Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Skip to main content
NCBI home page
Search in PMCSearch
  • View on publisher site icon
As a library, NLM provides access to scientific literature. Inclusion in an NLM database does not imply endorsement of, or agreement with, the contents by NLM or the National Institutes of Health.
Learn more:PMC Disclaimer | PMC Copyright Notice
NIHPA Author Manuscripts logo
. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2017 Feb 25.

Genomic insights into the origin of farming in the ancient Near East

Iosif Lazaridis1,2,,Dani Nadel3,Gary Rollefson4,Deborah C Merrett5,Nadin Rohland1,Swapan Mallick1,2,6,Daniel Fernandes7,8,Mario Novak7,9,Beatriz Gamarra7,Kendra Sirak7,10,Sarah Connell7,Kristin Stewardson1,6,Eadaoin Harney1,6,11,Qiaomei Fu1,12,13,Gloria Gonzalez-Fortes14,Eppie R Jones15,Songül Alpaslan Roodenberg16,György Lengyel17,Fanny Bocquentin18,Boris Gasparian19,Janet M Monge20,Michael Gregg20,Vered Eshed21,Ahuva-Sivan Mizrahi21,Christopher Meiklejohn22,Fokke Gerritsen23,Luminita Bejenaru24,Matthias Blüher25,Archie Campbell26,Gianpiero Cavalleri27,David Comas28,Philippe Froguel29,30,Edmund Gilbert27,Shona M Kerr26,Peter Kovacs31,Johannes Krause32,Darren McGettigan33,Michael Merrigan34,D Andrew Merriwether35,Seamus O'Reilly34,Martin B Richards36,Ornella Semino37,Michel Shamoon-Pour35,Gheorghe Stefanescu38,Michael Stumvoll25,Anke Tönjes25,Antonio Torroni37,James F Wilson39,40,Loic Yengo29,Nelli A Hovhannisyan41,Nick Patterson2,Ron Pinhasi7,*,,David Reich1,2,6,*,
1 Department of Genetics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA
2 Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02142, USA
3 The Zinman Institute of Archaeology, University of Haifa, Haifa 3498838, Israel
4 Dept. of Anthropology, Whitman College, Walla Walla, WA 99362, USA
5 Dept. of Archaeology, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia V5A 1S6, Canada
6 Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USA
7 School of Archaeology and Earth Institute, Belfield, University College Dublin, Dublin 4, Ireland
8 CIAS, Department of Life Sciences, University of Coimbra, Coimbra 3000-456, Portugal
9 Institute for Anthropological Research, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia
10 Dept. of Anthropology, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia 30322, USA
11 Dept. of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge 02138, USA
12 Dept. of Evolutionary Genetics, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig 04103, Germany
13 Key Laboratory of Vertebrate Evolution and Human Origins of Chinese Academy of Sciences, IVPP, CAS, Beijing 100044, China
14 Dept. of Biology and Evolution, University of Ferrara, Ferrara I-44121, Italy
15 Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, CB2 3EJ, UK.
16 Independent Researcher, Santpoort-Noord, The Netherlands
17 Department of Prehistory and Archaeology, University of Miskolc, 3515 Miskolc-Egyetemváros, Hungary
18 French National Centre for Scientific Research, UMR 7041, 92023 Nanterre Cedex, France
19 Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology, National Academy of Sciences of the Republic of Armenia, 0025 Yerevan, Republic of Armenia
20 University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA
21 Israel Antiquities Authority, Jerusalem 91004, Israel
22 Dept. of Anthropology, University of Winnipeg, Winnipeg, Manitoba R3B 2E9, Canada
23 Netherlands Institute in Turkey, Istiklal Caddesi, Nur-i Ziya Sokak 5, Beyoğlu, Istanbul, Turkey
24 Faculty of Biology, Alexandru Ioan Cuza University of Iasi, Iasi 700505, Romania
25 Department of Internal Medicine and Dermatology, Clinic of Endocrinology and Nephrology, 04103 Leipzig, Germany
26 Generation Scotland, Centre for Genomic and Experimental Medicine, MRC Institute of Genetics and Molecular Medicine, University of Edinburgh, Western General Hospital, Edinburgh EH4 2XU, Scotland
27 RCSI Molecular & Cellular Therapeutics, Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, Dublin 2, Ireland
28 Institut de Biologia Evolutiva (CSIC-UPF), Departament de Ciències Experimentals i de la Salut, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, 08003 Barcelona, Spain
29 Univ. Lille, CNRS, Institut Pasteur de Lille, UMR 8199 - EGID, F-59000 Lille, France
30 Department of Genomics of common disease, London Hammersmith Hospital, London W12 0HS, UK
31 Leipzig University Medical Center, IFB AdiposityDiseases, 04103 Leipzig, Germany
32 Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, 07745 Jena, Germany
33 Independent researcher, County Wicklow, Ireland
34 Genealogical Society of Ireland, Dún Laoghaire, County Dublin, Ireland
35 Department of Anthropology, Binghamton University, State University of New York, New York 13902, USA
36 Department of Biological Sciences, School of Applied Sciences, University of Huddersfield, Queensgate, Huddersfield HD1 3DH, UK
37 Dipartimento di Biologia e Biotecnologie “L. Spallanzani”, Università di Pavia, 27100 Pavia, Italy
38 Institutul de Cercetari Biologice, Iaşi 700505, Romania
39 Usher Institute for Population Health Sciences and Informatics, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH8 9AG, Scotland
40 MRC Human Genetics Unit, MRC Institute of Genetics and Molecular Medicine, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH4 2XU, Scotland
41 Center of Excellence in Applied Biosciences, Yerevan State University, 0025 Yerevan, Republic of Armenia
*

Co-senior authors

Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to: I. L. (lazaridis@genetics.med.harvard.edu), R. P. (ron.pinhasi@ucd.ie), or D. R. (reich@genetics.med.harvard.edu)

Users may view, print, copy, and download text and data-mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full Conditions of use:http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/license.html#terms

PMCID: PMC5003663  NIHMSID: NIHMS804247  PMID:27459054
The publisher's version of this article is available atNature

Abstract

We report genome-wide ancient DNA from 44 ancient Near Easterners ranging in time between ~12,000-1,400 BCE, from Natufian hunter-gatherers to Bronze Age farmers. We show that the earliest populations of the Near East derived around half their ancestry from a ‘Basal Eurasian’ lineage that had little if any Neanderthal admixture and that separated from other non-African lineages prior to their separation from each other. The first farmers of the southern Levant (Israel and Jordan) and Zagros Mountains (Iran) were strongly genetically differentiated, and each descended from local hunter-gatherers. By the time of the Bronze Age, these two populations and Anatolian-related farmers had mixed with each other and with the hunter-gatherers of Europe to drastically reduce genetic differentiation. The impact of the Near Eastern farmers extended beyond the Near East: farmers related to those of Anatolia spread westward into Europe; farmers related to those of the Levant spread southward into East Africa; farmers related to those from Iran spread northward into the Eurasian steppe; and people related to both the early farmers of Iran and to the pastoralists of the Eurasian steppe spread eastward into South Asia.


Between 10,000-9,000 BCE, humans began practicing agriculture in the Near East1. In the ensuing five millennia, plants and animals domesticated in the Near East spread throughout West Eurasia (a vast region that also includes Europe) and beyond. The relative homogeneity of present-day West Eurasians in a world context2 suggests the possibility of extensive migration and admixture that homogenized geographically and genetically disparate sources of ancestry. The spread of the world's first farmers from the Near East would have been a mechanism for such homogenization. To date, however, due to the poor preservation of DNA in warm climates, it has been impossible to study the population structure and history of the first farmers and to trace their contribution to later populations.

In order to overcome the obstacle of poor DNA preservation, we took advantage of two methodological developments. First, we sampled from the inner ear region of the petrous bone3,4 that can yield up to ~100 times more endogenous DNA than other skeletal elements4. Second, we used in-solution hybridization5 to enrich extracted DNA for about 1.2 million single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) targets6,7, making efficient sequencing practical by filtering out microbial and non-informative human DNA. We merged all sequences extracted from each individual, and randomly sampled a single sequence with minimum mapping and sequence quality to represent each SNP, restricting to individuals with at least 9,000 SNPs covered at least once (Methods). We obtained genome-wide data passing quality control for 45 individuals on whom we had a median coverage of 172,819 SNPs. We assembled radiocarbon dates for 26 individuals (22 new generated for this study) (Supplementary Data Table 1).

The newly reported ancient individuals date to ~12,000-1,400 BCE and come from the southern Caucasus (Armenia), northwestern Anatolia (Turkey), Iran, and the southern Levant (Israel and Jordan) (Supplementary Data Table 1,Fig. 1a). (One individual had a radiocarbon date that was not in agreement with the date of its archaeological context and was also a genetic outlier.) The samples include Epipaleolithic Natufian hunter-gatherers from Raqefet Cave in the Levant (12,000-9,800 BCE); a likely Mesolithic individual from Hotu Cave in the Alborz mountains of Iran (probable date of 9,100-8,600 BCE); Pre-Pottery Neolithic farmers from ‘Ain Ghazal and Motza in the southern Levant (8,300-6,700 BCE); and early farmers from Ganj Dareh in the Zagros mountains of western Iran (8,200-7,600 BCE). The samples also include later Neolithic, Chalcolithic (~4,800-3,700 BCE), and Bronze Age (~3,350-1,400 BCE) individuals (Supplementary Information, section 1). We combined our data with previously published ancient data7,8,9,10,8,10-15 to form a dataset of 281 ancient individuals. We then further merged with 2,583 present-day people genotyped on the Affymetrix Human Origins array13,16 (238 new) (Supplementary Data Table 2; Supplementary Information, section 2). We grouped the ancient individuals based on archaeological culture and chronology (Fig. 1a;Supplementary Data Table 1). We refined the grouping based on patterns evident in Principal Components Analysis (PCA)17 (Fig. 1b;Extended Data Fig. 1), ADMIXTURE model-based clustering18 (Extended Data Fig. 2a), and ‘outgroup’f3-analysis (Extended Data Fig. 3). We usedf4-statistics to identify outlier individuals and to cluster phylogenetically indistinguishable groups into ‘Analysis Labels’ (Supplementary Information, section 3).

Figure 1. Genetic structure of ancient West Eurasia.

Figure 1

(a) Sampling locations and times in six regions. Sample sizes for each population are given below each bar. Abbreviations used: E: Early, M: Middle, L: Late, HG: Hunter-Gatherer, N: Neolithic, ChL: Chalcolithic, BA: Bronze Age, IA: Iron Age. (b) Principal components analysis of 991 present-day West Eurasians (grey points) with 278 projected ancient samples (excluding the Upper Paleolithic Ust’-Ishim, Kostenki14, and MA1). To avoid visual clutter, population labels of present-day individuals are shown inExtended Data Fig. 1.

We analyzed these data to address six questions. (1) Previous work has shown that the first European farmers harboured ancestry from a Basal Eurasian lineage that diverged from the ancestors of north Eurasian hunter-gatherers and East Asians before they separated from each other13. What was the distribution of Basal Eurasian ancestry in the ancient Near East? (2) Were the first farmers of the Near East part of a single homogeneous population, or were they regionally differentiated? (3) Was there continuity between late pre-agricultural hunter-gatherers and early farming populations, or were the hunter-gatherers largely displaced by a single expansive population as in early Neolithic Europe?8 (4) What is the genetic contribution of these early Near Eastern farmers to later populations of the Near East? (5) What is the genetic contribution of the early Near Eastern farmers to later populations of mainland Europe, the Eurasian steppe, and to populations outside West Eurasia? (6) Do our data provide broader insights about population transformations in West Eurasia?

Basal Eurasian ancestry was pervasive in the ancient Near East and associated with reduced Neanderthal ancestry

The ‘Basal Eurasians’ are a lineage hypothesized13 to have split off prior to the differentiation of all other Eurasian lineages, including both eastern non-African populations like the Han Chinese, and even the early diverged lineage represented by the genome sequence of the ~45,000 year old Upper Paleolithic Siberian from Ust’-Ishim11. To test for Basal Eurasian ancestry, we computed the statisticf4(Test, Han; Ust’-Ishim, Chimp) (Supplementary Information, section 4), which measures the excess of allele sharing of Ust’-Ishim with a variety ofTest populations compared to Han as a baseline. This statistic is significantly negative (Z<−3.7) for all ancient Near Easterners as well as Neolithic and later Europeans, consistent with their having ancestry from a deeply divergent Eurasian lineage that separated from the ancestors of most Eurasians prior to the separation of Han and Ust’-Ishim. We usedqpAdm7 to estimate Basal Eurasian ancestry in eachTest population. We obtain the highest estimates in the earliest populations from both Iran (66±13% in the likely Mesolithic sample, 48±6% in Neolithic samples), and the Levant (44±8% in Epipaleolithic Natufians) (Fig. 2), showing that Basal Eurasian ancestry was widespread across the ancient Near East.

Figure 2. Basal Eurasian ancestry explains the reduced Neanderthal admixture in West Eurasians.

Figure 2

Basal Eurasian ancestry estimates are negatively correlated to a statistic measuring Neanderthal ancestryf4(Test, Mbuti; Altai, Denisovan).

West Eurasians harbour significantly less Neanderthal ancestry than East Asians19-21, which could be explained if West Eurasians (but not East Asians) have partial ancestry from a source diluting their Neanderthal inheritance22. Supporting this theory, we observe a negative correlation between Basal Eurasian ancestry and the rate of shared alleles with Neanderthals19 (Supplementary Information, section 5;Fig. 2). By extrapolation, we infer that the Basal Eurasian population had lower Neanderthal ancestry than non-Basal Eurasian populations and possibly none (ninety-five percent confidence interval truncated at zero of 0-60%;Fig. 2; Methods). The finding of little if any Neanderthal ancestry in Basal Eurasians could be explained if the Neanderthal admixture into modern humans 50,000-60,000 years ago11 largely occurred after the splitting of the Basal Eurasians from other non-Africans.

It is striking that the highest estimates of Basal Eurasian ancestry are from the Near East, given the hypothesis that it was there that most admixture between Neanderthals and modern humans occurred19,23. This could be explained if Basal Eurasians thoroughly admixed into the Near East before the time of the samples we analyzed but after the Neanderthal admixture. Alternatively, the ancestors of Basal Eurasians may have always lived in the Near East, but the lineage of which they were a part did not participate in the Neanderthal admixture.

A population without Neanderthal admixture, basal to other Eurasians, may have plausibly lived in Africa. Craniometric analyses have suggested an affinity between the Natufians and populations of north or sub-Saharan Africa24,25, a result that finds some support from Y chromosome analysis which shows that the Natufians and successor Levantine Neolithic populations carried haplogroup E, of likely ultimate African origin, which has not been detected in other ancient males from West Eurasia (Supplementary Information, section 6)7,8. However, no affinity of Natufians to sub-Saharan Africans is evident in our genome-wide analysis, as present-day sub-Saharan Africans do not share more alleles with Natufians than with other ancient Eurasians (Extended Data Table 1). (We could not test for a link to present-day North Africans, who owe most of their ancestry to back-migration from Eurasia26,27.) The idea of Natufians as a vector for the movement of Basal Eurasian ancestry into the Near East is also not supported by our data, as the Basal Eurasian ancestry in the Natufians (44±8%) is consistent with stemming from the same population as that in the Neolithic and Mesolithic populations of Iran, and is not greater than in those populations (Supplementary Information, section 4). Further insight into the origins and legacy of the Natufians could come from comparison to Natufians from additional sites, and to ancient DNA from north Africa.

Extreme regional differentiation in the ancient Near East

PCA on present-day West Eurasian populations (Methods) (Extended Data Fig. 1) on which we projected the ancient individuals (Fig. 1b) replicates previous findings of a Europe-Near East contrast along the horizontal Principal Component 1 (PC1) and parallel clines (PC2) in both Europe and the Near East (Extended Data Fig. 1)7,8,13. Ancient samples from the Levant project at one end of the Near Eastern cline, and ancient samples from Iran at the other. The two Caucasus Hunter Gatherers (CHG)9 are less extreme along PC1 than the Mesolithic and Neolithic individuals from Iran, while individuals from Chalcolithic Anatolia, Iran, and Armenia, and Bronze Age Armenia occupy intermediate positions. Qualitatively, the PCA has the appearance of a quadrangle whose four corners are some of the oldest samples: bottom-left: Western Hunter Gatherers (WHG), top-left: Eastern Hunter Gatherers (EHG), bottom-right: Neolithic Levant and Natufians, top-right: Neolithic Iran. This suggests the hypothesis that diverse ancient West Eurasians can be modelled as mixtures of as few as four streams of ancestry related to these populations, which we confirmed usingqpWave7 (Supplementary Information, section 7).

We computed squared allele frequency differentiation between all pairs of ancient West Eurasians28 (Methods;Fig. 3;Extended Data Fig. 2b;Extended Data Fig. 4), and found that the populations at the four corners of the quadrangle had differentiation of FST=0.08-0.15, comparable to the value of 0.09-0.13 seen between present-day West Eurasians and East Asians (Han) (Supplementary Data Table 3). In contrast, by the Bronze Age, genetic differentiation between pairs of West Eurasian populations had reached its present-day low levels (Fig. 3): today, FST is ≤0.025 for 95% of the pairs of West Eurasian populations and ≤0.046 for all pairs (Fig. 3). These results point to a demographic process that established high differentiation across West Eurasia and then reduced this differentiation over time.

Figure 3. Genetic differentiation and its dramatic decrease over time in West Eurasia.

Figure 3

Pairwise FST distribution among populations belonging to four successive time slices in West Eurasia; the median (red) and range of FST is shown.

Continuity between pre-farming hunter-gatherers and early farmers of the Near East

Our data document continuity across the hunter-gatherer / farming transition, separately in the southern Levant and in the southern Caucasus-Iran highlands. The qualitative evidence for this is that PCA, ADMIXTURE, and outgroupf3 analysis cluster Levantine hunter-gatherers (Natufians) with Levantine farmers, and Iranian and Caucasus Hunter Gatherers with Iranian farmers (Fig. 1b;Extended Data Fig. 1;Extended Data Fig. 3). We confirm this in the Levant by showing that its early farmers share significantly more alleles with Natufians than with the early farmers of Iran: the statisticf4(Levant_N, Chimp; Natufian, Iran_N) is significantly positive (Z=13.6). The early farmers of the Caucasus-Iran highlands similarly share significantly more alleles with the hunter-gatherers of this region than with the early farmers from the Levant: the statisticf4(Iran_N, Chimp; Caucasus or Iran highland hunter-gatherers, Levant_N) is significantly positive (Z>6).

How diverse first farmers of the Near East mixed to form the region's later populations

Almost all ancient and present-day West Eurasians have evidence of significant admixture between two or more ancestral populations, as documented by statistics of the formf3(Test;Reference1,Reference2) which if negative, show that aTest population's allele frequencies tend to be intermediate between twoReference populations16 (Extended Data Table 2). To better understand the admixture history beyond these patterns, we usedqpAdm7, which can evaluate whether a particularTest population is consistent with being derived from a set of proposed source populations, and if so, infer mixture proportions (Methods). We used this approach to carry out a systematic survey of ancient West Eurasian populations to explore their possible sources of admixture (Fig. 4;Supplementary Information, section 7).

Figure 4. Modelling ancient West Eurasians, East Africans, East Eurasians and South Asians.

Figure 4

(a) All the ancient populations can be modelled as mixtures of two or three other populations and up to four proximate sources (marked in colour). Mixture proportions inferred byqpAdm are indicated by the incoming arrows to each population. Clouds represent sets of more than one population. Multiple admixture solutions are consistent with the data for some populations, and while only one solution is shown here,Supplementary Information, section 7 presents the others. (b) A flat representation of the graph showing mixture proportions from the four proximate sources.

Among first farmers, those of the Levant trace ~2/3 of their ancestry to people related to Natufian hunter-gatherers and ~1/3 to people related to Anatolian farmers (Supplementary Information, section 7). Western Iranian first farmers cluster with the likely Mesolithic HotuIIIb individual and more remotely with hunter-gatherers from the southern Caucasus (Fig. 1b), and share alleles at an equal rate with Anatolian and Levantine early farmers (Supplementary Information, section 7), highlighting the long-term isolation of western Iran.

During subsequent millennia, the early farmer populations of the Near East expanded in all directions and mixed, as we can only model populations of the Chalcolithic and subsequent Bronze Age as having ancestry from two or more sources. The Chalcolithic people of western Iran can be modelled as a mixture of the Neolithic people of western Iran, the Levant, and Caucasus Hunter Gatherers (CHG), consistent with their position in the PCA (Fig. 1b). Admixture from populations related to the Chalcolithic people of western Iran had a wide impact, consistent with contributing ~44% of the ancestry of Levantine Bronze Age populations in the south and ~33% of the ancestry of the Chalcolithic northwest Anatolians in the west. Our analysis show that the ancient populations of the Chalcolithic Iran, Chalcolithic Armenia, Bronze Age Armenia and Chalcolithic Anatolia were all composed of the same ancestral components, albeit in slightly different proportions (Fig. 4b;Supplementary Information, section 7).

The Near Eastern contribution to Europeans, East Africans and South Asians

Admixture did not only occur within the Near East but extended towards Europe. To the north, a population related to people of the Iran Chalcolithic contributed ~43% of the ancestry of early Bronze Age populations of the steppe. The spread of Near Eastern ancestry into the Eurasian steppe was previously inferred7 without access to ancient samples, by hypothesizing a population related to present-day Armenians as a source7,8. To the west, the early farmers of mainland Europe were descended from a population related to Neolithic northwestern Anatolians8. This is consistent with an Anatolian origin of farming in Europe, but does not reject other sources, since the spatial distribution of the Anatolian/European-like farmer populations is unknown. We can rule out the hypothesis that European farmers stem directly from a population related to the ancient farmers of the southern Levant29,30, however, since they share more allele with Anatolian Neolithic farmers than with Levantine farmers as attested by the positive statisticf4(Europe_EN, Chimp; Anatolia_N, Levant_N) (Z=15).

Migrations from the Near East also occurred towards the southwest into East African populations which experienced West Eurasian admixture ~1,000 BCE31,32. Previously, the West Eurasian population known to be the best proxy for this ancestry was present-day Sardinians32, who resemble Neolithic Europeans genetically13,33. However, our analysis shows that East African ancestry is significantly better modelled by Levantine early farmers than by Anatolian or early European farmers, implying that the spread of this ancestry to East Africa was not from the same group that spread Near Eastern ancestry into Europe (Extended Data Fig. 5;Supplementary Information, section 8).

In South Asia, our dataset provides insight into the sources of Ancestral North Indians (ANI), a West Eurasian related population that no longer exists in unmixed form but contributes a variable amount of the ancestry of South Asians34,35 (Supplementary Information, section 9) (Extended Data Fig. 5). We show that it is impossible to model the ANI as being derived from any single ancient population in our dataset. However, it can be modelled as a mix of ancestry related to both early farmers of western Iran and to people of the Bronze Age Eurasian steppe; all sampled South Asian groups are inferred to have significant amounts of both ancestral types. The demographic impact of steppe related populations on South Asia was substantial, as the Mala, a south Indian population with minimal ANI along the ‘Indian Cline’ of such ancestry34,35 is inferred to have ~18% steppe-related ancestry, while the Kalash of Pakistan are inferred to have ~50%, similar to present-day northern Europeans7.

Broader insights into population transformations across West Eurasia and beyond

We were concerned that our conclusions might be biased by the particular populations we happened to sample, and that we would have obtained qualitatively different conclusions without data from some key populations. We tested our conclusions by plotting the inferred position of admixed populations in PCA against a weighted combination of their inferred source populations and obtained qualitatively consistent results (Extended Data Fig. 6).

To further assess the robustness of our inferences, we developed a method to infer the existence and genetic affinities of ancient populations from unobserved ‘ghost’ populations (Supplementary Information, section 10;Extended Data Fig. 7). This method takes advantage of the insight that if an unsampled ghost population admixes with differentiated ‘substratum’ populations, it is possible to extrapolate its identity by intersecting clines of populations with variable proportions of ‘ghost’ and ‘substratum’ ancestry. Applying this while withholding major populations, we validated some of our key inferences, successfully inferring mixture proportions consistent with those obtained when the populations are included in the analysis. Application of this methods highlights the impact of Ancient North Eurasian (ANE) ancestry related to the ~22,000 BCE Mal'ta 1 and ~15,000 BCE Afontova Gora 215 on populations living in Europe, the Americas, and Eastern Eurasia. Eastern Eurasians can be modelled as arrayed along a cline with different proportions of ANE ancestry (Supplementary Information, section 11;Extended Data Fig. 8), ranging from ~40% ANE in Native Americans matching previous findings13,15, to no less than ~5-10% ANE in diverse East Asian groups including Han Chinese (Extended Data Fig. 5;Extended Data Fig. 7f). We also document a cline of ANE ancestry across the east-west extent of Eurasia. Eastern Hunter Gatherers (EHG) derive ~3/4 of their ancestry from the ANE (Supplementary Information, section 11); Scandinavian hunter-gatherers7,8,13 (SHG) are a mix of EHG and WHG; and WHG are a mix of EHG and the Upper Paleolithic Bichon from Switzerland (Supplementary Information, section 7). Northwest Anatolians—with ancestry from a population related to European hunter-gatherers (Supplementary Information, section 7)—are better modelled if this ancestry is taken as more extreme than Bichon (Supplementary Information, section 10).

The population structure of the ancient Near East was not independent of that of Europe (Supplementary Information, section 4), as evidenced by the highly significant (Z=−8.9) statisticf4(Iran_N, Natufian;WHG, EHG) which suggests gene flow in ‘northeastern’ (Neolithic Iran/EHG) and ‘southwestern’ (Levant/WHG) interaction spheres (Fig. 4d). This interdependence of the ancestry of Europe and the Near East may have been mediated by unsampled geographically intermediate populations36 that contribute ancestry to both regions.

Conclusions

By analysing genome-wide ancient DNA data from ancient individuals from the Levant, Anatolia, the southern Caucasus and Iran, we have provided a first glimpse of the demographic structure of the human populations that transitioned to farming. We reject the hypothesis that the spread of agriculture in the Near East was achieved by the dispersal of a single farming population displacing the hunter-gatherers they encountered. Instead, the spread of ideas and farming technology moved faster than the spread of people, as we can determine from the fact that the population structure of the Near East was maintained throughout the transition to agriculture. A priority for future ancient DNA studies should be to obtain data from older periods, which would reveal the deeper origins of the population structure in the Near East. It will also be important to obtain data from the ancient civilizations of the Near East to bridge the gap between the region's prehistoric inhabitants and those of the present.

Methods

No statistical methods were used to predetermine sample size. The experiments were not randomized and the investigators were not blinded to allocation during experiments and outcome assessment.

Ancient DNA data

In a dedicated ancient DNA laboratory at University College Dublin, we prepared powder from 132 ancient Near Eastern samples, either by dissecting the inner ear region of the petrous bone using a sandblaster (Renfert), or by drilling using a Dremel tool and single-use drill bits and selecting the best preserved bone fragments based on anatomical criteria. These fragments were then powdered using a mixer mill (Retsch Mixer Mill 400)4.

We performed all subsequent processing steps in a dedicated ancient DNA laboratory at Harvard Medical School, where we extracted DNA from the powder (usually 75 mg, range 14-81 mg) using an optimized ancient DNA extraction protocol37, but replaced the assembly of Qiagen MinElute columns and extension reservoirs from Zymo Research with a High Pure Extender Assembly from the High Pure Viral Nucleic Acid Large Volume Kit (Roche Applied Science). We built a total of 170 barcoded double-stranded Illumina sequencing libraries for these samples38, of which we treated 167 with Uracil-DNA glycosylase (UDG) to remove the characteristic C-to-T errors of ancient DNA39. The UDG treatment strategy is (by-design) inefficient at removing terminal uracils, allowing the mismatch rate to the human genome at the terminal nucleotide to be used for authentication38. We updated this library preparation protocol in two ways compared to the original publication: first, we used 16U Bst2.0 Polymerase, Large Fragment (NEB) and 1x Isothermal Amplification buffer (NEB) in a final volume of 25μL fill-in reaction, and second, we used the entire inactivated 25μL fill-in reaction in a total volume of 100μL PCR mix with 1 μM of each primer40. We included extraction negative controls (where no sample powder was used) and library negative controls (where extract was supplemented by water) in every batch of samples processed and carried them through the entire wet lab processing to test for reagent contamination.

We screened the libraries by hybridizing them in solution to a set of oligonucleotide probes tiling the mitochondrial genome41, using the protocol described previously7. We sequenced the enriched libraries using an Illumina NextSeq 500 instrument using 2×76bp reads, trimmed identifying sequences (seven base pair molecular barcodes at either end) and any trailing adapters, merged read pairs that overlapped by at least 15 base pairs, and mapped the merged sequences to the RSRS mitochondrial DNA reference genome42, using the Burrows Wheeler Aligner43 (bwa) and the commandsamse (v0.6.1).

We enriched promising libraries for a targeted set of ~1.2 million SNPs8 as in ref.5, and adjusted the blocking oligonucleotide and primers to be appropriate for our libraries. The specific probe sequences are given inSupplementary Data 2 of ref.7 (http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v522/n7555/abs/nature14317.html#supplementary-information) andSupplementary Data 1 of ref.6. (http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v524/n7564/full/nature14558.html#supplementary-information). We sequenced the libraries on an Illumina NextSeq 500 using 2×76bp reads. We trimmed identifying sequences (molecular barcodes) and any trailing adapters, merged pairs that overlapped by at least 15 base pairs (allowing up to one mismatch), and mapped the merged sequences tohg19 using the single-ended alignersamse in bwa (v0.6.1). We removed duplicated sequences by identifying sets of sequences with the same orientation and start and end positions after alignment tohg19; we picked the highest quality sequence to represent each set. For each sample, we represented each SNP position by a randomly chosen sequence, restricting to sequences with a minimum mapping quality (MAPQ≥10), sites with a minimum sequencing quality (≥20), and removing 2 bases at the ends of reads. We sequenced the enriched products up to the point that we estimated that generating a hundred new sequences was expected to add data on less than about one new SNP8.

Testing for contamination and quality control

For each ancient DNA library, we evaluated authenticity in several ways. First, we estimated the rate of matching to the consensus sequence for mitochondrial genomes sequenced to a coverage of at least 10-fold from the initial screening data. Of the 76 libraries that contributed to our dataset (coming from 45 samples), 70 had an estimated rate of sequencing matching to the consensus of >95% according to contamMix5 (the remaining libraries had estimated match rates of 75-92%, but gave no sign of being outliers in principal component analysis or X chromosome contamination analysis so we retained them for analysis) (Supplementary Data Table 1). We quantified the rate of C-to-T substitution in the final nucleotide of the sequences analyzed, relative to the human reference genome sequence, and found that all the libraries analyzed had rates of at least 3%38, consistent with genuine ancient DNA. For the nuclear data from males, we used the ANGSD software44 to estimate a conservative X chromosome estimate of contamination. We determined that all libraries passing our quality control and for which we had sufficient X chromosome data to make an assessment had contamination rates of 0-1.5%. Finally, we merged data for samples for which we had multiple libraries to produce an analysis dataset.

Affymetrix Human Origins genotyping data

We genotyped 238 present-day individuals from 17 diverse West Eurasian populations on the Affymetrix Human Origins array16, and applied quality control analyses as previously described13 (Supplementary Data Table 2). We merged the newly generated data with data from 2,345 individuals previously genotyped on the same array13. All individuals that were genotyped provided individual informed consent consistent with studies of population history, following protocols approved by the ethical review committees of the institutions of the researchers who collected the samples; the ethical reviews applying to each of these individual sample collections are specified inSupplementary Data Table 2. The collection and analysis of genome-wide on anonymized samples at Harvard Medical School for the purpose of studying population history was approved by the Harvard Human Research Protection Program, protocol 11681, re-reviewed on July 12 2016. Anonymized aliquots of DNA from all individuals were sent to the core facility of the Center for Applied Genomics at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia for genotyping and data processing. For 127 of the individuals with newly reported data, the informed consent was consistent with public distribution of data, and the data can be downloaded athttp://genetics.med.harvard.edu/reich/Reich_Lab/Datasets.html. To access data for the remaining 111 samples, researchers should send a signed letter to D.R. containing the following text: “(a) I will not distribute the data outside my collaboration; (b) I will not post the data publicly, (c) I will make no attempt to connect the genetic data to personal identifiers for the samples, (d) I will use the data only for studies of population history, (e) I will not use the data for any selection studies, (f) I will not use the data for medical or disease-related analyses, (g) I will not use the data for commercial purposes.”Supplementary Data Table 2 specifies which samples are consistent with which type of data distribution.

Datasets

We carried out population genetic analysis on two datasets: (i)HO includes 2,583 present-day humans genotyped on the Human Origins array13,16 including 238 newly reported (Supplementary Data Table 2; Supplementary Information, section 2), and 281 ancient individuals on a total of 592,146 autosomal SNPs. (ii)HOIll includes the 281 ancient individuals on a total of 1,055,186 autosomal SNPs, including those present in both the Human Origins and Illumina genotyping platforms, but excluding SNPs on the sex chromosomes or additional SNPs of the 1240k capture array that were included because of their potential functional importance8. We usedHO for analyses that involve both ancient and present-day individuals, andHOIll for analysis on ancient individuals alone. We also use 235 individuals from Pagani et al.31 on 418,700 autosomal SNPs to study admixture in East Africans (Supplementary Information, section 8). Ancient individuals are represented in ‘pseudo-haploid’ form by randomly choosing one allele for each position of the array.

Principal Components Analysis

We carried out principal components analysis in thesmartpca program of EIGENSOFT17, using default parameters and the lsqproject: YES13 and numoutlieriter: 0 options. We carried out PCA of theHO dataset on 991 present-day West Eurasians (Extended Data Fig. 1), and projected the 278 ancient individuals (Fig. 1b).

ADMIXTURE Analysis

We carried out ADMIXTURE analysis18 of theHO dataset after pruning for linkage disequilibrium in PLINK45,46 with parameters --indep-pairwise 200 25 0.4 which retained 296,309 SNPs. We performed analysis in 20 replicates with different random seeds, and retained the highest likelihood replicate for each value of K. We show the K=11 results for the 281 ancient samples inExtended Data Fig. 2a (this is the lowest K for which components maximized in European hunter-gatherers, ancient Levant, and ancient Iran appear).

f-statistics

We carried out analysis off3-statistics,f4-ratio, andf4-statistics statistics using the ADMIXTOOLS16 programsqp3Pop,qpF4ratio with default parameters, andqpDstat with f4mode: YES, and computed standard errors with a block jackknife47. For computingf3-statistics with an ancient population as a target, we set the inbreed:YES parameter. We computedf-statistics on theHOIll dataset when no present-day humans were involved and on theHO dataset when they were. We computed the statisticf4(Test, Mbuti; Altai, Denisovan) inFig. 2 on theHOIll dataset after merging with whole genome data on 3 Mbuti individuals from Panel C of the Simons Genome Diversity Project48. We computed the dendrogram ofExtended Data Fig. 3 showing hierarchical clustering of populations with outgroupf3-statistics using the open sourceheatmap.2 function of thegplots package inR.

Negative correlation of Basal Eurasian ancestry with Neanderthal ancestry

We used thelm function of R to fit a linear regression of the rate of allele sharing of aTest population with the Altai Neanderthal as measured byf4(Test, Mbuti; Altai, Denisovan) as the dependent variable, and the proportion of Basal Eurasian ancestry (Supplementary Information, section 4) as the predictor variable,. Extrapolating from the fitted line, we obtain the value of the statistic expected ifTest is a population of 0% or 100% Basal Eurasian ancestry. We then compute the ratio of the Neanderthal ancestry estimate in Basal Eurasians relative to non-Basal Eurasians asf4(100% Basal Eurasian, Mbuti; Altai, Denisovan)/f4(0% Basal Eurasian, Mbuti; Altai, Denisovan). We use a block jackknife47, dropping one of 100 contiguous blocks of the genome at a time, to estimate the value and standard error of this quantity (9±26%). We compute a 95% confidence interval based on the point estimate ±1.96-times the standard error: −42 to 60%. We truncated to 0-60% on the assumption that Basal Eurasians had no less Neanderthal admixture than Mbuti from sub-Saharan Africa.

Estimation of FST coefficients

We estimated FST insmartpca17 with default parameters, inbreed: YES, and fstonly: YES.

Admixture Graph modeling

We carried out Admixture Graph modeling with theqpGraph software16 using Mbuti as an outgroup unless otherwise specified.

Testing for the number of streams of ancestry

We used theqpWave34,49 software, described inSupplementary Information, section 10 of ref.7, to test whether a set of ‘Left’ populations is consistent with being related via as few asN streams of ancestry to a set of ‘Right’ populations by studying statistics of the formX(u,v) =F4(u0,u;v0,v) whereu0,v0 are basis populations chosen from the ‘Left’ and ‘Right’ sets andu,v are other populations from these sets. We use a Hotelling's T2 test49 to evaluate whether the matrix of size (L-1)*(R-1), where L, R are the sizes of the ‘Left’ and ‘Right’ sets has rankm. If this is the case, we can conclude that the ‘Left’ set is related via at leastN=m+1 streams of ancestry related differently to the ‘Right’ set.

Inferring mixture proportions without an explicit phylogeny

We used theqpAdm methodology described inSupplementary Information, section 10 of ref.7 to estimate the proportions of ancestry in aTest population deriving from a mixture ofN ‘reference’ populations by exploiting (but not explicitly modeling) shared genetic drift with a set of ‘Outgroup’ populations (Supplementary Information, section 7). We set the details: YES parameter, which reports a normally distributed Z-score estimated with a block jackknife for the difference between the statisticsf4(u0,Test;v0,v) andf4(u0,Estimated Test;v0,v) whereEstimated Test isi=1Nαif4(u0,Refi;v0,v), the average of thesef4-statistics weighed by the mixture proportionsαi from theN reference populations.

Modeling admixture from ghost populations

We model admixture from a ‘ghost’ (unobserved) populationX in the specific case thatX has part of its ancestry from two unobserved ancestral populationsp andq. Any populationX composed of the same populationsp andq resides on a line defined by two observed reference populationsr1 andr2 composed of the same elementsp andq according to a parametric equationx =r1 +λ(r2r1) with real-valued parameterλ. We define and solve the optimization problem of fittingλ and obtain mixture proportions (Supplementary Information, section 10).

Code availability

Code implementing the method to model admixture from ghost populations is available on request from I.L.

Extended Data

Extended Data Figure 1. Principal components analysis of 991 present-day West Eurasians.

Extended Data Figure 1

The PCA analysis is performed on the same set of individuals as are reported inFig. 1b, using EIGENSOFT. Here, we color the samples by population (to highlight the present-day populations) instead of using grey points as inFig. 1b (where the goal is to highlight ancient samples).

Extended Data Figure 2. Genetic structure in ancient West Eurasian populations across time and decline of genetic differentiation over time.

Extended Data Figure 2

(a) ADMIXTURE model-based clustering analysis of 2,583 present-day humans and 281 ancient samples; we show the results only for ancient samples for K=11 clusters. (b) Pairwise FST between 19 Ancient West Eurasian populations (arranged in approximate chronological order), and select present-day populations.

Extended Data Figure 3. Outgroupf3(Mbuti; X, Y) for pairs of ancient populations.

Extended Data Figure 3

The dendrogram is plotted for convenience and should not be interpreted as a phylogenetic tree. Areas of high shared genetic drift are ‘yellow’ and include from top-right to bottom-left along the diagonal: early Anatolian and European farmers; European hunter-gatherers, Steppe populations and ones admixed with steppe ancestry; populations from the Levant from the Epipaleolithic (Natufians) to the Bronze Age; populations from Iran from the Mesolithic to the Late Neolithic.

Extended Data Figure 4. Reduction of genetic differentiation in West Eurasia over time.

Extended Data Figure 4

We measure differentiation by FST. Each column of the 5×5 matrix of plots represents a major region and each row the earliest population with at least two individuals from each major region.

Extended Data Figure 5. West Eurasian related admixture in East Africa, Eastern Eurasia and South Asia.

Extended Data Figure 5

(a) Levantine ancestry in Eastern Africa in the Human Origins dataset, (b) Levantine ancestry in different Eastern African population in the dataset of Pagani et al. (2012); the remainder of the ancestry is a clade with Mota, a ~4,500 year old sample from Ethiopia50. (c) EHG ancestry in Eastern Eurasians, or (d) Afontova Gora (AG2) ancestry in Eastern Eurasians; the remainder of their ancestry is a clade with Onge. (e) Mixture proportions for South Asian populations showing that they can be modelled as having West Eurasian-related ancestry similar to that in populations from both the Eurasian steppe and Iran.

Extended Data Figure 6.

Extended Data Figure 6

Inferred position of ancient populations in West Eurasian PCA according to the model ofFig. 4.

Extended Data Figure 7. Admixture from ghost populations using ‘cline intersection’.

Extended Data Figure 7

We model eachTest population (purple) in panels (a-f) as a mixture (pink) of a fixed reference population (blue) and a ghost population (orange) residing on the cline defined by two other populations (red and green) according to the visualization method ofSupplementary Information, section 10. (a) Early/Middle Bronze Age steppe populations are a mixture of Iran_ChL and a population on the WHG→SHG cline. (b) Scandinavian hunter-gatherers (SHG) are a mixture of WHG and a population on the Iran_ChL→Steppe_EMBA cline. (c) Caucasus hunter-gatherers (CHG) are a mixture of Iran_N and both WHG and EHG. (d) Late Neolithic/Bronze Age Europeans are a mixture of the preceding Europe_MNChL population and a population with both EHG and Iran_ChL ancestry. (e) Somali are a mixture of Mota50 and a population on the Iran_ChL→Levant_BA cline. (f) Eastern European hunter-gatherers (EHG) are a mixture of WHG and a population on the Onge→Han cline.

Extended Data Figure 8. Admixture from a ‘ghost’ ANE population into both European and Eastern Eurasian ancestry.

Extended Data Figure 8

EHG, and Upper Paleolithic Siberians Mal'ta 1 (MA1) and Afontova Gora 2 (AG2) are positioned near the intersection of clines formed by European hunter-gatherers (WHG, SHG, EHG) and Eastern non-Africans in the space of outgroupf3-statistics of the formf3(Mbuti; Papuan,Test) andf3(Mbuti; Switzerland_HG,Test).

Extended Data Table 1. No evidence for admixture related to sub-Saharan Africans in Natufians.

We computed the statisticf4(Natufian,Other Ancient;African, Chimp) varyingAfrican to be Mbuti, Yoruba, Ju_hoan_North, or the ancient Mota individual. Gene flow between Natufians and African populations would be expected to bias these statistics positive. However, we find most of them to be negative in sign and all of them to be non-significant (|Z|<3), providing no evidence that Natufians differ from other ancient samples with respect to African populations.

Other AncientAfricanf4(Natufian, Other Ancient; African, Chimp)zNumber of SNPs
EHGMbuti−0.00044−1.0254033
EHGYoruba0.000290.7254033
EHGJu_hoan_North−0.00015−0.4254033
EHGMota−0.00022−0.4253986
WHGMbuti−0.00067−1.7261514
WHGYoruba−0.00045−1.1261514
WHGJu_hoan_North−0.00046−1.2261514
WHGMota−0.00129−2.3261461
SHGMbuti−0.00076−2.0255686
SHGYoruba−0.00039−1.0255686
SHGJu_hoan_North−0.00052−1.4255686
SHGMota−0.00091−1.7255641
Switzerland_HGMbuti−0.00018−0.4261322
Switzerland_HGYoruba0.000190.4261322
Switzerland_HGJu_hoan_North0.000090.2261322
Switzerland_HGMota−0.00062−0.9261276
Kostenki14Mbuti0.000340.7246765
Kostenki14Yoruba0.001202.3246765
Kostenki14Ju_hoan_North0.000691.4246765
Kostenki14Mota0.000360.5246719
MA1Mbuti−0.00038−0.7191819
MA1Yoruba0.000090.2191819
MA1Ju_hoan_North−0.00010−0.2191819
MA1Mota−0.00038−0.5191782
CHGMbuti−0.00051−1.2261505
CHGYoruba−0.00012−0.3261505
CHGJu_hoan_North−0.00013−0.3261505
CHGMota−0.00042−0.7261456
Iran_NMbuti−0.00018−0.4232927
Iran_NYoruba0.000360.8232927
Iran_NJu_hoan_North0.000410.9232927
Iran_NMota0.000060.1232880

Extended Data Table 2. Admixturef3-statistics.

We show the lowest Z-score of the statisticf3(Test;Reference1,Refrence2) for every ancientTest population with at least 2 individuals and every pair (Reference1,Refrence2) of ancient or present-day source populations. Z-scores lower than −3 are highlighted and indicate that theTest population is admixed from sources related to (but not identical to) the reference populations. Z-scores greater than −3 are consistent with the population either being admixed or not.

TestReference1Reference2f3(Test; Reference1, Refrence2)Z-scoreNumber of SNPs
Anatolia_NIberia_BALevant_N−0.00034−0.2111632
Armenia_ChLEHGLevant_N−0.00249−1.5167020
Armenia_EBAAnatolia_NCHG−0.01017−7.9195596
Armenia MLBAAnatolia_NSteppe_EMBA−0.00809−7.3203796
CHGAnatolia_ChLIran_Hotulllb0.026123.69884
EHGSteppe_EneolithicSwitzerland_HG−0.00282−0.967938
Europe_ENAnatolia_NWHG−0.00494−11.2380684
Europe_LNBAEurope_MNChLSteppe_EMBA−0.00920−41.8414782
Europe_MNChLAnatolia_NWHG−0.01351−26.8363672
Iran_ChLAnatolia_NIran_N−0.01285−10.6167941
Iran_NIran_LNGana−0.00462−1.117804
Levant_BAIran_NLevant_N−0.00853−4.7118269
Levant_NEurope_MNChLNatufian−0.00671−3.661845
NatufianIberia_BAIran_Hotulllb0.076133.41054
SHGSteppe_EneolithicSwitzerland_HG0.007283.2154825
Steppe_EMBAEHGAbkhasian−0.00756−11.2349359
Steppe_EneolithicEHGIran_LN−0.01637−4.225100
Steppe_MLBAEurope_MNChLSteppe_EMBA−0.00573−18.0378298
WHGSwitzerland_HGSaudi−0.01562−7.7218758
AbkhasianCHGSardinian−0.00754−13.1387956
AdygeiAnatolia_NEskimo−0.00699−14.4413128
AlbanianEurope_ENBurusho−0.00650−16.8395851
ArmenianAnatolia_NSindhi−0.00603−19.5406021
AssyrianIran_NSardinian−0.00672−11.8309055
BalkarAnatolia_NChukchi−0.00975−18.8401928
BasqueSwitzerland_HGDruze−0.00726−12.6416070
BedouinAEurope_ENYoruba−0.01584−42.8460762
BedouinBIran_HotulllbNatufian0.013844.132266
BelarusianWHGIranian−0.00974−19.8392363
BulgarianAnatolia_NSteppe_EMBA−0.00807−26.7400263
Canary_IslanderEurope_MNChLMende−0.00829−5.9353172
ChechenAnatolia_NEskimo−0.00440−7.9396678
CroatianWHGDruze−0.00871−18.6394032
CypriotAnatolia_NSindhi−0.00562−16.1401141
CzechSHGDruze−0.00919−21.7374705
DruzeIran_NSardinian−0.00269−5.8343813
EnglishSteppe_EMBASardinian−0.00628−20.6402502
EstonianSHGDruze−0.00789−17.6371575
FinnishSHGAssyrian−0.00716−12.6355744
FrenchSteppe_EMBASardinian−0.00669−37.9441807
GeorgianCHGSardinian−0.00782−13.7390744
GermanWHGDruze−0.01103−22.9391302
GreekEurope_ENPathan−0.00600−30.0421984
HungarianSteppe_EMBASardinian−0.00644−31.2420017
IcelandicWHGAbkhasian−0.00974−17.0394625
IranianAnatolia_MSindhi−0.00594−30.9443011
IrishSteppe_EMBASardinian−0.00590−22.8416663
Irish_UlsterSHGAssyrian−0.00909−15.6350547
Italian_NorthEurope_ENSteppe_EMBA−0.00627−26.4419169
Italian_SouthIberia_BAIran_Hotulllb0.012242.617678
Jew_AshkenaziAnatolia_NKoryak−0.00532−9.4389012
Jew_GeorgianIran_NSardinian−0.00306−4.2292410
Jew_IranianIran_NSardinian−0.00385−5.8302446
Jew_IraqiIran_NSardinian−0.00486−6.5287673
Jew_LibyanEurope_ENYoruba−0.00397−7.2415797
Jew_MoroccanEurope_ENYoruba−0.00649−10.9405193
Jew_TunisianAnatolia_NMende−0.00276−4.1399354
Jew_TurkishAnatolia_NBurusho−0.00571−16.4405254
Jew_YemeniteNatufianKalash−0.00341−3.8174052
JordanianEurope_ENYoruba−0.01283−26.7423649
KumykAnatolia_NChukchi−0.01025−19.6396439
LebaneseAnatolia_NYoruba−0.01022−19.5414854
Lebanese_ChristianAnatolia_NSindhi−0.00504−15.7404858
Lebanese_MuslimAnatolia_NBrahmin_Tiwari−0.00616−20.4415129
LezginSteppe_EMBAJew_Yemenite−0.00481−13.1398974
LithuanianWHGAbkhasian−0.00999−17.7386718
MalteseAnatolia_NBrahmin_Tiwari−0.00518−14.5404438
MordovianWHGIranian−0.00912−18.4395230
North_OssetianAnatolia_NChukchi−0.00894−17.2401729
NorwegianWHGAbkhasian−0.00957−16.5393546
OrcadianSHGDruze−0.00662−15.8379656
PalestinianEurope_ENYoruba−0.01129−31.3464066
PolishSHGDruze−0.00924−27.8394654
RomanianEurope_ENSteppe_EMBA−0.00549−16.9397119
RussianSHGTurkish−0.00731−25.0398393
SardinianAnatolia_NSwitzerland_HG−0.00587−9.6417931
SaudiAnatolia_NDinka−0.00326−5.1404923
ScottishSteppe_EMBASardinian−0.00622−26.6426660
ShetlandicWHGAbkhasian−0.00868−14.6386562
SicilianAnatolia_NBrahmin_Tiwari−0.00646−22.2411481
SorbSHGPalestinian−0.00787−16.8366924
SpanishSteppe_EMBASardinian−0.00557−32.2447735
Spanish_NorthWHGArmenian−0.00825−10.9356832
SyrianEurope_ENDinka−0.01002−17.3410920
TurkishEurope_ENSindhi−0.00709−41.1448975
UkrainianWHGAbkhasian−0.01183−21.4388282

Supplementary Material

supp_info1-11
supp_table1
supp_table2
supp_table3

Acknowledgements

We thank the 238 human subjects who donated samples for genome-wide analysis, and D. Labuda and P. Zalloua for sharing samples from Poland and Lebanon. TheFig. 1a map was plotted in R using the worldHiRes map of the 'mapdata' package (using public domain data from the CIA World Data Bank II). We thank O. Bar-Yosef, M. Bonogofsky, I. Hershkowitz, M. Lipson, I. Mathieson, H. May, R. Meadow, I. Olalde, S. Paabo, P. Skoglund, and N. Nakatsuka for comments and critiques, and D. Bradley, M. Dallakyan, S. Esoyan, M. Ferry and M. Michel, and A. Yesayan, for contributions to bone preparation and ancient DNA work D.F. and M.N. were supported by Irish Research Council grants GOIPG/2013/36 and GOIPD/2013/1, respectively. S.C. was funded by the Irish Research Council for Humanities and Social Sciences (IRCHSS) ERC Support Programme. Q.F. was funded by the Bureau of International Cooperation of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, the National Natural Science Foundation of China (L1524016) and the Chinese Academy of Sciences Discipline Development Strategy Project (2015-DX-C-03). The Scottish diversity data was funded by the Chief Scientist Office of the Scottish Government Health Directorates [CZD/16/6], the Scottish Funding Council [HR03006], and a project grant from the Scottish Executive Health Department, Chief Scientist Office [CZB/4/285]. M.S., A.Tön., M.B. and P.K. were supported by the German Research Foundation (CRC 1052; B01, B03, C01). M.S.-P. was funded by a Wenner-Gren Foundation Dissertation Fieldwork Grant (#9005), and by the National Science Foundation DDRIG (BCS-1455744).P.K. was funded by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research, Germany (FKZ: 01EO1501). J.F.W acknowledges the MRC “QTL in Health and Disease” programme grant. The Romanian diversity data was supported by the EC Commission, Directorate General XII (Supplementary Agreement ERBCIPDCT 940038 to the Contract ERBCHRXCT 920032, coordinated by Prof. A. Piazza, Turin, Italy). M.R. received support from the Leverhulme Trust's Doctoral Scholarship programme. O.S. and A.Tor. were supported by the University of Pavia (MIGRAT-IN-G) and the Italian Ministry of Education, University and Research: Progetti Ricerca Interesse Nazionale 2012. The Raqefet Cave Natufian project was supported by funds from the National Geographic Society (Grant #8915-11), the Wenner-Gren Foundation (Grant #7481) and the Irene Levi-Sala CARE Foundation, while radiocarbon dating on the samples was funded by the Israel Science Foundation (Grant 475/10; E. Boaretto). R.P. was supported by ERC starting grant ADNABIOARC (263441). D.R. was supported by NIH grant GM100233, by NSF HOMINID BCS-1032255, and is a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator.

Footnotes

Author Contributions R.P. and D.R. conceived the idea for the study. D.N., G.R., D.C.M., S.C., S.A.R., G.L., F.B., B.Gas., J.M.M., M.G., V.E., A.M., C.M., F.G., N.A.H. and R.P. assembled archaeological material. N.R., D.F., M.N., B.Gam., K.Si., S.C., K.St., E.H., Q.F., G.G.-F., E.R.J., R.P. and D.R. performed or supervised ancient DNA wet laboratory work. L.B, M.B., A.C., G.C., D.C., P.F., E.G., S.M.K., P.K., J.K., D.M., M.M., D.A.M., S.O., M.B.R., O.S., M.S.-P., G.S., M.S., A.Tön., A.Tor., J.F.W., L.Y. and D.R. assembled present-day samples for genotyping. I.L, N.P. and D.R. developed methods for data analysis. I.L., S.M., Q.F., N.P. and D.R. analyzed data. I.L., R.P. and D.R. wrote the manuscript and supplements.

Author Information The aligned sequences are available through the European Nucleotide Archive under accession number PRJEB14455. Fully public subsets of the analysis datasets are at (http://genetics.med.harvard.edu/reichlab/Reich_Lab/Datasets.html). The complete dataset including present-day humans for which the informed consent is not consistent with public posting of data is available to researchers who send a signed letter to D.R. indicating that they will abide by specified usage conditions (Supplementary Information, section 2). The authors declare no competing financial interests. Readers are welcome to comment on the online version of the paper.

Supplementary Information is available in the online version of the paper.

Online Content Methods, along with any additional Extended Data display items and Source Data, are available in the online version of the paper; references unique to these sections appear only in the online paper.

References

Associated Data

This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.

Supplementary Materials

supp_info1-11
supp_table1
supp_table2
supp_table3

ACTIONS

RESOURCES


[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2026 Movatter.jp