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Genetic history of the Indigenous peoples of the Americas

The genetic history of the Indigenous peoples of the Americas is divided into two distinct periods: the initial peopling of the Americas during about 20,000 to 14,000 years ago (20–14 kya), and European contact, after about 500 years ago.[1][2] The first period of Indigenous American genetic history is the determinant factor for the number of genetic lineages, zygosity mutations and founding haplotypes present in today's Indigenous American populations.[3]

Indigenous American populations descend from an Ancient Paleo-Siberian population, itself a combination of an Ancient East Asian lineage which diverged from other East Asian peoples prior to the Last Glacial Maximum, between 36,000 and 25,000 years ago, and subsequently migrated into Siberia, where they merged with Ancient North Eurasians. They later dispersed throughout the Americas after about 16,000 years ago (exceptions being the Na-Dene and Eskimo–Aleut speaking groups, which are derived partially from Siberian populations which entered the Americas at a later time).[4][5]

Analyses of genetics among Indigenous American and Siberian populations have been used to argue for early isolation of founding populations on Beringia[6] and for later, more rapid migration from Siberia through Beringia into the New World.[7] The microsatellite diversity and distributions of the Y lineage specific to South America indicates that certain Indigenous American populations have been isolated since the initial peopling of the region.[8] The Na-Dene, Inuit and Native Alaskan populations exhibit Haplogroup Q-M242; however, they are distinct from other Indigenous Americans with various mtDNA and atDNA mutations.[9][10][11] This suggests that the peoples who first settled in the northern extremes of North America and Greenland derived from later migrant populations than those who penetrated farther south in the Americas.[12][13] Linguists and biologists have reached a similar conclusion based on analysis of Indigenous American language groups and ABO blood group system distributions.[14][15][16][17]

Autosomal DNA edit

 
Position of Native Americans on a Principal component analysis of global human population clusters from the 1000 Genomes project.

Genetic diversity and population structure in the American landmass is also measured using autosomal (atDNA) micro-satellite markers genotyped; sampled from North, Central, and South America and analyzed against similar data available from other Indigenous populations worldwide.[18][19] The Indigenous American populations show a lesser genetic diversity than populations from other continental regions.[19] Observed is a decreasing genetic diversity as geographic distance from the Bering Strait occurs, as well as a decreasing genetic similarity to Siberian populations from Alaska (the genetic entry point).[18][19] Also observed is evidence of a greater level of diversity and lesser level of population structure in western South America compared to eastern South America.[18][19] There is a relative lack of differentiation between Mesoamerican and Andean populations, a scenario that implies that coastal routes (in this case along the coast of the Pacific Ocean) were easier for migrating peoples (more genetic contributors) to traverse in comparison with inland routes.[18]

The over-all pattern that is emerging suggests that the Americas were colonized by a small number of individuals (effective size of about 70), which grew by many orders of magnitude over 800 – 1000 years.[20][21] The data also shows that there have been genetic exchanges between Asia, the Arctic, and Greenland since the initial peopling of the Americas.[21][22]

According to an autosomal genetic study from 2012,[23] Indigenous Americans descend from at least three main migrant waves from East Asia. Most of it is traced back to a single ancestral population, called 'First Americans'. However, those who speak Inuit languages from the Arctic inherited almost half of their ancestry from a second East Asian migrant wave. And those who speak Na-Dene, on the other hand, inherited a tenth of their ancestry from a third migrant wave. The initial settling of the Americas was followed by a rapid expansion southwards along the west coast, with little gene flow later, especially in South America. One exception to this are the Chibcha speakers of Colombia, whose ancestry comes from both North and South America.[23]

In 2014, the autosomal DNA of a 12,500+ year old infant from Montana was sequenced.[24] The DNA was taken from a skeleton referred to as Anzick-1, found in close association with several Clovis artifacts. Comparisons showed strong affinities with DNA from Siberian sites, and virtually ruled out that particular individual had any close affinity with European sources (the "Solutrean hypothesis"). The DNA also showed strong affinities with all existing Indigenous American populations, which indicated that all of them derive from an ancient population that lived in or near Siberia.[25]

Linguistic studies have reinforced genetic studies, with relationships between languages found among those spoken in Siberia and those spoken in the Americas.[26]

Two 2015 autosomal DNA genetic studies confirmed the Siberian origins of the Indigenous peoples of the Americas. However an ancient signal of shared ancestry with Australasians (Indigenous peoples of Australia, Melanesia and the Andaman Islands) was detected among the Indigenous peoples of the Amazon region. The migration coming out of Siberia would have happened 23,000 years ago.[27][28][29]

A 2018 study analysed ancient Indigenous samples. The genetic evidence suggests that all Indigenous Americans ultimately descended from a founding population that combined East Asian and Ancient North Eurasian ancestry. The authors also provided evidence that the basal northern and southern Indigenous American branches, to which all other Indigenous peoples belong, diverged around 16,000 years ago.[4] An Indigenous American sample from 16,000 BCE in Idaho, which is craniometrically similar to modern Indigenous Americans as well as Paleosiberians, was found to have been largely East-Eurasian genetically, and showed high affinity with contemporary East Asians, as well as Jōmon period samples of Japan, confirming that Ancestral Indigenous Americans split from an East-Eurasian source population somewhere in eastern Siberia.[30]

A study published in the Nature journal in 2018 concluded that Indigenous Americans descended from a single founding population which initially divided from East Asians about ~36,000 BCE, with gene flow between Ancestral Indigenous Americans and Siberians persisting until ~25,000 BCE, before becoming isolated in the Americas at ~22,000 BCE. Northern and Southern American Indigenous sub-populations split from each other at ~17,500 BCE. There is also some evidence for a back-migration from the Americas into Siberia after ~11,500 BCE.[4]

A study published in the Cell journal in 2019, analysed 49 ancient Indigenous American samples from all over North and South America, and concluded that all Indigenous American populations descended from a single ancestral source population which divided from Siberians and East Asians, and gave rise to the Ancestral Indigenous Americans, which later diverged into the various Indigenous groups. The authors further dismissed previous claims for the possibility of two distinct population groups among the peopling of the Americas. Both, Northern and Southern Indigenous Americans are closest to each other, and do not show evidence of admixture with hypothetical previous populations.[31]

 
A qpGraph by Posth et al. 2018 showing the formation of Ancient Native Americans.

A review article published in the Nature journal in 2021, which summarized the results of previous genomic studies, similarly concluded that all Indigenous Americans descended from the movement of people from Northeast Asia into the Americas. These Ancestral Americans, once south of the continental ice sheets, spread and expanded rapidly, and branched into multiple groups, which later gave rise to the major subgroups of Indigenous American populations. The study also dismissed the existence, inferred from craniometric data, of a hypothetical distinct non-Indigenous American population (suggested to have been related to Indigenous Australians and Papuans), sometimes called "Paleoamerican".[32][33]

Overall, the 'Ancestral Native Americans' formed from an 'Ancient Paleo-Siberian' lineage which formed from the admixture between East Asian people and a distinct Paleolithic Siberian population known as Ancient North Eurasians, closer related to modern Europeans, giving rise to both Indigenous peoples of Siberia and Native Americans.[34] Around 67% of the ancestry of Native Americans is derived from East Asian sources, while c. 33% is derived from an Ancient West Eurasian (ANE-like) source.[31]

Y-chromosome DNA edit

 
Map of Y-Chromosome Haplogroups - Dominant haplogroups in pre-colonial populations with proposed migration routes.

A "Central Siberian" origin has been postulated for the paternal lineage of the source populations of the original migration into the Americas.[35]

Membership in haplogroups Q and C3b implies Indigenous American patrilineal descent.[36]

The micro-satellite diversity and distribution of a Y lineage specific to South America suggest that certain Indigenous American populations became isolated after the initial colonization of their regions.[8] The Na-Dene, Inuit, and Native Alaskan populations exhibit haplogroup Q (Y-DNA) mutations, but are distinct from other Indigenous Americans with various mtDNA and autosomal DNA (atDNA) mutations.[9][37][38] This suggests that the earliest migrants into the northern extremes of North America and Greenland derived from later migrant populations.[39][40]

Haplogroup Q edit

 
Frequency distribution of haplogroup Q-M242.[41]

Q-M242 (mutational name) is the defining (SNP) of Haplogroup Q (Y-DNA) (phylogenetic name).[42][43] In Eurasia, haplogroup Q is found among Indigenous Siberian populations, such as the modern Chukchi and Koryak peoples, as well as some Southeast Asians, such as the Dayak people. In particular, two groups exhibit large concentrations of the Q-M242 mutation, the Ket (93.8%) and the Selkup (66.4%) peoples.[44] The Ket are thought to be the only survivors of ancient wanderers living in Siberia.[45] Their population size is very small; there are fewer than 1,500 Ket in Russia.2002[20] The Selkup have a slightly larger population size than the Ket, with approximately 4,250 individuals.[46]

Starting the Paleo-Indigenous American period, a migration to the Americas across the Bering Strait (Beringia) by a small population carrying the Q-M242 mutation occurred.[10] A member of this initial population underwent a mutation, which defines its descendant population, known by the Q-M3 (SNP) mutation.[47] These descendants migrated all over the Americas.[42]

Haplogroup Q-M3 is defined by the presence of the rs3894 (M3) (SNP).[1][20][48] The Q-M3 mutation is roughly 15,000 years old as that is when the initial migration of Paleo-Indigenous Americans into the Americas occurred.[49][50] Q-M3 is the predominant haplotype in the Americas, at a rate of 83% in South American populations,[8] 50% in the Na-Dene populations, and in North American Eskimo-Aleut populations at about 46%.[44] With minimal back-migration of Q-M3 in Eurasia, the mutation likely evolved in east-Beringia, or more specifically the Seward Peninsula or western Alaskan interior. The Beringia land mass began submerging, cutting off land routes.[44][51][18]

Since the discovery of Q-M3, several subclades of M3-bearing populations have been discovered. An example is in South America, where some populations have a high prevalence of (SNP) M19, which defines subclade Q-M19.[8] M19 has been detected in (59%) of Amazonian Ticuna men and in (10%) of Wayuu men.[8] Subclade M19 appears to be unique to South American Indigenous peoples, arising 5,000 to 10,000 years ago.[8] This suggests that population isolation, and perhaps even the establishment of tribal groups, began soon after migration into the South American areas.[20][52] Other American subclades include Q-L54, Q-Z780, Q-MEH2, Q-SA01, and Q-M346 lineages. In Canada, two other lineages have been found. These are Q-P89.1 and Q-NWT01.

Haplogroup R1 edit

Haplogroup R1 is the second most common Y-DNA haplogroup found among Indigenous Americans after Y-DNA haplogroup Q.[53]

Initially, there was debate about the origin of haplogroup R1b in Native Americans. Two early studies suggested that this haplogroup could have been one of the founding Siberian lineages of Native Americans, however this is now considered unlikely, because the R1b lineages commonly found in Native Americans are in most cases identical to those in western Europeans, and its highest concentration is found among a variety of culturally unaffiliated tribes, in eastern North America.[54]

Thus, according to several authors, R1b was most likely introduced through admixture during the post-1492 European settlement of North America.[55][56][57]

R1 (M173) is found predominantly in North American groups like the Ojibwe (50-79%), Seminole (50%), Sioux (50%), Cherokee (47%), Dogrib (40%) and Tohono O'odham (Papago) (38%). Its highest frequency is found in northeastern North America, and declines in frequency from east to west. In southwestern Native American tribes the frequency of this haplogroup is as low as 4%.[53][58]

Haplogroup C-P39 edit

 
Distribution of haplogroup C2=C-M217 (YDNA), formerly C3.[59]

Haplogroup C-M217 is found mainly in Indigenous Siberians, Mongolians, and Kazakhs. Haplogroup C-M217 is the most widespread and frequently occurring branch of the greater (Y-DNA) haplogroup C-M130. Haplogroup C-M217 descendant C-P39 is most commonly found in today's Na-Dene speakers, with the greatest frequency found among the Athabaskans at 42%, and at lesser frequencies in some other Indigenous American groups.[10] This distinct and isolated branch C-P39 includes almost all the Haplogroup C-M217 Y-chromosomes found among all Indigenous peoples of the Americas.[60]

Some researchers feel that this may indicate that the Na-Dene migration occurred from the Russian Far East after the initial Paleo-Indigenous American colonization, but prior to modern Inuit, Inupiat and Yupik expansions.[10][9][61]

In addition to in Na-Dene peoples, haplogroup C-P39 (C2b1a1a) is also found among other Indigenous Americans such as Algonquian- and Siouan-speaking populations.[62][63] C-M217 is found among the Wayuu people of Colombia and Venezuela.[62][63]

Data edit

Listed here are notable Indigenous peoples of the Americas by human Y-chromosome DNA haplogroups based on relevant studies. The samples are taken from individuals identified with the ethnic and linguistic designations in the first two columns, the fourth column (n) is the sample size studied, and the other columns give the percentage of the particular haplogroup.

Group Language Place n C Q R1 Others Reference
Algonquian[nb 1] Algic Northeast North America 155 7.7 33.5 [nb 2] 38.1 20.6 Bolnick 2006[64]
Apache Na-Dene SW United States 96 14.6 78.1 5.2 2.1 Zegura 2004[10]
Athabaskan[nb 3] Na-Dene Western North America 243 11.5 70.4 18.1 Malhi 2008[53]
Cherokee Iroquoian SE United States 62 1.6 50.0 [nb 4] 37.1 11.3 Bolnick 2006[64]
Cherokee Iroquoian Eastern North America 30 50.0 46.7 3.3 Malhi 2008[53]
Cheyenne Algic United States 44 16 61 16 7 Zegura 2004[10]
Chibchan[nb 5] Macro-Chibchan Panama 26 100 Zegura 2004[10]
Chipewyan Na-Dene Canada 48 6 31 [nb 6] 62.5[nb 7] Bortoloni 2003[8]
Chippewa Algic Eastern North America 97 4.1 15.9 [nb 8] 50.5 29.9 Bolnick 2006[64]
Dogrib Na-Dene Canada 15 33 27 40 Malhi 2008[53]
Dogrib Na-Dene Canada 37 35.1 45.9 [nb 9] 8.1 10.8 Dulik 2012[65]

[nb 10]

Macro-Jê Brazil 51 92 [nb 11] 8 Bortoloni 2003[8]
Guaraní Tupian Paraguay 59 86 [nb 12] 9 5 Bortoloni 2003[8]
Inga Quechua Colombia 11 78 [nb 13] 11 11 Bortoloni 2003[8]
Inuit Eskimo–Aleut North American Arctic 60 80.0 11.7 8.3 Zegura 2004[10]
Inuvialuit Eskimo–Aleut Canada 56 1.8 55.1 [nb 14] 33.9 8.9 Dulik 2012[65]

Maya

Mayan Mesoamerica 71   87.3   12.7 Zegura 2004[10]
Mixe Mixe–Zoque Mexico 12 100 Zegura 2004[10]
Mixtec Oto-Manguean Mexico 28 93 7 Zegura 2004[10]
Muskogean[nb 15] Muskogean SE United States 36   2.8   75 [nb 16] 11.1 11.1 Bolnick 2006[64]
Nahua Uto-Aztecan Mexico 17 94 6 Malhi 2008[53]
Native Americans
(United States)
United States 398 9.0 58.1 22.2 10.7 Hammer 2005[66]
Navajo Na-Dene SW United States 78 1.3 92.3 2.6 3.8 Zegura 2004[10]
Indigenous North Americans North America 530 6.0 77.2 12.5 4.3 Zegura 2004[10]
Papago Uto-Aztecan SW United States 13 61.5 38.5 Malhi 2008[53]
Seminole Muskogean Eastern North America 20 45.0 50.0 5.0 Malhi 2008[53]
Sioux Macro-Siouan Central North America 44 11 25 50 14 Zegura 2004[10]
South America Amerindian South America 390 92 [nb 17] 4 4 Bortoloni 2003[8]
Tanana Na-Dene Northwest North America 12 42 42 8 8 Zegura 2004[10]
Ticuna Ticuna–Yuri West Amazon basin 33 100 [nb 18] Bortoloni 2003[8]
Tlingit Na-Dene Pacific Northwest 11 18 [nb 19] 82 [nb 20] Dulik 2012[65]
Tupí–Guaraní[nb 21] Tupian Brazil 54 100 [nb 22] Bortoloni 2003[8]
Uto-Aztecan[nb 23] Uto-Aztecan Mexico, Arizona 167 93.4 6.0 Malhi 2008[53]
Warao Warao (isolate) Caribbean South America 12 100 [nb 24] Bortoloni 2003[8]
Wayúu Arawakan Guajira Peninsula 19 69 [nb 25] 21 10 Bortoloni 2003[8]
Wayúu Arawakan Guajira Peninsula 25 8 36 44 12 Zegura 2004[10]
Yagua Peba–Yaguan Peru 7 100 [nb 26] Bortoloni 2003[8]
Yukpa Cariban Colombia 12 100 [nb 27] Bortoloni 2003[8]
Zapotec Oto-Manguean Mexico 16 75 6 19 Zegura 2004[10]
Zenú extinct Colombia 30 81 [nb 28] 19 Bortoloni 2003[8]

Mitochondrial DNA edit

The common occurrence of the mtDNA Haplogroups A, B, C, and D among eastern Asian and Indigenous American populations has long been recognized, along with the presence of Haplogroup X.[67] As a whole, the greatest frequency of the four Indigenous American associated haplogroups occurs in the Altai-Baikal region of southern Siberia.[68] Some subclades of C and D closer to the Indigenous American subclades occur among Mongolian, Amur, Japanese, Korean, and Ainu populations.[67][69] A 2023 DNA study found that "[i]n addition to previously described ancestral sources in Siberia, Australo-Melanesia, and Southeast Asia, ... northern coastal China also contributed to the gene pool of Native Americans" as well as that of Japanese people.[70]

 
Distribution of haplogroup X

When studying human mitochondrial DNA haplogroup, the results indicated that Indigenous American haplogroups, including haplogroup X, are part of a single founding East Asian population. It also indicates that the distribution of mtDNA haplogroups and the levels of sequence divergence among linguistically similar groups were the result of multiple preceding migrations from Bering Straits populations.[71] All Indigenous American mtDNA can be traced back to five haplogroups, A, B, C, D and X.[72][73] More specifically, Indigenous American mtDNA belongs to sub-haplogroups A2, B2, C1b, C1c, C1d, D1, and X2a (with minor groups C4c, D2a, and D4h3a).[6][71] This suggests that 95% of Indigenous American mtDNA is descended from a minimal genetic founding female population, comprising sub-haplogroups A2, B2, C1b, C1c, C1d, and D1.[72] The remaining 5% is composed of the X2a, D2a, C4c, and D4h3a sub-haplogroups.[71][72]

X is one of the five mtDNA haplogroups found in Indigenous Americans. Native Americans mostly belong to the X2a clade, which has never been found in the Old World.[74] According to Jennifer Raff, X2a probably originated in the same Siberian population as the other four founding maternal lineages.[75]

Haplogroup X genetic sequences diverged about 20,000 to 30,000 years ago to give two sub-groups, X1 and X2. X2's subclade X2a occurs only at a frequency of about 3% for the total current Indigenous population of the Americas.[20] However, X2a is a major mtDNA subclade in North America; among the Algonquian peoples, it comprises up to 25% of mtDNA types.[1][76] It is also present in lower percentages to the west and south of this area — among the Sioux (15%), the Nuu-chah-nulth (11%–13%), the Navajo (7%), and the Yakama (5%).[77] The predominant theory for sub-haplogroup X2a's appearance in North America is migration along with A, B, C, and D mtDNA groups, from a source in the Altai Mountains of central Asia.[78][79][80][81] Haplotype X6 was present in the Tarahumara 1.8% (1/53) and Huichol 20% (3/15)[82]

Sequencing of the mitochondrial genome from Paleo-Eskimo remains (3,500 years old) are distinct from modern Indigenous Americans, falling within sub-haplogroup D2a1, a group observed among today's Aleutian Islanders, the Aleut and Siberian Yupik populations.[83] This suggests that the colonizers of the far north, and subsequently Greenland, originated from later coastal populations.[83] Then a genetic exchange in the northern extremes introduced by the Thule people (proto-Inuit) approximately 800–1,000 years ago began.[38][84] These final Pre-Columbian migrants introduced haplogroups A2a and A2b to the existing Paleo-Eskimo populations of Canada and Greenland, culminating in the modern Inuit.[38][84]

 
Frequency distribution of the main mtDNA American haplogroups in Indigenous American populations.

A route through Beringia is seen as more likely than the Solutrean hypothesis.[85] An abstract in a 2012 issue of the "American Journal of Physical Anthropology" states that "The similarities in ages and geographical distributions for C4c and the previously analyzed X2a lineage provide support to the scenario of a dual origin for Paleo-Indigenous Americans. Taking into account that C4c is deeply rooted in the Asian portion of the mtDNA phylogeny and is indubitably of Asian origin, the finding that C4c and X2a are characterized by parallel genetic histories definitively dismisses the controversial hypothesis of an Atlantic glacial entry route into North America."[86]

Another study, also focused on the mtDNA (that which is inherited through only the maternal line),[6] revealed that the Indigenous people of the Americas have their maternal ancestry traced back to a few founding lineages from East Asia, which would have arrived via the Bering strait. According to this study, it is probable that the ancestors of the Indigenous Americans would have remained for a time in the region of the Bering Strait, after which there would have been a rapid movement of settling of the Americas, taking the founding lineages to South America.

According to a 2016 study, focused on mtDNA lineages, "a small population entered the Americas via a coastal route around 16.0 ka, following previous isolation in eastern Beringia for ~2.4 to 9 thousand years after separation from eastern Siberian populations. Following a rapid movement throughout the Americas, limited gene flow in South America resulted in a marked phylogeographic structure of populations, which persisted through time. All of the ancient mitochondrial lineages detected in this study were absent from modern data sets, suggesting a high extinction rate. To investigate this further, we applied a novel principal components multiple logistic regression test to Bayesian serial coalescent simulations. The analysis supported a scenario in which European colonization caused a substantial loss of pre-Columbian lineages".[87]

Genetic admixture edit

Ancient Beringians edit

 
Figure 2. Schematic illustration of maternal (mtDNA) gene-flow in and out of Beringia (long chronology, single source model).

Recent archaeological findings in Alaska have shed light on the existence of a previously unknown Indigenous American population that has been academically named "Ancient Beringians."[88] Although it is popularly agreed among archeologists that early settlers had crossed into Alaska from Russia through the Bering Strait land bridge, the issue of whether or not there was one founding group or several waves of migration is a controversial and prevalent debate among academics in the field today. In 2018, the sequenced DNA of an Indigenous girl, whose remains were found at the Upward Sun River archaeological site in Alaska in 2013, proved not to match the two recognized branches of Indigenous Americans and instead belonged to the early population of Ancient Beringians.[89] This breakthrough is said to be the first direct genomic evidence that there was potentially only one wave of migration in the Americas that occurred, with genetic branching and division transpiring after the fact. The migration wave is estimated to have emerged about 20,000 years ago.[88] The Ancient Beringians are said to be a common ancestral group among contemporary Indigenous American populations today, which differs in results collected from previous research that suggests that modern populations are descendants of either Northern and Southern branches.[88] Experts were also able to use wider genetic evidence to establish that the split between the Northern and Southern American branches of civilization from the Ancient Beringians in Alaska only occurred about 17,000 and 14,000 years,[23] further challenging the concept of multiple migration waves occurring during the very first stages of settlement.

Genetic evidence for Paleo-Indigenous Americans consists of the presence of apparent admixture of archaic Sundadont lineages to the remote populations in the South American rain forest, and in the genetics of Patagonians-Fuegians.[90][91]

Nomatto et al. (2009) proposed migration into Beringia occurred between 40,000 and 30,000 BP, with a pre-LGM migration into the Americas followed by isolation of the northern population following closure of the ice-free corridor.[92]

A 2016 genetic study of Indigenous peoples of the Amazonian region of Brazil (by Skoglund and Reich) showed evidence of admixture from a separate lineage of an otherwise unknown ancient people. This ancient group appears to be related to modern day "Australasian" peoples (i.e. Aboriginal Australians and Melanesians). This "Ghost population" was found in speakers of Tupian languages. They provisionally named this ancient group; "Population Y", after Ypykuéra, "which means 'ancestor' in the Tupi language family".[29] A 2021 genetic study dismissed the existence of an hypothetical Australasian component among Indigenous Americans. The signal of the hypothetical Australasian component, can also be reproduced using the Basal-East Asian Tianyuan man sample, and thus does not represent "real Australasian affinity". The authors explained that the previous claims of possibly Australasian ancestry were based on a misinterpreted genetic echo, which was revealed to represent early East-Eurasian gene flow (represented by the 40,000 BC old Tianyuan sample) into Aboriginal Australians and Papuans, which was lost in modern East Asians.[32][33]

Archaeological evidence for pre-LGM human presence in the Americas was first presented in the 1970s.[93][94] notably the "Luzia Woman" skull found in Brazil.[95][96][97]

Old world edit

 
The current distribution of Indigenous peoples (based on self-identification, not genetic data).

Substantial racial admixture has taken place during and since the European colonization of the Americas.[98][99]

South and Central America edit

In Latin America in particular, significant racial admixture took place between the Indigenous American population, the European-descended colonial population, and the Sub-Saharan African populations imported as slaves. From about 1700, a Latin American terminology developed to refer to the various combinations of mixed racial descent produced by this.[100]

Many individuals who self-identify as one race exhibit genetic evidence of a multiracial ancestry.[101] The European conquest of South and Central America, beginning in the late 15th century, was initially executed by male soldiers and sailors from the Iberian Peninsula (Spain and Portugal).[102][unreliable source] The new soldier-settlers fathered children with Indigenous American women and later with African slaves.[103][unreliable source] These mixed-race children were generally identified by the Spanish colonist and Portuguese colonist as "Castas".[104]

North America edit

The North American fur trade during the 16th century brought many European men, from France, Ireland, and Great Britain, who married Indigenous North American women.[105] In the areas where these peoples formed communities, and developed a unique, syncretic culture, their children became known as "Métis" or "Bois-Brûlés" by the French colonists. In some contexts these peoples have also been referred to as "mixed-bloods", or "country-born" by the English and Scottish colonists.[106]

Native Americans in the United States are defined by citizenship, culture, and familial relationships, not race.[107][108] Having never defined Native American identity as racial,[107] historically, Native Americans have commonly practiced what mainstream society defines as interracial marriage, which has affected racial ideas of blood quantum.[109]

In the United States 2010 census, nearly 3 million people indicated that their race was Indigenous American (including Alaskan Native).[110] This is based on self-identification, as the census does not require documentation of this belief. Especially numerous was the self-identification of Cherokee ethnic origin,[111] a phenomenon dubbed the "Cherokee Syndrome", where some Americans believe they have a "long-lost Cherokee ancestor" without being able to identify any Cherokee or Native American people in their family tree or among their living relatives.[112][113] This cultivation of an opportunistic ethnic identity is related to the "prestige" non-Natives may associate with Indigenous American ancestry, having never experienced any of the attendant hardships or oppression.[114] In the Eastern United States, in particular, pretendians are common.[114][115]

Some tribes have adopted blood quantum requirements, or Certificates of Degree of Indian Blood, and practice disenrollment of tribal members unable to prove they are the child of an enrolled tribal member. In these cases, the tribe may demand a paternity test. For some, this has become a contentious issue in Native American reservation politics.[116]

European diseases and genetic modification edit

A team led by Ripan Malhi, an anthropologist at the University of Illinois in Urbana, conducted a study where they used a scientific technique known as whole exome sequencing to test immune-related gene variants within Indigenous Americans.[117] Through analyzing ancient and modern Indigenous DNA, it was found that HLA-DQA1, a variant gene that codes for protein in charge of differentiating between healthy cells from invading viruses and bacteria were present in nearly 100% of ancient remains but only 36% in modern Indigenous Americans.[117] These finding suggest that European-borne epidemics such as smallpox altered the disease landscape of the Americas, leaving survivors of these outbreaks less likely to carry variants like HLA-DQA1. This made them less able to cope with new diseases. The change in genetic makeup is measured by scientists to have occurred around 175 years ago, during a time when the smallpox epidemic was ranging through the Americas.

Blood groups edit

 
Frequency of O group in Indigenous populations. Note the predominance of this group in Indigenous Americans.

Prior to the 1952 confirmation of DNA as the hereditary material by Alfred Hershey and Martha Chase, scientists used blood proteins to study human genetic variation.[118][119] The ABO blood group system is widely credited to have been discovered by the Austrian Karl Landsteiner, who found three different blood types in 1900.[120] Blood groups are inherited from both parents. The ABO blood type is controlled by a single gene (the ABO gene) with three alleles: i, IA, and IB.[121]

Research by Ludwik and Hanka Herschfeld during World War I found that the frequencies of blood groups A, B and O differed greatly from region to region.[119] The "O" blood type (usually resulting from the absence of both A and B alleles) is very common around the world, with a rate of 63% in all human populations.[122] Type "O" is the primary blood type among the Indigenous populations of the Americas, particularly within Central and South American populations, with a frequency of nearly 100%.[122] In Indigenous North American populations the frequency of type "A" ranges from 16% to 82%.[122] This suggests again that the initial Indigenous Americans evolved from an isolated population with a minimal number of individuals.[123][124]

The standard explanation for such a high population of Indigenous Americans with blood type O is genetic drift. Because the ancestral population of Indigenous Americans was numerically small, blood type diversity could have been reduced from generation to generation by the founder effect.[125] Other related explanations include the Bottleneck explanation which states that there were high frequencies of blood type A and B among Indigenous Americans but severe population decline during the 1500s and 1600s caused by the introduction of disease from Europe resulted in the massive death toll of those with blood types A and B. Coincidentally, a large amount of the survivors were type O.[125]

Distribution of ABO blood types
in various modern Indigenous American populations
Test results as of 2008[126]
PEOPLE GROUP O (%) A (%) B (%) AB (%)
Blackfoot Confederacy (Indigenous North American) 17 82 0 1
Bororo (Brazil) 100 0 0 0
Eskimos (Alaska) 38 44 13 5
Inuit (Eastern Canada & Greenland) 54 36 23 8
Hawaiians (Polynesians, non-Indigenous American) 37 61 2 1
Indigenous North Americans (as a whole Native Nations/First Nations) 79 16 4 1
Maya (modern) 98 1 1 1
Navajo 73 27 0 0
Peru 100 0 0 0

The Dia antigen of the Diego antigen system has been found only in Indigenous peoples of the Americas and East Asians, and in people with some ancestry from those groups. The frequency of the Dia antigen in various groups of Indigenous peoples of the Americas ranges from almost 50% to 0%.[127] Differences in the frequency of the antigen in populations of Indigenous people in the Americas correlate with major language families, modified by environmental conditions.[128]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Algonquian ethnic groups: Ojibwe, Cheyenne/Arapaho, Shawnee, Mi'kmaq, Kickapoo and Meskwaki.
  2. ^ Q-M3=12.9; Q(xM3)=20.6.
  3. ^ Athabaskan ethnic groups: Chipewyan, Tłı̨chǫ, Tanana, Apache and Navajo.
  4. ^ Q-M3=32.; Q3(xM3)=17.7.
  5. ^ Chibchan ethnic groups: Ngöbe and Kuna peoples.
  6. ^ Q-M3=6; Q(xM3)=25.
  7. ^ P1(xQ) 62.5%. While other studies identify this as R(xR2)/R1b,
    the subject remains controversial (see Hammer, Michael F. et al 2005)
  8. ^ Q-M3=8.2; Q(xQ-M3)=7.2.
  9. ^ Q-M3=40.5; Q(xM3)=5.4.
  10. ^ Gê ethnic groups: Gorotire, Kaigang, Kraho, Mekranoti and Xikrin.
  11. ^ Q-M3=90; Q(xM3)=2)
  12. ^ Q-M3=79; Q(xM3)=7.
  13. ^ Q-M3=11; Q(xM3)=67.
  14. ^ Q-M3=10.7; NWT01=44.6.
  15. ^ Muskogean ethnic groups: Chickasaw, Choctaw, Muscogee and Seminole.
  16. ^ Q-M3=50.0; Q(xM3)=25.0.
  17. ^ Q-M3=83; Q(xM3)=9.
  18. ^ Q-M3=89; Q(xM3)=11.
  19. ^ C3*=9; C3b=9
  20. ^ Q-M3=64; Q-MEH2*=9; Q-NWT01=9.
  21. ^ Tupi–Guarani Brazilian ethnic groups: Asuriní, Parakanã, Ka'apor and Wayampi.
  22. ^ All examples of haplogroup Q were Q-M3.
  23. ^ Uto-Aztecan ethnic groups: Pima, Tohono O'odham, Tarahumara, Nahua, Cora and Huichol.
  24. ^ Q=M3
  25. ^ Q-M3=48; Q(xM3)=21.
  26. ^ Q-M3=86<; Q(xM3)=14.
  27. ^ Q=M3
  28. ^ Q-M3=33; Q(xM3)=48.

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Further reading edit

  • Peter N. Jones (October 2002). American Indian mtDNA, Y chromosome genetic data, and the peopling of North America. Bauu Institute. ISBN 978-0-9721349-1-0.
  • Joseph Frederick Powell (2005). The first Americans: race, evolution, and the origin of Native Americans. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-82350-0.
  • Francisco M. Salzano; Maria Cátira Bortolini (2002). The evolution and genetics of Latin American populations. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-65275-9.
  • "The peopling of the Americas: Genetic ancestry influences health". American Journal of Physical Anthropology. University of Oklahoma. 2009. Retrieved November 21, 2009.
  • McInnes, Roderick R. (March 2011). "2010 Presidential Address: Culture: The Silent Language Geneticists Must Learn— Genetic Research with Indigenous Populations". The American Journal of Human Genetics. 88 (3): 254–261. doi:10.1016/j.ajhg.2011.02.014. PMC 3059421. PMID 21516613.
  • Raff, Jennifer (February 8, 2022). Origin: A Genetic History of the Americas. Grand Central Publishing. ISBN 978-1-5387-4970-8.

genetic, history, indigenous, peoples, americas, genetic, history, indigenous, peoples, americas, divided, into, distinct, periods, initial, peopling, americas, during, about, years, european, contact, after, about, years, first, period, indigenous, american, . The genetic history of the Indigenous peoples of the Americas is divided into two distinct periods the initial peopling of the Americas during about 20 000 to 14 000 years ago 20 14 kya and European contact after about 500 years ago 1 2 The first period of Indigenous American genetic history is the determinant factor for the number of genetic lineages zygosity mutations and founding haplotypes present in today s Indigenous American populations 3 Indigenous American populations descend from an Ancient Paleo Siberian population itself a combination of an Ancient East Asian lineage which diverged from other East Asian peoples prior to the Last Glacial Maximum between 36 000 and 25 000 years ago and subsequently migrated into Siberia where they merged with Ancient North Eurasians They later dispersed throughout the Americas after about 16 000 years ago exceptions being the Na Dene and Eskimo Aleut speaking groups which are derived partially from Siberian populations which entered the Americas at a later time 4 5 Analyses of genetics among Indigenous American and Siberian populations have been used to argue for early isolation of founding populations on Beringia 6 and for later more rapid migration from Siberia through Beringia into the New World 7 The microsatellite diversity and distributions of the Y lineage specific to South America indicates that certain Indigenous American populations have been isolated since the initial peopling of the region 8 The Na Dene Inuit and Native Alaskan populations exhibit Haplogroup Q M242 however they are distinct from other Indigenous Americans with various mtDNA and atDNA mutations 9 10 11 This suggests that the peoples who first settled in the northern extremes of North America and Greenland derived from later migrant populations than those who penetrated farther south in the Americas 12 13 Linguists and biologists have reached a similar conclusion based on analysis of Indigenous American language groups and ABO blood group system distributions 14 15 16 17 Contents 1 Autosomal DNA 2 Y chromosome DNA 2 1 Haplogroup Q 2 2 Haplogroup R1 2 3 Haplogroup C P39 2 4 Data 3 Mitochondrial DNA 4 Genetic admixture 4 1 Ancient Beringians 4 2 Old world 4 2 1 South and Central America 4 2 2 North America 4 3 European diseases and genetic modification 5 Blood groups 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further readingAutosomal DNA editMain article Autosome See also Human genetic variation nbsp Position of Native Americans on a Principal component analysis of global human population clusters from the 1000 Genomes project Genetic diversity and population structure in the American landmass is also measured using autosomal atDNA micro satellite markers genotyped sampled from North Central and South America and analyzed against similar data available from other Indigenous populations worldwide 18 19 The Indigenous American populations show a lesser genetic diversity than populations from other continental regions 19 Observed is a decreasing genetic diversity as geographic distance from the Bering Strait occurs as well as a decreasing genetic similarity to Siberian populations from Alaska the genetic entry point 18 19 Also observed is evidence of a greater level of diversity and lesser level of population structure in western South America compared to eastern South America 18 19 There is a relative lack of differentiation between Mesoamerican and Andean populations a scenario that implies that coastal routes in this case along the coast of the Pacific Ocean were easier for migrating peoples more genetic contributors to traverse in comparison with inland routes 18 The over all pattern that is emerging suggests that the Americas were colonized by a small number of individuals effective size of about 70 which grew by many orders of magnitude over 800 1000 years 20 21 The data also shows that there have been genetic exchanges between Asia the Arctic and Greenland since the initial peopling of the Americas 21 22 According to an autosomal genetic study from 2012 23 Indigenous Americans descend from at least three main migrant waves from East Asia Most of it is traced back to a single ancestral population called First Americans However those who speak Inuit languages from the Arctic inherited almost half of their ancestry from a second East Asian migrant wave And those who speak Na Dene on the other hand inherited a tenth of their ancestry from a third migrant wave The initial settling of the Americas was followed by a rapid expansion southwards along the west coast with little gene flow later especially in South America One exception to this are the Chibcha speakers of Colombia whose ancestry comes from both North and South America 23 In 2014 the autosomal DNA of a 12 500 year old infant from Montana was sequenced 24 The DNA was taken from a skeleton referred to as Anzick 1 found in close association with several Clovis artifacts Comparisons showed strong affinities with DNA from Siberian sites and virtually ruled out that particular individual had any close affinity with European sources the Solutrean hypothesis The DNA also showed strong affinities with all existing Indigenous American populations which indicated that all of them derive from an ancient population that lived in or near Siberia 25 Linguistic studies have reinforced genetic studies with relationships between languages found among those spoken in Siberia and those spoken in the Americas 26 Two 2015 autosomal DNA genetic studies confirmed the Siberian origins of the Indigenous peoples of the Americas However an ancient signal of shared ancestry with Australasians Indigenous peoples of Australia Melanesia and the Andaman Islands was detected among the Indigenous peoples of the Amazon region The migration coming out of Siberia would have happened 23 000 years ago 27 28 29 A 2018 study analysed ancient Indigenous samples The genetic evidence suggests that all Indigenous Americans ultimately descended from a founding population that combined East Asian and Ancient North Eurasian ancestry The authors also provided evidence that the basal northern and southern Indigenous American branches to which all other Indigenous peoples belong diverged around 16 000 years ago 4 An Indigenous American sample from 16 000 BCE in Idaho which is craniometrically similar to modern Indigenous Americans as well as Paleosiberians was found to have been largely East Eurasian genetically and showed high affinity with contemporary East Asians as well as Jōmon period samples of Japan confirming that Ancestral Indigenous Americans split from an East Eurasian source population somewhere in eastern Siberia 30 A study published in the Nature journal in 2018 concluded that Indigenous Americans descended from a single founding population which initially divided from East Asians about 36 000 BCE with gene flow between Ancestral Indigenous Americans and Siberians persisting until 25 000 BCE before becoming isolated in the Americas at 22 000 BCE Northern and Southern American Indigenous sub populations split from each other at 17 500 BCE There is also some evidence for a back migration from the Americas into Siberia after 11 500 BCE 4 A study published in the Cell journal in 2019 analysed 49 ancient Indigenous American samples from all over North and South America and concluded that all Indigenous American populations descended from a single ancestral source population which divided from Siberians and East Asians and gave rise to the Ancestral Indigenous Americans which later diverged into the various Indigenous groups The authors further dismissed previous claims for the possibility of two distinct population groups among the peopling of the Americas Both Northern and Southern Indigenous Americans are closest to each other and do not show evidence of admixture with hypothetical previous populations 31 nbsp A qpGraph by Posth et al 2018 showing the formation of Ancient Native Americans A review article published in the Nature journal in 2021 which summarized the results of previous genomic studies similarly concluded that all Indigenous Americans descended from the movement of people from Northeast Asia into the Americas These Ancestral Americans once south of the continental ice sheets spread and expanded rapidly and branched into multiple groups which later gave rise to the major subgroups of Indigenous American populations The study also dismissed the existence inferred from craniometric data of a hypothetical distinct non Indigenous American population suggested to have been related to Indigenous Australians and Papuans sometimes called Paleoamerican 32 33 Overall the Ancestral Native Americans formed from an Ancient Paleo Siberian lineage which formed from the admixture between East Asian people and a distinct Paleolithic Siberian population known as Ancient North Eurasians closer related to modern Europeans giving rise to both Indigenous peoples of Siberia and Native Americans 34 Around 67 of the ancestry of Native Americans is derived from East Asian sources while c 33 is derived from an Ancient West Eurasian ANE like source 31 Y chromosome DNA editMain articles Y chromosome and Human Y chromosome DNA haplogroup nbsp Map of Y Chromosome Haplogroups Dominant haplogroups in pre colonial populations with proposed migration routes A Central Siberian origin has been postulated for the paternal lineage of the source populations of the original migration into the Americas 35 Membership in haplogroups Q and C3b implies Indigenous American patrilineal descent 36 The micro satellite diversity and distribution of a Y lineage specific to South America suggest that certain Indigenous American populations became isolated after the initial colonization of their regions 8 The Na Dene Inuit and Native Alaskan populations exhibit haplogroup Q Y DNA mutations but are distinct from other Indigenous Americans with various mtDNA and autosomal DNA atDNA mutations 9 37 38 This suggests that the earliest migrants into the northern extremes of North America and Greenland derived from later migrant populations 39 40 Haplogroup Q edit Main article Haplogroup Q M242 nbsp Frequency distribution of haplogroup Q M242 41 Q M242 mutational name is the defining SNP of Haplogroup Q Y DNA phylogenetic name 42 43 In Eurasia haplogroup Q is found among Indigenous Siberian populations such as the modern Chukchi and Koryak peoples as well as some Southeast Asians such as the Dayak people In particular two groups exhibit large concentrations of the Q M242 mutation the Ket 93 8 and the Selkup 66 4 peoples 44 The Ket are thought to be the only survivors of ancient wanderers living in Siberia 45 Their population size is very small there are fewer than 1 500 Ket in Russia 2002 20 The Selkup have a slightly larger population size than the Ket with approximately 4 250 individuals 46 Starting the Paleo Indigenous American period a migration to the Americas across the Bering Strait Beringia by a small population carrying the Q M242 mutation occurred 10 A member of this initial population underwent a mutation which defines its descendant population known by the Q M3 SNP mutation 47 These descendants migrated all over the Americas 42 Haplogroup Q M3 is defined by the presence of the rs3894 M3 SNP 1 20 48 The Q M3 mutation is roughly 15 000 years old as that is when the initial migration of Paleo Indigenous Americans into the Americas occurred 49 50 Q M3 is the predominant haplotype in the Americas at a rate of 83 in South American populations 8 50 in the Na Dene populations and in North American Eskimo Aleut populations at about 46 44 With minimal back migration of Q M3 in Eurasia the mutation likely evolved in east Beringia or more specifically the Seward Peninsula or western Alaskan interior The Beringia land mass began submerging cutting off land routes 44 51 18 Since the discovery of Q M3 several subclades of M3 bearing populations have been discovered An example is in South America where some populations have a high prevalence of SNP M19 which defines subclade Q M19 8 M19 has been detected in 59 of Amazonian Ticuna men and in 10 of Wayuu men 8 Subclade M19 appears to be unique to South American Indigenous peoples arising 5 000 to 10 000 years ago 8 This suggests that population isolation and perhaps even the establishment of tribal groups began soon after migration into the South American areas 20 52 Other American subclades include Q L54 Q Z780 Q MEH2 Q SA01 and Q M346 lineages In Canada two other lineages have been found These are Q P89 1 and Q NWT01 Haplogroup R1 edit Main article Haplogroup R1 Haplogroup R1 is the second most common Y DNA haplogroup found among Indigenous Americans after Y DNA haplogroup Q 53 Initially there was debate about the origin of haplogroup R1b in Native Americans Two early studies suggested that this haplogroup could have been one of the founding Siberian lineages of Native Americans however this is now considered unlikely because the R1b lineages commonly found in Native Americans are in most cases identical to those in western Europeans and its highest concentration is found among a variety of culturally unaffiliated tribes in eastern North America 54 Thus according to several authors R1b was most likely introduced through admixture during the post 1492 European settlement of North America 55 56 57 R1 M173 is found predominantly in North American groups like the Ojibwe 50 79 Seminole 50 Sioux 50 Cherokee 47 Dogrib 40 and Tohono O odham Papago 38 Its highest frequency is found in northeastern North America and declines in frequency from east to west In southwestern Native American tribes the frequency of this haplogroup is as low as 4 53 58 Haplogroup C P39 edit Main article Haplogroup C M217 nbsp Distribution of haplogroup C2 C M217 YDNA formerly C3 59 Haplogroup C M217 is found mainly in Indigenous Siberians Mongolians and Kazakhs Haplogroup C M217 is the most widespread and frequently occurring branch of the greater Y DNA haplogroup C M130 Haplogroup C M217 descendant C P39 is most commonly found in today s Na Dene speakers with the greatest frequency found among the Athabaskans at 42 and at lesser frequencies in some other Indigenous American groups 10 This distinct and isolated branch C P39 includes almost all the Haplogroup C M217 Y chromosomes found among all Indigenous peoples of the Americas 60 Some researchers feel that this may indicate that the Na Dene migration occurred from the Russian Far East after the initial Paleo Indigenous American colonization but prior to modern Inuit Inupiat and Yupik expansions 10 9 61 In addition to in Na Dene peoples haplogroup C P39 C2b1a1a is also found among other Indigenous Americans such as Algonquian and Siouan speaking populations 62 63 C M217 is found among the Wayuu people of Colombia and Venezuela 62 63 Data edit Listed here are notable Indigenous peoples of the Americas by human Y chromosome DNA haplogroups based on relevant studies The samples are taken from individuals identified with the ethnic and linguistic designations in the first two columns the fourth column n is the sample size studied and the other columns give the percentage of the particular haplogroup Group Language Place n C Q R1 Others ReferenceAlgonquian nb 1 Algic Northeast North America 155 7 7 33 5 nb 2 38 1 20 6 Bolnick 2006 64 Apache Na Dene SW United States 96 14 6 78 1 5 2 2 1 Zegura 2004 10 Athabaskan nb 3 Na Dene Western North America 243 11 5 70 4 18 1 Malhi 2008 53 Cherokee Iroquoian SE United States 62 1 6 50 0 nb 4 37 1 11 3 Bolnick 2006 64 Cherokee Iroquoian Eastern North America 30 50 0 46 7 3 3 Malhi 2008 53 Cheyenne Algic United States 44 16 61 16 7 Zegura 2004 10 Chibchan nb 5 Macro Chibchan Panama 26 100 Zegura 2004 10 Chipewyan Na Dene Canada 48 6 31 nb 6 62 5 nb 7 Bortoloni 2003 8 Chippewa Algic Eastern North America 97 4 1 15 9 nb 8 50 5 29 9 Bolnick 2006 64 Dogrib Na Dene Canada 15 33 27 40 Malhi 2008 53 Dogrib Na Dene Canada 37 35 1 45 9 nb 9 8 1 10 8 Dulik 2012 65 Ge nb 10 Macro Je Brazil 51 92 nb 11 8 Bortoloni 2003 8 Guarani Tupian Paraguay 59 86 nb 12 9 5 Bortoloni 2003 8 Inga Quechua Colombia 11 78 nb 13 11 11 Bortoloni 2003 8 Inuit Eskimo Aleut North American Arctic 60 80 0 11 7 8 3 Zegura 2004 10 Inuvialuit Eskimo Aleut Canada 56 1 8 55 1 nb 14 33 9 8 9 Dulik 2012 65 Maya Mayan Mesoamerica 71 87 3 12 7 Zegura 2004 10 Mixe Mixe Zoque Mexico 12 100 Zegura 2004 10 Mixtec Oto Manguean Mexico 28 93 7 Zegura 2004 10 Muskogean nb 15 Muskogean SE United States 36 2 8 75 nb 16 11 1 11 1 Bolnick 2006 64 Nahua Uto Aztecan Mexico 17 94 6 Malhi 2008 53 Native Americans United States United States 398 9 0 58 1 22 2 10 7 Hammer 2005 66 Navajo Na Dene SW United States 78 1 3 92 3 2 6 3 8 Zegura 2004 10 Indigenous North Americans North America 530 6 0 77 2 12 5 4 3 Zegura 2004 10 Papago Uto Aztecan SW United States 13 61 5 38 5 Malhi 2008 53 Seminole Muskogean Eastern North America 20 45 0 50 0 5 0 Malhi 2008 53 Sioux Macro Siouan Central North America 44 11 25 50 14 Zegura 2004 10 South America Amerindian South America 390 92 nb 17 4 4 Bortoloni 2003 8 Tanana Na Dene Northwest North America 12 42 42 8 8 Zegura 2004 10 Ticuna Ticuna Yuri West Amazon basin 33 100 nb 18 Bortoloni 2003 8 Tlingit Na Dene Pacific Northwest 11 18 nb 19 82 nb 20 Dulik 2012 65 Tupi Guarani nb 21 Tupian Brazil 54 100 nb 22 Bortoloni 2003 8 Uto Aztecan nb 23 Uto Aztecan Mexico Arizona 167 93 4 6 0 Malhi 2008 53 Warao Warao isolate Caribbean South America 12 100 nb 24 Bortoloni 2003 8 Wayuu Arawakan Guajira Peninsula 19 69 nb 25 21 10 Bortoloni 2003 8 Wayuu Arawakan Guajira Peninsula 25 8 36 44 12 Zegura 2004 10 Yagua Peba Yaguan Peru 7 100 nb 26 Bortoloni 2003 8 Yukpa Cariban Colombia 12 100 nb 27 Bortoloni 2003 8 Zapotec Oto Manguean Mexico 16 75 6 19 Zegura 2004 10 Zenu extinct Colombia 30 81 nb 28 19 Bortoloni 2003 8 Mitochondrial DNA editMain articles Mitochondrial DNA Human mitochondrial genetics and Human mitochondrial DNA haplogroup The common occurrence of the mtDNA Haplogroups A B C and D among eastern Asian and Indigenous American populations has long been recognized along with the presence of Haplogroup X 67 As a whole the greatest frequency of the four Indigenous American associated haplogroups occurs in the Altai Baikal region of southern Siberia 68 Some subclades of C and D closer to the Indigenous American subclades occur among Mongolian Amur Japanese Korean and Ainu populations 67 69 A 2023 DNA study found that i n addition to previously described ancestral sources in Siberia Australo Melanesia and Southeast Asia northern coastal China also contributed to the gene pool of Native Americans as well as that of Japanese people 70 nbsp Distribution of haplogroup XWhen studying human mitochondrial DNA haplogroup the results indicated that Indigenous American haplogroups including haplogroup X are part of a single founding East Asian population It also indicates that the distribution of mtDNA haplogroups and the levels of sequence divergence among linguistically similar groups were the result of multiple preceding migrations from Bering Straits populations 71 All Indigenous American mtDNA can be traced back to five haplogroups A B C D and X 72 73 More specifically Indigenous American mtDNA belongs to sub haplogroups A2 B2 C1b C1c C1d D1 and X2a with minor groups C4c D2a and D4h3a 6 71 This suggests that 95 of Indigenous American mtDNA is descended from a minimal genetic founding female population comprising sub haplogroups A2 B2 C1b C1c C1d and D1 72 The remaining 5 is composed of the X2a D2a C4c and D4h3a sub haplogroups 71 72 X is one of the five mtDNA haplogroups found in Indigenous Americans Native Americans mostly belong to the X2a clade which has never been found in the Old World 74 According to Jennifer Raff X2a probably originated in the same Siberian population as the other four founding maternal lineages 75 Haplogroup X genetic sequences diverged about 20 000 to 30 000 years ago to give two sub groups X1 and X2 X2 s subclade X2a occurs only at a frequency of about 3 for the total current Indigenous population of the Americas 20 However X2a is a major mtDNA subclade in North America among the Algonquian peoples it comprises up to 25 of mtDNA types 1 76 It is also present in lower percentages to the west and south of this area among the Sioux 15 the Nuu chah nulth 11 13 the Navajo 7 and the Yakama 5 77 The predominant theory for sub haplogroup X2a s appearance in North America is migration along with A B C and D mtDNA groups from a source in the Altai Mountains of central Asia 78 79 80 81 Haplotype X6 was present in the Tarahumara 1 8 1 53 and Huichol 20 3 15 82 Sequencing of the mitochondrial genome from Paleo Eskimo remains 3 500 years old are distinct from modern Indigenous Americans falling within sub haplogroup D2a1 a group observed among today s Aleutian Islanders the Aleut and Siberian Yupik populations 83 This suggests that the colonizers of the far north and subsequently Greenland originated from later coastal populations 83 Then a genetic exchange in the northern extremes introduced by the Thule people proto Inuit approximately 800 1 000 years ago began 38 84 These final Pre Columbian migrants introduced haplogroups A2a and A2b to the existing Paleo Eskimo populations of Canada and Greenland culminating in the modern Inuit 38 84 nbsp Frequency distribution of the main mtDNA American haplogroups in Indigenous American populations A route through Beringia is seen as more likely than the Solutrean hypothesis 85 An abstract in a 2012 issue of the American Journal of Physical Anthropology states that The similarities in ages and geographical distributions for C4c and the previously analyzed X2a lineage provide support to the scenario of a dual origin for Paleo Indigenous Americans Taking into account that C4c is deeply rooted in the Asian portion of the mtDNA phylogeny and is indubitably of Asian origin the finding that C4c and X2a are characterized by parallel genetic histories definitively dismisses the controversial hypothesis of an Atlantic glacial entry route into North America 86 Another study also focused on the mtDNA that which is inherited through only the maternal line 6 revealed that the Indigenous people of the Americas have their maternal ancestry traced back to a few founding lineages from East Asia which would have arrived via the Bering strait According to this study it is probable that the ancestors of the Indigenous Americans would have remained for a time in the region of the Bering Strait after which there would have been a rapid movement of settling of the Americas taking the founding lineages to South America According to a 2016 study focused on mtDNA lineages a small population entered the Americas via a coastal route around 16 0 ka following previous isolation in eastern Beringia for 2 4 to 9 thousand years after separation from eastern Siberian populations Following a rapid movement throughout the Americas limited gene flow in South America resulted in a marked phylogeographic structure of populations which persisted through time All of the ancient mitochondrial lineages detected in this study were absent from modern data sets suggesting a high extinction rate To investigate this further we applied a novel principal components multiple logistic regression test to Bayesian serial coalescent simulations The analysis supported a scenario in which European colonization caused a substantial loss of pre Columbian lineages 87 Genetic admixture editSee also Miscegenation Genetic studies of racial admixture Ancient Beringians edit Main article Ancient Beringian nbsp Figure 2 Schematic illustration of maternal mtDNA gene flow in and out of Beringia long chronology single source model Recent archaeological findings in Alaska have shed light on the existence of a previously unknown Indigenous American population that has been academically named Ancient Beringians 88 Although it is popularly agreed among archeologists that early settlers had crossed into Alaska from Russia through the Bering Strait land bridge the issue of whether or not there was one founding group or several waves of migration is a controversial and prevalent debate among academics in the field today In 2018 the sequenced DNA of an Indigenous girl whose remains were found at the Upward Sun River archaeological site in Alaska in 2013 proved not to match the two recognized branches of Indigenous Americans and instead belonged to the early population of Ancient Beringians 89 This breakthrough is said to be the first direct genomic evidence that there was potentially only one wave of migration in the Americas that occurred with genetic branching and division transpiring after the fact The migration wave is estimated to have emerged about 20 000 years ago 88 The Ancient Beringians are said to be a common ancestral group among contemporary Indigenous American populations today which differs in results collected from previous research that suggests that modern populations are descendants of either Northern and Southern branches 88 Experts were also able to use wider genetic evidence to establish that the split between the Northern and Southern American branches of civilization from the Ancient Beringians in Alaska only occurred about 17 000 and 14 000 years 23 further challenging the concept of multiple migration waves occurring during the very first stages of settlement Genetic evidence for Paleo Indigenous Americans consists of the presence of apparent admixture of archaic Sundadont lineages to the remote populations in the South American rain forest and in the genetics of Patagonians Fuegians 90 91 Nomatto et al 2009 proposed migration into Beringia occurred between 40 000 and 30 000 BP with a pre LGM migration into the Americas followed by isolation of the northern population following closure of the ice free corridor 92 A 2016 genetic study of Indigenous peoples of the Amazonian region of Brazil by Skoglund and Reich showed evidence of admixture from a separate lineage of an otherwise unknown ancient people This ancient group appears to be related to modern day Australasian peoples i e Aboriginal Australians and Melanesians This Ghost population was found in speakers of Tupian languages They provisionally named this ancient group Population Y after Ypykuera which means ancestor in the Tupi language family 29 A 2021 genetic study dismissed the existence of an hypothetical Australasian component among Indigenous Americans The signal of the hypothetical Australasian component can also be reproduced using the Basal East Asian Tianyuan man sample and thus does not represent real Australasian affinity The authors explained that the previous claims of possibly Australasian ancestry were based on a misinterpreted genetic echo which was revealed to represent early East Eurasian gene flow represented by the 40 000 BC old Tianyuan sample into Aboriginal Australians and Papuans which was lost in modern East Asians 32 33 Archaeological evidence for pre LGM human presence in the Americas was first presented in the 1970s 93 94 notably the Luzia Woman skull found in Brazil 95 96 97 Old world edit See also Multiracial Americans nbsp The current distribution of Indigenous peoples based on self identification not genetic data Substantial racial admixture has taken place during and since the European colonization of the Americas 98 99 South and Central America edit In Latin America in particular significant racial admixture took place between the Indigenous American population the European descended colonial population and the Sub Saharan African populations imported as slaves From about 1700 a Latin American terminology developed to refer to the various combinations of mixed racial descent produced by this 100 Many individuals who self identify as one race exhibit genetic evidence of a multiracial ancestry 101 The European conquest of South and Central America beginning in the late 15th century was initially executed by male soldiers and sailors from the Iberian Peninsula Spain and Portugal 102 unreliable source The new soldier settlers fathered children with Indigenous American women and later with African slaves 103 unreliable source These mixed race children were generally identified by the Spanish colonist and Portuguese colonist as Castas 104 North America edit Main articles Native Americans in the United States Admixture and genetics Metis and Cherokee descent The North American fur trade during the 16th century brought many European men from France Ireland and Great Britain who married Indigenous North American women 105 In the areas where these peoples formed communities and developed a unique syncretic culture their children became known as Metis or Bois Brules by the French colonists In some contexts these peoples have also been referred to as mixed bloods or country born by the English and Scottish colonists 106 Native Americans in the United States are defined by citizenship culture and familial relationships not race 107 108 Having never defined Native American identity as racial 107 historically Native Americans have commonly practiced what mainstream society defines as interracial marriage which has affected racial ideas of blood quantum 109 In the United States 2010 census nearly 3 million people indicated that their race was Indigenous American including Alaskan Native 110 This is based on self identification as the census does not require documentation of this belief Especially numerous was the self identification of Cherokee ethnic origin 111 a phenomenon dubbed the Cherokee Syndrome where some Americans believe they have a long lost Cherokee ancestor without being able to identify any Cherokee or Native American people in their family tree or among their living relatives 112 113 This cultivation of an opportunistic ethnic identity is related to the prestige non Natives may associate with Indigenous American ancestry having never experienced any of the attendant hardships or oppression 114 In the Eastern United States in particular pretendians are common 114 115 Some tribes have adopted blood quantum requirements or Certificates of Degree of Indian Blood and practice disenrollment of tribal members unable to prove they are the child of an enrolled tribal member In these cases the tribe may demand a paternity test For some this has become a contentious issue in Native American reservation politics 116 European diseases and genetic modification edit A team led by Ripan Malhi an anthropologist at the University of Illinois in Urbana conducted a study where they used a scientific technique known as whole exome sequencing to test immune related gene variants within Indigenous Americans 117 Through analyzing ancient and modern Indigenous DNA it was found that HLA DQA1 a variant gene that codes for protein in charge of differentiating between healthy cells from invading viruses and bacteria were present in nearly 100 of ancient remains but only 36 in modern Indigenous Americans 117 These finding suggest that European borne epidemics such as smallpox altered the disease landscape of the Americas leaving survivors of these outbreaks less likely to carry variants like HLA DQA1 This made them less able to cope with new diseases The change in genetic makeup is measured by scientists to have occurred around 175 years ago during a time when the smallpox epidemic was ranging through the Americas Blood groups editMain article ABO blood group system nbsp Frequency of O group in Indigenous populations Note the predominance of this group in Indigenous Americans Prior to the 1952 confirmation of DNA as the hereditary material by Alfred Hershey and Martha Chase scientists used blood proteins to study human genetic variation 118 119 The ABO blood group system is widely credited to have been discovered by the Austrian Karl Landsteiner who found three different blood types in 1900 120 Blood groups are inherited from both parents The ABO blood type is controlled by a single gene the ABO gene with three alleles i IA and IB 121 Research by Ludwik and Hanka Herschfeld during World War I found that the frequencies of blood groups A B and O differed greatly from region to region 119 The O blood type usually resulting from the absence of both A and B alleles is very common around the world with a rate of 63 in all human populations 122 Type O is the primary blood type among the Indigenous populations of the Americas particularly within Central and South American populations with a frequency of nearly 100 122 In Indigenous North American populations the frequency of type A ranges from 16 to 82 122 This suggests again that the initial Indigenous Americans evolved from an isolated population with a minimal number of individuals 123 124 The standard explanation for such a high population of Indigenous Americans with blood type O is genetic drift Because the ancestral population of Indigenous Americans was numerically small blood type diversity could have been reduced from generation to generation by the founder effect 125 Other related explanations include the Bottleneck explanation which states that there were high frequencies of blood type A and B among Indigenous Americans but severe population decline during the 1500s and 1600s caused by the introduction of disease from Europe resulted in the massive death toll of those with blood types A and B Coincidentally a large amount of the survivors were type O 125 Distribution of ABO blood types in various modern Indigenous American populationsTest results as of 2008 update 126 PEOPLE GROUP O A B AB Blackfoot Confederacy Indigenous North American 17 82 0 1Bororo Brazil 100 0 0 0Eskimos Alaska 38 44 13 5Inuit Eastern Canada amp Greenland 54 36 23 8Hawaiians Polynesians non Indigenous American 37 61 2 1Indigenous North Americans as a whole Native Nations First Nations 79 16 4 1Maya modern 98 1 1 1Navajo 73 27 0 0Peru 100 0 0 0The Dia antigen of the Diego antigen system has been found only in Indigenous peoples of the Americas and East Asians and in people with some ancestry from those groups The frequency of the Dia antigen in various groups of Indigenous peoples of the Americas ranges from almost 50 to 0 127 Differences in the frequency of the antigen in populations of Indigenous people in the Americas correlate with major language families modified by environmental conditions 128 See also edit nbsp Indigenous peoples of the Americas portal nbsp Evolutionary biology portal nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Genetic studies of indigenous populations of the Americas Introduction to genetics Archaeogenetics Archaeology of the Americas Ancient DNA Clovis culture Early human migrations Genetic history of Africa Genetic history of Europe Genetic history of Italy Genetic history of North Africa Genetic history of the British Isles Genetic history of the Iberian Peninsula Genetic history of the Middle East Genetics and archaeogenetics of South Asia List of haplogroups of historic people Mayan genetics Race and genetics Settlement of the Americas Genomic age estimates List of Y chromosome haplogroups in populations of the worldNotes edit Algonquian ethnic groups Ojibwe Cheyenne Arapaho Shawnee Mi kmaq Kickapoo and Meskwaki Q M3 12 9 Q xM3 20 6 Athabaskan ethnic groups Chipewyan Tli chǫ Tanana Apache and Navajo Q M3 32 Q3 xM3 17 7 Chibchan ethnic groups Ngobe and Kuna peoples Q M3 6 Q xM3 25 P1 xQ 62 5 While other studies identify this as R xR2 R1b the subject remains controversial see Hammer Michael F et al 2005 Q M3 8 2 Q xQ M3 7 2 Q M3 40 5 Q xM3 5 4 Ge ethnic groups Gorotire Kaigang Kraho Mekranoti and Xikrin Q M3 90 Q xM3 2 Q M3 79 Q xM3 7 Q M3 11 Q xM3 67 Q M3 10 7 NWT01 44 6 Muskogean ethnic groups Chickasaw Choctaw Muscogee and Seminole Q M3 50 0 Q xM3 25 0 Q M3 83 Q xM3 9 Q M3 89 Q xM3 11 C3 9 C3b 9 Q M3 64 Q MEH2 9 Q NWT01 9 Tupi Guarani Brazilian ethnic groups Asurini Parakana Ka apor and Wayampi All examples of haplogroup Q were Q M3 Uto Aztecan ethnic groups Pima Tohono O odham Tarahumara Nahua Cora and Huichol Q M3 Q M3 48 Q xM3 21 Q M3 86 lt Q xM3 14 Q M3 Q M3 33 Q xM3 48 References edit a b c Wendy Tymchuk 2008 Learn about Y DNA Haplogroup Q Genebase Tutorials Genebase Systems Archived from the original on June 22 2010 Retrieved November 21 2009 Orgel Leslie E 2004 Prebiotic chemistry and the origin of the RNA world Critical Reviews in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 39 2 99 123 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 537 7679 doi 10 1080 10409230490460765 PMID 15217990 S2CID 4939632 Tallbear Kim 2014 The Emergence Politics and Marketplace of Native American DNA In Kleinman Daniel Lee Moore Kelly eds Routledge Handbook of Science Technology and Society Routledge p 23 ISBN 978 1 136 23716 4 Archived from the original on January 30 2016 Retrieved January 5 2016 a b c Moreno Mayar J 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137 4 412 424 doi 10 1002 ajpa 20883 PMC 2584155 PMID 18618732 Bolnick Deborah Bolnick Daniel Smith David 2006 Asymmetric Male and Female Genetic Histories among Native Americans from Eastern North America Molecular Biology and Evolution 23 11 2161 2174 doi 10 1093 molbev msl088 PMID 16916941 In most cases there is widespread agreement about whether a particular haplogroup represents an ancient Native American lineage or post 1492 admixture but the status of haplogroup R M173 has recently been subject to some debate Some authors have argued that this haplogroup represents a founding Native American lineage Lell et al 2002 Bortolini et al 2003 whereas others suggest that it instead reflects recent European admixture Tarazona Santos and Santos 2002 Bosch et al 2003 Zegura et al 2004 In eastern North America the pattern of haplotype variation within this haplogroup supports the latter hypothesis R M173 haplotypes do not cluster by population or culture area as haplotypes in the other founding haplogroups do and most match or are closely related to R M173 haplotypes that are common in Europe but rare in Asia This pattern is opposite than expected if the Native American R M173 haplotypes were descended from Asian haplotypes and suggests that recent European admixture is responsible for the presence of haplogroup R M173 in eastern North America Bolnick Deborah Ann 2005 The Genetic Prehistory of Eastern North America Evidence from Ancient and Modern DNA University of California Davis p 83 Haplogroup R M173 likely represents recent post 1492 European admixture as may P M45 Tarazona Santos and Santos 2002 Bosch et al 2003 Zegura et al 2004 Raff 2022 pp 59 60 Y chromosome founder haplogroups in Native Americans include Q M3 and its sub haplogroups Q CTS1780 and C3 MPB373 potentially C P39 Z30536 Other haplogroups found sic Native American populations like R1b were likely the result of post European contact admixture 44 Malhi et al 2008 All individuals that did not belong 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The first Americans race evolution and the origin of Native Americans Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 82350 0 Francisco M Salzano Maria Catira Bortolini 2002 The evolution and genetics of Latin American populations Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 65275 9 The peopling of the Americas Genetic ancestry influences health American Journal of Physical Anthropology University of Oklahoma 2009 Retrieved November 21 2009 McInnes Roderick R March 2011 2010 Presidential Address Culture The Silent Language Geneticists Must Learn Genetic Research with Indigenous Populations The American Journal of Human Genetics 88 3 254 261 doi 10 1016 j ajhg 2011 02 014 PMC 3059421 PMID 21516613 Raff Jennifer February 8 2022 Origin A Genetic History of the Americas Grand Central Publishing ISBN 978 1 5387 4970 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Genetic history of the Indigenous peoples of the Americas amp oldid 1205384517, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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