The search for ancient DNA heads east
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Bellwood, Peter
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American Association for the Advancement of Science
Abstract
Anthropologists and prehistorians have
debated the origins of the peoples of
Southeast Asia for more than a century,
often without consensus over
the relative importance of successive
migrations from external sources versus
indigenous continuity through time. The
analysis of ancient whole-genome DNA from
archaeological skeletons brings a new view to
this debate (1, 2). On pages 88 and 92 of this
issue, McColl et al. (3) and Lipson et al. (4),
respectively, use genomic DNA sequencing
data from 43 ancient Southeast Asian skeletons
excavated by archaeologists to explain
how the region was peopled during the past
10,000 years. Both teams show that human
migration was highly significant, especially
the migration of mid-Holocene Neolithic
farming populations, ~5000 to 4000 years
ago, from southern China into both mainland
and island Southeast Asia.
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Science
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Restricted until
2037-12-31
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