TY - JOUR
T1 - Genomic insights into the peopling of the Southwest Pacific
AU - Skoglund, Pontus
AU - Posth, Cosimo
AU - Sirak, Kendra
AU - Spriggs, Matthew
AU - Valentin, Frederique
AU - Bedford, Stuart
AU - Clark, Geoffrey R.
AU - Reepmeyer, Christian
AU - Petchey, Fiona
AU - Fernandes, Daniel
AU - Fu, Qiaomei
AU - Harney, Eadaoin
AU - Lipson, Mark
AU - Mallick, Swapan
AU - Novak, Mario
AU - Rohland, Nadin
AU - Stewardson, Kristin
AU - Abdullah, Syafiq
AU - Cox, Murray P.
AU - Friedlaender, Françoise R.
AU - Friedlaender, Jonathan S.
AU - Kivisild, Toomas
AU - Koki, George
AU - Kusuma, Pradiptajati
AU - Merriwether, D. Andrew
AU - Ricaut, Francois X.
AU - Wee, Joseph T.S.
AU - Patterson, Nick
AU - Krause, Johannes
AU - Pinhasi, Ron
AU - Reich, David
PY - 2016
Y1 - 2016
N2 - The appearance of people associated with the Lapita culture in the South Pacific around 3,000 years ago marked the beginning of the last major human dispersal to unpopulated lands. However, the relationship of these pioneers to the long-established Papuan people of the New Guinea region is unclear. Here we present genome-wide ancient DNA data from three individuals from Vanuatu (about 3,100-2,700 years before present) and one from Tonga (about 2,700-2,300 years before present), and analyse them with data from 778 present-day East Asians and Oceanians. Today, indigenous people of the South Pacific harbour a mixture of ancestry from Papuans and a population of East Asian origin that no longer exists in unmixed form, but is a match to the ancient individuals. Most analyses have interpreted the minimum of twenty-five per cent Papuan ancestry in the region today as evidence that the first humans to reach Remote Oceania, including Polynesia, were derived from population mixtures near New Guinea, before their further expansion into Remote Oceania. However, our finding that the ancient individuals had little to no Papuan ancestry implies that later human population movements spread Papuan ancestry through the South Pacific after the first peopling of the islands.
AB - The appearance of people associated with the Lapita culture in the South Pacific around 3,000 years ago marked the beginning of the last major human dispersal to unpopulated lands. However, the relationship of these pioneers to the long-established Papuan people of the New Guinea region is unclear. Here we present genome-wide ancient DNA data from three individuals from Vanuatu (about 3,100-2,700 years before present) and one from Tonga (about 2,700-2,300 years before present), and analyse them with data from 778 present-day East Asians and Oceanians. Today, indigenous people of the South Pacific harbour a mixture of ancestry from Papuans and a population of East Asian origin that no longer exists in unmixed form, but is a match to the ancient individuals. Most analyses have interpreted the minimum of twenty-five per cent Papuan ancestry in the region today as evidence that the first humans to reach Remote Oceania, including Polynesia, were derived from population mixtures near New Guinea, before their further expansion into Remote Oceania. However, our finding that the ancient individuals had little to no Papuan ancestry implies that later human population movements spread Papuan ancestry through the South Pacific after the first peopling of the islands.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84993661810&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1038/nature19844
DO - 10.1038/nature19844
M3 - Article
SN - 0028-0836
VL - 538
SP - 510
EP - 513
JO - Nature
JF - Nature
IS - 7626
ER -