nelson Elizabeth A
EL
EA le Roux
PP
Petrus P
HC
Herrera Claudia
CC
C Coz
GG
Graciela G
CM
Candito Matías
ML
M Lopopolo
MM
Maria M
LC
Le Corre Maël
MB
M Becerra-Valdivia
LL
Lorena L
OM
Orbegozo Miren Iraeta
MT
MI Tressières
GG
Gaétan G
LG
Lucero Gustavo
GC
G Cardillo
MM
Marcelo M
CJ
Carbajo Julia Merler
JD
JM Da Peña
GG
Gabriela G
SJ
Suby Jorge
JR
J Roux
MM
Maguelonne M
DP
de Porras María Eugenia
MM
ME Morano
CA
Candela Acosta CA
MC
Mallea Claudia
CM
C Menéndez
LL
Lumila L
QM
Quintana María Fernanda
ML
MF López
ML
María Laura ML
TA
Troncoso Andrés
AL
A Luyt
JJ
Julie J
GK
Gray Kerryn
KS
K Santana-Sagredo
FF
Francisca F
OL
Orlando Ludovic
LD
L Durán
VV
Víctor V
SJ
Sealy Judith
JP
J Patin
EE
Etienne E
QL
Quintana-Murci Lluis
LS
L Schroeder
HH
Hannes H
RN
Rascovan Nicolás
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

The transition to agriculture was a transformative process in human history with wide-ranging demographic and social consequences1. Across South America, agriculture was adopted at different times and through diverse pathways, resulting in a mosaic of regionally distinct farming histories2,3. The Uspallata Valley, at the southern frontier of Andean farming, offers a unique opportunity to examine a case of late adoption of agriculture. Here we show that agriculture in the Uspallata Valley was adopted by local hunter-gatherers, as evidenced by genetic continuity between pre-farming and farming populations inferred from 46 newly sequenced ancient human genomes. These groups carried a distinct genetic component in Indigenous American diversity, indicating a unique population history in the region. Palaeodietary isotopes (δ13C/δ15N) reveal fluctuating maize intake consistent with flexible farming. Strontium isotopes (87Sr/86Sr) indicate the arrival of migrants from nearby regions between around 810-700 cal years BP, shortly before the Inka expansion. Genomic and isotopic analyses show that these migrants belonged to the same regional metapopulation as local groups, relied heavily on maize, probably moved in matrilineally organized family groups, exhibited stress markers (including malnutrition and diseases, such as tuberculosis, as confirmed by pathogen genomics) and experienced a long-term demographic decline. Our results suggest that these groups used social organization and migration as resilience strategies in the face of a multidimensional crisis.

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Chapter III

Analysis

Comprehensive review of ancestry and genetic findings

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Scientific Assessment