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Jōmon people

Jōmon people (縄文人, Jōmon jin) is the generic name of the hunter-gatherer population that lived in the Japanese archipelago during the Jōmon period (c. 14,000 to 300 BC). The Jōmon people constituted a coherent population but displayed geographically defined regional subgroups.[1][2]

Multiple studies on the Jōmon population analyzed the genetic contribution to modern Japanese. Jōmon samples, represented by a specimen obtained from the Funadomari archaeological site on Rebun Island and two specimens obtained from Honshu, show that mainstream Japanese people have inherited an average of 10-20% of Jōmon ancestry in their genome.[3][4] The results of a study from 2021 inferred gene flow from the Jōmon population to the modern Japanese across all migration models tested, with genetic contributions ranging from 8.9 to 11.5%. In the same study, the mean Jōmon component of the modern Japanese individual estimated using the admixture analysis was 9.31%.[5]

Population genomic data from various Jōmon period samples show that they diverged from other East Asian people 30,000 to 20,000 years ago. After their migration into the Japanese archipelago in 15,000 to 20,000 BC, they became largely isolated from outside geneflow.[6][7] A tie between Jomon and Yana was detected but was only marginally significant. Further validation studies using better-quality ancient samples would be necessary. Future studies, particularly additional samples of Paleo-Siberians and ancient Central Asians, would help to elucidate the reason for the potential genetic connection between Yana and Jomon people.[4]

Morphological characteristics

 
Male skull of the late Jōmon period (replica). Excavated at Miyano Kaizuka (Iwate Prefecture). Exhibition in National Museum of Nature and Science.[8]

Several studies of numerous Jōmon skeletal remains that were excavated from various locations in the Japanese archipelago allowed researchers to learn more about the Jōmon period population of Japan. The Jōmon people were relatively close to other East Asians, however shared more similarities with Native American samples. Within Japan, regional variance among different Jōmon remains was detected. Historically, the Jōmon people were classified as Mongoloid.[9][10]

 
Forensic reconstruction from a Jōmon individual from Niigata prefecture.

Dental morphology suggests that the Jōmon had Sundadont dental structure which is more common among modern Southeast Asians and Indigenous Taiwanese, and is ancestral to the Sinodont dental structure commonly found among modern Northeast Asians, suggesting that the Jōmon split from the common "Ancestral East Asians" prior to the formation of modern Northeast Asians.[11]

According to the article "Jōmon culture and the peopling of the Japanese archipelago" by Schmidt and Seguchi (2014), the prehistoric Jōmon people descended from various paleolithic populations, which migrated into the Japanese archipelago, using different routes at different times. They concluded:

"In this respect, the biological identity of the Jomon is heterogeneous, and it may be indicative of diverse peoples who possibly belonged to a common culture, known as the Jomon. ... These results suggest a level of inter-regional heterogeneity not expected among Jomon groups. This observation is further substantiated by the studies of Kanzawa-Kiriyama et al. (2013) and Adachi et al. (2013). Kanzawa-Kiriyama et al. (2013) analysed craniometrics and extracted aDNA from museum samples that came from the Sanganji shell mound site in Fukushima Prefecture dated to the Final Jomon Period. They tested for regional differences and found the Tokoku Jomon (northern Honshu) were more similar to Hokkaido Jomon than to geographically adjacent Kanto Jomon (central Honshu). Adachi et al. (2013) described the craniometrics and aDNA sequence from a Jomon individual from Nagano (Yugora cave site) dated to the middle of the initial Jomon Period (7920–7795 cal BP). This individual carried ancestry, which is widely distributed among modern East Asians (Nohira et al. 2010; Umetsu et al. 2005) and resembled modern East Asian comparison samples rather than the geographical close Urawa Jomon sample."[12]

A study published in the scientific journal Nature by Jinam et al. in 2015, using genome-wide SNP data comparison, found that the Hokkaido Jōmon samples, ancestral to the Ainu people, differ from Mainland Japanese at several loci, including two genes that are known from a previous study to influence facial features in Europeans (and possibly in other populations).[13]

Kondo et al. 2017, analyzed the regional morphological and craniometric characteristics of the Jōmon period population of Japan, and found that they were morphologically heterogeneous and displayed differences along a Northeast to Southwest cline. They concluded that the "Jomon skulls, especially in the neurocranium, exhibit a discernible level of northeast-to-southwest geographical cline across the Japanese archipelago, placing the Hokkaido and Okinawa samples at both extreme ends. The following scenarios can be hypothesized with caution: (a) the formation of Jomon population seemed to proceed in eastern or central Japan, not western Japan (Okinawa or Kyushu regions); (b) the Kyushu Jomon could have a small-sized and isolated population history; and (c) the population history of Hokkaido Jomon could have been deeply rooted and/or affected by long-term extrinsic gene flows."[14]

In 2021, it was confirmed that the ancient population of Hokkaido formed from proper Jōmon people and from "Terminal Upper-Paleolithic people" (TUP people) indigenous to Paleolithic Northern Eurasia. The proper Jōmon groups arrived at about 15,000 BC from East Asia, and merged with the earlier arrived "Terminal Upper-Paleolithic North Eurasians", to form the local Hokkaido Jōmon.[15] Previously, Gakuhari et al. 2020 similarly noted the possibility of geneflow from Ancient North Eurasians (samplified by the MA-1 sample), or a similar group, into northern Japan, which can be demonstrably linked to the introduction of the microblade culture of Siberia.[16]

Languages

It is not known what language or languages were spoken in Japan during the Jōmon period. Suggested languages are: the Ainu language, Japonic languages, Austronesian languages, or unknown and today extinct languages.[17][18] While the most supported view is to equate the Ainu language with the Jōmon language, this view is not uncontroversial or easily acceptable as there were probably multiple distinct language families spoken by the Jōmon period population of the Japanese archipelago.[2]

Alexander Vovin (1993) argues that the Ainu languages originated in Central Honshu, and were later pushed northwards into Hokkaido, where the early Ainu-speakers merged with local groups, forming the historical Ainu ethnicity. Bilingualism between Ainu and Japanese was common in Tohoku until the 10th century.[19][20] A study by Lee and Hasegawa (2013) of the Waseda University, however, found evidence that the Ainu language originated from the Okhotsk population, which expanded roughly 2,000 years ago from northern Hokkaido southwards into Tohoku.[21]

Vovin (2021) presented arguments for the presence of Austronesian peoples within the Japanese archipelago during the Jōmon period, based on previous linguistic, historical, and cultural evidence, specifically referring to the historical Hayato and Kumaso people. Vovin found specific Austronesian vocabulary loaned into the core vocabulary of (Insular) Japanese. He suggests that Austronesian-speakers arrived in Japan during the Jōmon period and prior to the arrival of Yayoi period migrants, associated with the spread of Japonic languages. These Austronesian-speakers were subsequently assimilated into the Japanese ethnicity. Evidence for non-Ainuic, non-Austronesian, and non-Korean loanwords are found among Insular Japonic languages, and probably derived from unknown and extinct Jōmon languages.[20]

Some linguists suggest that the Japonic languages may have been already present within the Japanese archipelago and coastal Korea, before the Yayoi period, and can be linked to one of the Jōmon populations of southwestern Japan, rather than the later Yayoi or Kofun period rice-agriculturalists. Japonic-speakers then expanded during the Yayoi period, assimilating the newcomers, adopting rice-agriculture, and fusing mainland Asian technologies with local traditions.[22]

Culture

The culture of the Jōmon people was largely based on food collection and hunting, but it is also suggested that the Jōmon people practiced early agriculture. They gathered tree nuts and shellfish, were involved in hunting and fishing, and also practiced some degree of agriculture. The Jōmon people also used stoneware and pottery, and generally lived in pit dwellings.[23]

Some elements of modern Japanese culture may have come from the Jōmon culture. Among these elements are the precursory beliefs to modern Shinto, some marriage customs, some architectural styles, and possibly some technological developments such as lacquerware, laminated yumi, metalworking, and glass making.

Pottery

The style of pottery created by the Jōmon people is identifiable for its "cord-marked" patterns, hence the name "Jōmon" (縄文, "straw rope pattern"). The pottery styles characteristic of the first phases of Jōmon culture used decoration created by impressing cords into the surface of wet clay, and are generally accepted to be among the oldest forms of pottery in East Asia and the world.[24] Next to clay pots and vessels, the Jōmon also made many highly stylized statues (dogū), clay masks, stone batons or rods and swords.[25]

Craftsmanship

 
Magatama – kidney-shaped beads – are commonly found in Jōmon period Japanese finds, as well as in parts of Northeast Asia and Siberia.

There is evidence that the Jōmon people built ships out of large trees and used them for fishing and traveling; however, there is no agreement as to whether they used sails or paddles.[26] The Jōmon people also used obsidian, jade and different kinds of wood.[27] The Jōmon people created many jewelry and ornamental items; for instance, magatama were likely invented by one of the Jōmon tribes, and are commonly found throughout Japan and less in Northeast Asia.[25]

Religion

It is suggested that the religion of the Jōmon people was similar to early Shinto (specifically Ko-Shintō). It was largely based on animism, and possibly shamanism. Other similar religions are the Ryukyuan and Ainu religions.[28]

Origins

The Jōmon people predominantly descended from an Ancestral East Asian population expanding out of Mainland Southeast Asia or the southeastern Himalayan region. Geneflow from Upper-Paleolithic groups of Northern Eurasia and Siberia was detected in local Jōmon period samples from Hokkaido and Tohoku. Evidence suggests that the ethnic roots of the Jōmon period population was rather heterogeneous and that migration routes can be traced back to ancient Northeast Asia, the Tibetan plateau, ancient Taiwan and paleolithic Siberia.[29][30][31][32][33] According to a 2009 study, the Jōmon people are an admixture of several distinct ethnic groups.[34]

According to the review article "Jōmon culture and the peopling of the Japanese archipelago" by Schmidt and Seguchi (2014), the prehistoric Jōmon people descended from diverse paleolithic populations with multiple migrations into Jōmon-period Japan. They concluded: "In this respect, the biological identity of the Jomon is heterogeneous, and it may be indicative of diverse peoples who possibly belonged to a common culture, known as the Jomon".[35]

Genetics

 
Phylogenetic position of the Jōmon lineage among other East Eurasians.
 
Genetic structure of present-day and ancient Eurasian and Ikawazu Jomon.[36]

Full genome analyses in 2020 and 2021 revealed further information regarding the origin of the Jōmon peoples. The genetic results suggest early admixture between different groups in Japan already during the Paleolithic, followed by constant geneflow from coastal East Asian groups, resulting in a heterogeneous population which then homogenized until the arrival of the Yayoi people. Geneflow from Northeast Asia during the Jōmon period is associated geneflow from the Tibetan Plateau and Southern China is associated with the D1a2a (previously D1b) and D1a1 (previously D1a) lineages. Geneflow from ancient Siberia was also detected into the northern Jōmon people of Hokkaido, with later geneflow from Hokkaido into parts of northern Honshu (Tohoku). The lineages K and F are suggested to have been presented during the early Jōmon period but got replaced by C and D. The genetic evidence suggests that an East Asian source population, near the Himalayan mountain range, contributed ancestry to the Jōmon period population of Japan, and less to ancient Southeast Asians. The authors concluded that this points to an inland migration through southern or central China towards Japan during the Paleolithic. Another ancestry component seem to have arrived from Siberia into Hokkaido.[37][29] Archeological and biological evidence link the southern Jōmon culture of Kyushu, Shikoku and parts of Honshu to cultures of southern China and Northeast India. A common culture, known as "Broadleaved Evergreen Forest Culture", ranged from southwestern Japan through southern China towards Northeast India and southern Tibet, and was characterized by the cultivation of Azuki beans.[38]

Another study, published in the Cambridge University Press in 2020, concluded that there was also a migration of ancient Northeast Asians at approximately 6000BC (or already at ~10,000BC), which introduced the Incipient Jōmon culture, typified by early ceramic cultures such as the ones found at Ōdai Yamamoto I Jōmon Site or Aoyagamiji site in the Tottori prefecture. The authors argue that this migration may be the source of the Japonic languages rather than the later Yayoi migration.[39][40]

A 2021 study concluded that the Jōmon people descended from a common Basal-East Asian source population in Mainland Southeast Asia, which also gave rise to the other East Asian-related populations. The Jōmon people however became isolated from other East Asians on the Japanese archipelago at about 15,000 BCE, which resulted in their relative more Basal position compared to other East Asians.[41]

A review article in 2022 by Professor and historian Melinda A. Yang, concluded that the main Jōmon lineage is closely related to other populations on the "East- and Southeast Asian lineage" (ESEA), which descended from a source population in Mainland Southeast Asia, and gave rise to all modern East and Southeast Asian people, Indigenous peoples of Siberia, and Indigenous peoples of the Americas, as well as the ancient Hoabinhian lineage and the Tianyuan lineage, and which is distinct from the Australasian (AA) or West-Eurasian lineages.[42]

Paternal lineages

It is thought that the haplogroups D-M55 (D1a2a) and C1a1 were frequent in Jōmon period people. O-M119 is also suggested to have been presented in at least some Jōmon period people. One 3,800 year old Jōmon man excavated from Rebun Island was found to belong to Haplogroup D1a2b1(D-CTS 220).[43] Haplogroup D-M55 is found in about 35%[44] and haplogroup C1a1 in about 6% of modern Japanese people.

 
Presence of haplogroups C, D and F in 2302 present-day samples. The map demonstrates how many of the three haplogroups of interest (none, one, two, or all three) were found in different areas of the Old World and Near Oceania. Black dots indicate the locations of the studied populations.[45]

D-M55 is only found in Japanese (Ainu, Ryukyuans, and Yamato).[46] Haplogroup C1a1 has been found in modern Japanese at a frequency of 6%. Elsewhere it was found at low frequency in Koreans, and northeast Chinese.[34] Recently it was confirmed that the Japanese branch of haplogroup D-M55 is distinct and isolated from other D-branches since more than 53,000 years. The split between D1a2-M55 and D1a-F6251 (the latter of which is common in Tibetans, other Tibeto-Burmese groups, and Altaians, and has a moderate distribution in the rest of East Asia, Southeast Asia, and Central Asia) may have occurred near the Tibetan Plateau.[47] A DNA study in 2019 suggests that haplogroup D-M55 increased to about 70% during the late Jōmon period, suggesting a population boom and bust shortly before the Yayoi migration.[48] Another study similar concluded that D-M55 became the dominant haplogroup in Japan during the late Jōmon period.[49]

Maternal lineages

MtDNA Haplogroup Jōmon people is characterized by the presence of haplogroups M7a and N9b. Studies published in 2004 and 2007 show the combined frequency of M7a and N9b observed in modern Japanese to be from 12~15% to 17% in mainstream Japanese.[50][51] N9b is frequently found in the Hokkaido Jomons while M7a is found frequently in the Tohoku Jomons.[52] However N9b is found at very low percent in the Kanto Jomons.[53]

M7a is estimated to share a most recent common ancestor with M7b'c, a clade whose members are found mainly in Japan (including Jōmon people), other parts of East Asia, and Southeast Asia, 33,500 (95% CI 26,300 <-> 42,000) years before present.[54] All extant members of haplogroup M7a are estimated to share a most recent common ancestor 20,500 (95% CI 14,700 <-> 27,800) years before present.[54] Haplogroup M7a now has its highest frequency in Okinawa.

Haplogroup N9b is estimated to share a most recent common ancestor with N9a and Y, two clades that are widespread in eastern Asia, 37,700 (95% CI 29,600 <-> 47,300) years before present.[54] All extant members of haplogroup N9b are estimated to share a most recent common ancestor 21,100 (95% CI 16,700 <-> 26,200) years before present.[54] Haplogroup N9b now has its highest frequency among Tungusic peoples in southeastern Siberia (especially Udeges), but it has been found to be very common in skeletal remains of Jōmon people of northern Japan (Tōhoku and Hokkaidō).

In addition, haplogroups D4, D5, M7b, M8, M9a, M10, G, A, B, and F have been found in Jōmon people as well.[55][56][57] These latter haplogroups are all distributed widely among populations of East Asia (including modern Japanese, Ryukyuans, and Ainus) and Southeast Asia, but some of their subclades are distributed almost exclusively in Japan. From a mtDNA study of ancient Jomon and Yayoi found that mtDNA D5, G, M7a, M7b, M10, N9b are found exclusively in Jomon, Ainu, Ryukyuan, Japanese in various percentages but not in the ancient Yayoi people of Japan.[58]

ATL retrovirus

A gene common in Jōmon people is a retrovirus of ATL (human T lymphotropic virus, HTVL-I). This virus was discovered as a cause of adult T cell leukemia (ATL), and research was advanced by Takuo Hinuma of Kyoto University Virus Research Institute.

Although it was known that many virus carriers existed in Japan, it was not found at all in neighboring countries of East Asia. Meanwhile, it has been found in many Africans, Native Americans, Tibetans, Siberians, Burmese people, Indigenous people of New Guinea, Polynesians, etc. Looking at distribution in Japan, it is seen particularly frequently in southern Kyushu, Nagasaki Prefecture, Okinawa and among the Ainu. And it is seen at medium frequency in the southern part of Shikoku, southern part of the Kii Peninsula, the Pacific side of the Tōhoku region (Sanriku) and Oki Islands. Overall, carriers of the ATL retrovirus were found to be more common in remote areas and remote islands. When examining the well-developed areas of ATL in each region of Kyushu, Shikoku, and Tōhoku in detail, carriers are preserved at high rates in small settlements that were isolated from the surroundings and inconvenient for traffic.

The path of natural infection of this virus is limited to vertical infection between women and children (most often through breastfeeding) and horizontal infection between males and females (most often from males to females through sexual intercourse).[59]

Based on the above, Hinuma concluded that the high frequency area of this virus indicates the high density remain of Jōmon people.[60]

Ikawazu Jōmon studies

A partial genome analysis by McColl et al. in 2018 about the prehistoric peopling of Southeast Asia analysed 26 ancient samples from Southeast Asia spanning from the late Neolithic to the Iron Age. They analysed an Ikawazu Jōmon (named IK002) sample from the Ikawazu Shell Midden site (伊川津貝塚) on the Atsumi Peninsula of southern Aichi Prefecture in central Honshu, and a draft sequence of the Jōmon genome was determined from IK002. This Jōmon individual was found to share some ancestry with prehistoric Hoabinhians, who also share some ancestry with Onge and Jehai (Peninsular Malaysia) in mainland Southeast Asia, which may represent gene flow from that group into the Jōmon period population. The Ikawazu Jōmon sample could be modeled as possible admixture of Southeast Asian Hoabinhian and East Asian Amis people.[61][62] Her mitochondrial mtDNA is Haplogroup N9b which is typical of Northeast Siberian populations, this haplogroups in present-day Japaneses people (< 2.0%), but typically found in previous studies of Jomon mtDNA[63] N9b 4% in Okinawans, 6.9% in modern Ulchi 8% in Modern Ainu, 32.3% in the Udegey, People of the Amur-Ussuri where the region carry high frequencies of N9b.[50][51][64]

A more recent genetic analysis of the Ikawazu Jōmon sample (IK002), by Gakuhari et al. 2020, next to two additional Jōmon samples from northern Honshu and Hokkaido, found contradicting results. The Jōmon people descended predominantly from an Basal-East Asian population and does not share ancestry with Hoabhinians or Onge as suggested by McColl in 2018. The authors note that there is no genetic evidence for admixture or that the ancestral Jōmon lineage is closer to Hoabinhians, rejecting the conclusion by McColl. They concluded that there is also no evidence that Jōmon formed from admixture of Onge/Hoabhinians and Ami-related groups but that the Jōmon are mostly the direct descendants of the East Asian-related Upper Paleolithic population which arrived in Japan about 35,000 years ago from Mainland Southeast Asia or the Himalayan region. The Jōmon samples (including IK002), were found to be part of the "basal-East Asian cluster" (bEE), an ancient population that had no divergence among the ancestors of East Asians, Northeast Asians/East Siberian, and Native Americans. The Jōmon are genetically basal to modern East and Northeast Asians as well as Native Americans, suggesting that they share closer affinity towards the Ancient Northeast Asian/Eastern Siberian and Native American cluster (NA-ES-NA) rather than the Southern East Asian component. However, IK002 shows some affinity to the Amis people (one of the many Taiwanese indigenous peoples), which may support a later coastal migration into Japan outgoing from Taiwan.[16]

Additionally the authors note the possible link between the microblade culture around Lake Baikal of Paleolithic Siberia and Jōmon period Hokkaido. The microblade culture is suggested to have arrived in Japan about ~25,000 years ago with an migration associated with the Ancient North Eurasians, an ancient population distantly related to modern Europeans and Middle Easterners, and which contributed about 30% ancestry into Native Americans and some other Paleo-Siberian ethnic groups. They further conclude that their results support the "dual structure model" for the origin of modern Japanese.[16]

Funadomari Jōmon study

A full genome analysis,[65] using high-confidence SNPs and functional SNP assessments to assign possible phenotypic characteristics as well as Y-chromosome polymorphisms, analysed a male and a female Jomon sample (termed as "F23"). The Funadomari archaeological site is located on a sandbar separating Lake Kushu from Funadomari Bay on the north coast of Rebun Island, a small island off the northwestern tip of Hokkaidō. The study results suggest that the Hokkaido Jōmon are their own distinct population and not closely related to other populations. The Jōmon generally are closer to East-Eurasian populations and form a cluster near the "Basal East Asians".

Modern Japanese share about 9% to 13% of their genome with the used Jōmon sample. Jōmon specific genome is also found in minor percentage in populations of Northeast Asia and Southeast Asia, suggesting gene-flow from Jōmon-related groups or more ancient shared source population. Additionally, the Hokkaido Jōmon share specific gene alleles with populations in the Arctic regions of Eurasia and northern America, absent from other East Asians. An analysis of phylogenetic relationship modeled the Funadomari Jōmon samples of Hokkaido with ~86% East Asian-related ancestry and ~14% deeply European-related ancestry.[66]

Rebun Jōmon study

Another full genome analysis of a 3,800 year old Jōmon woman shows that this sample shared gene variants which are found only in Arctic populations of Eurasia, but are absent elsewhere. According to the authors this provides evidence that the Jomon fished and hunted fatty sea and land animals. The sample also showed a higher alcohol tolerance than other East-Eurasian populations. Further analysis suggest that the Jōmon sample was at high risk of developing liver spots if she spent to much time in the sun. The Jōmon sample had wet earwax, which is rare among modern East Asian populations. Despite the strong differences, the Rebun Jōmon sample is relative closest to modern Japanese. Additionally the Rebun Jōmon sample is also relative closer to coastal groups such as Ulchi in Russia and some aboriginal Taiwanese.[67][68][better source needed]

A facial reconstruction in 2018 based on genome information of a 3,800 year old Jomon women from Rebun Island in Hokkaido showed that the color of the woman's skin was slightly darker than that of modern Japanese, her hair was thin and fine, and that the color of her eyes was light brown. Additionally, analysis revealed that the woman had blood type A+.[69]

Full genome analyses of 2020

A full genome analysis published in 2020, analysed for the first time the complete genome of several Jōmon samples. The study rejected previous arguments by McColl 2018 and Chuan-Chao Wang et al., who suggested a shared ancestry with Hoabhinians.

The Jōmon do not share a special relationship with Hòabìnhians as previously suggested (McColl et al., 2018). Tests of genetic similarity do not show Hòabìnhians or the Jōmon sharing exceptionally high genetic similarity with each other.

On the contrary, evidence for geneflow from an Basal East Asian-related group into the Hoabhinians and the Andamanese Onge was detected. The Jōmon themselves share relatively most genome with East Asians and less with Paleolithic Siberians, as well as with modern people in Japan and various groups around the Sea of Okhotsk.[29]

In another analysis in 2020 of modern and ancient East-Eurasian samples from Southeast Asia, East Asia and Siberia researchers found that the Jōmon people (named "Jōmon_HG" for Jomon period hunter gatherers) could be modeled from two distinct components: one "East Asian-related" component and one "currently unsamplified" component (or multiple components), probably from Paleolithic Siberia. They also could not reproduce the special affinity between Jōmon and Hoabhinians and Andamanese as suggested in a 2018 study by McColl, but found contrary evidence that an ancient population related to the Tibetan lineage (including the Chokhopani sample), contributed to both the Jōmon hunter gatherers and less to ancient Southeast Asian hunter gatherers.[37]

Higashimyo Jōmon study

A study in 2021 by Adachi et al. analyzed a Jōmon sample (~5,000 BC) from the Higashimyo cave near Saga on the island of Kyushu, which adds further evidence to the regional differences among the Jōmon period populations. The Higashimyo Jōmon sample was found to be genetically relative closest to other Jōmon samples and to various East Asian groups, such as Taiwanese indigenous peoples (Ami and Atayal), Kankanaey and Ilocano of northern Philippines, as well as Koreans and Japanese people. However, since only 6.9% of the nuclear genome was readable in the Higashimyo individual, no reliable conclusion could be made. According to the authors, the main ancestry component of the Jōmon period population of Japan shares ancestry with contemporary East Asians but split about 22,000 years ago, close to the split between East Asians and ancestral Native Americans. However, non-East Asian geneflow into the Jōmon period population resulted in their unique position and internal diversity, which got strengthened by later isolation, migration, and genetic drift. Unlike Hokkaido Jomon samples, the Higashimyo individual belonged to mitochondrial DNA haplogroup M7a1, rather than N9b. Like previous studies, a distinction between Northern and Southern Jōmon was detected, with the Southern Jōmon (represented by the Higashimyo sample) likely being the source of Jōmon ancestry among modern Japanese, rather than Northern Jōmon. The authors note that more studies are needed to better understand the internal diversity of the Jōmon people and their historical formation.[70]

Reevaluation of the genetic position of the Jōmon lineage in 2021

A study in 2021 by Cooke et al., reevaluated the phylogenetic relationship of various Jōmon samples with other populations, and estimated that the Jōmon lineage split from modern East Asians between 15,000BC and 20,000BC, but after the divergence of Ancestral Native Americans in ~25,000BC. The authors then analyzed whether the Jōmon population had any contact with other continental Upper Paleolithic people after the divergence of their lineage, but before they became isolated in the Japanese archipelago. The inferred Jōmon ancestry among modern Japanese people is estimated at a mean average of 9.31%.[71]

Descendants

Recent studies note that the Jōmon people consisted of several ethnic groups that arrived in Japan at different times and later converged into the pre-Yayoi population of Japan. However, the studies used to theorise the modern-day descendents of the originally-mixed ethnic group used modelled ancestry by comparing various Jōmon period samples with modern populations, and they may not be indicative of actual shared ancestry.[29]

Ainu people

 
Two Sakhalin Ainu men

It is generally agreed that the Ainu people are the descendants of the Hokkaido Jōmon.

A recent genetic study (Gakuhari et al. 2020) suggests about 79.3% of the ancestry of the Ainu comes from the Hokkaido Jōmon.[72][73] A study by Kanazawa-Kiriyama et al. (2019) suggests about 66% Hokkaido Jōmon ancestry in the Ainu people.[65]

Emishi

The Emishi, a former non-Yamato group in central Honshu, are often linked to the Ainu people, but several historians suggest that they either form their own Jōmon group and did not share close cultural connections to the Ainu, or they consisted of several different tribes.

The Satsumon culture of northern Honshu, one of the cultures that merged to later form Ainu culture, is often speculated to be related to the Emishi culture.[74]

Other historians suggest that the Emishi were in fact largely Japanese people who spoke the Izumo dialect of the Japonic languages, and resisted the imperial rule of the Yamato Dynasty.[29]

Yamato (Japanese) people

The Yamato Japanese are mostly descended from the Yayoi/Kofun period people but also have admixture from the Jōmon period population. It is estimated that the Jōmon ancestry found in the Yamato Japanese is less than 20%.[75] Another study estimates the Jōmon ancestry in people from Tokyo at approximately 12%.[32] One study estimates about 10% of Jōmon ancestry in modern Yamato people.[76]

Another study on autosomal DNA by Kanazawa-Kiriyama et al. (2019) finds about 9-13% Jōmon ancestry in the modern Japanese (with the remainder being from the Yayoi).[65]

Ryukyuan people

According to several studies, the Ryukyuan people share more alleles with the Jōmon period (16,000–3,000 years ago) hunter-gatherers and Ainu people than do the Yamato Japanese and have smaller genetic contributions from Asian continental populations.[75][77][78][79][80][81][82]

Within the Japanese population, the Ryukyuans form a separate genome-wide cluster as one of two along the main island of Honshu.[83][84] The local Jōmon ancestry is estimated at 28%[85] or 50-60%,[86][87][88] depending on various studies. The admixture event which formed the admixed Ryukyuans was estimated to be at least 1100–1075 years ago, which corresponds to the Gusuku period, and is considered to be related to the arrival of migrants from Japan.[85] Thus, the Ryukyuans appear to be genetically closest to the Ainu from the Ainu viewpoint, whereas it is exactly the opposite from the Ryukyuans' viewpoint, who are closest to the Yamato Japanese.[87]

According to recent genome studies, Ryukyuans and especially Okinawans are the closest to other East Asians but are also relatively homogenous on a genetic level. The study did not find much evidence for a strong Jōmon influence on Ryukyuans. On average, the Okinawans were found to share 80.8% admixture with the Japanese and 19.2% admixture with the Chinese. Individual admixture estimates were quite variable and ranged from 5.84% to 57.82% Chinese admixture,[79] which likely coincides with historical migrations of Chinese people to Okinawa.[89]

A study by Kanazawa-Kiriyama et al. (2019) suggests that Ryukyuans inherit about 27% of their ancestry from the local Jōmon, with rest being from the Yayoi people.[65]

In popular culture

Aspects of the Jōmon culture and pottery were used in the video game The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild. Nintendo's art director Takizawa Satoru said that the Jōmon culture was the inspiration for the "Sheikah slates, shrines and other ancient objects" in the game.[90]

A recreated Jōmon village in the form of an experience park (Sarashina no Sato), which offers different activities, can be visited in Chikuma, Nagano.[91]

See also

References

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    "The dual nature of Japanese population structure was advanced by Miller, who proposed that the resident Jōmon population spoke an Altaic language ancestral to modern Japanese, and this Altaic tongue underwent Austronesian influence when the islanders absorbed the bearers of the incursive Yayoi culture.
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jōmon, people, 縄文人, jōmon, generic, name, hunter, gatherer, population, that, lived, japanese, archipelago, during, jōmon, period, constituted, coherent, population, displayed, geographically, defined, regional, subgroups, multiple, studies, jōmon, population,. Jōmon people 縄文人 Jōmon jin is the generic name of the hunter gatherer population that lived in the Japanese archipelago during the Jōmon period c 14 000 to 300 BC The Jōmon people constituted a coherent population but displayed geographically defined regional subgroups 1 2 Multiple studies on the Jōmon population analyzed the genetic contribution to modern Japanese Jōmon samples represented by a specimen obtained from the Funadomari archaeological site on Rebun Island and two specimens obtained from Honshu show that mainstream Japanese people have inherited an average of 10 20 of Jōmon ancestry in their genome 3 4 The results of a study from 2021 inferred gene flow from the Jōmon population to the modern Japanese across all migration models tested with genetic contributions ranging from 8 9 to 11 5 In the same study the mean Jōmon component of the modern Japanese individual estimated using the admixture analysis was 9 31 5 Population genomic data from various Jōmon period samples show that they diverged from other East Asian people 30 000 to 20 000 years ago After their migration into the Japanese archipelago in 15 000 to 20 000 BC they became largely isolated from outside geneflow 6 7 A tie between Jomon and Yana was detected but was only marginally significant Further validation studies using better quality ancient samples would be necessary Future studies particularly additional samples of Paleo Siberians and ancient Central Asians would help to elucidate the reason for the potential genetic connection between Yana and Jomon people 4 Contents 1 Morphological characteristics 2 Languages 3 Culture 3 1 Pottery 3 2 Craftsmanship 3 3 Religion 4 Origins 4 1 Genetics 4 1 1 Paternal lineages 4 1 2 Maternal lineages 4 1 3 ATL retrovirus 4 1 4 Ikawazu Jōmon studies 4 1 5 Funadomari Jōmon study 4 1 6 Rebun Jōmon study 4 1 7 Full genome analyses of 2020 4 1 8 Higashimyo Jōmon study 4 1 9 Reevaluation of the genetic position of the Jōmon lineage in 2021 5 Descendants 5 1 Ainu people 5 2 Emishi 5 3 Yamato Japanese people 5 4 Ryukyuan people 6 In popular culture 7 See also 8 ReferencesMorphological characteristics Edit Male skull of the late Jōmon period replica Excavated at Miyano Kaizuka Iwate Prefecture Exhibition in National Museum of Nature and Science 8 Several studies of numerous Jōmon skeletal remains that were excavated from various locations in the Japanese archipelago allowed researchers to learn more about the Jōmon period population of Japan The Jōmon people were relatively close to other East Asians however shared more similarities with Native American samples Within Japan regional variance among different Jōmon remains was detected Historically the Jōmon people were classified as Mongoloid 9 10 Forensic reconstruction from a Jōmon individual from Niigata prefecture Dental morphology suggests that the Jōmon had Sundadont dental structure which is more common among modern Southeast Asians and Indigenous Taiwanese and is ancestral to the Sinodont dental structure commonly found among modern Northeast Asians suggesting that the Jōmon split from the common Ancestral East Asians prior to the formation of modern Northeast Asians 11 According to the article Jōmon culture and the peopling of the Japanese archipelago by Schmidt and Seguchi 2014 the prehistoric Jōmon people descended from various paleolithic populations which migrated into the Japanese archipelago using different routes at different times They concluded In this respect the biological identity of the Jomon is heterogeneous and it may be indicative of diverse peoples who possibly belonged to a common culture known as the Jomon These results suggest a level of inter regional heterogeneity not expected among Jomon groups This observation is further substantiated by the studies of Kanzawa Kiriyama et al 2013 and Adachi et al 2013 Kanzawa Kiriyama et al 2013 analysed craniometrics and extracted aDNA from museum samples that came from the Sanganji shell mound site in Fukushima Prefecture dated to the Final Jomon Period They tested for regional differences and found the Tokoku Jomon northern Honshu were more similar to Hokkaido Jomon than to geographically adjacent Kanto Jomon central Honshu Adachi et al 2013 described the craniometrics and aDNA sequence from a Jomon individual from Nagano Yugora cave site dated to the middle of the initial Jomon Period 7920 7795 cal BP This individual carried ancestry which is widely distributed among modern East Asians Nohira et al 2010 Umetsu et al 2005 and resembled modern East Asian comparison samples rather than the geographical close Urawa Jomon sample 12 A study published in the scientific journal Nature by Jinam et al in 2015 using genome wide SNP data comparison found that the Hokkaido Jōmon samples ancestral to the Ainu people differ from Mainland Japanese at several loci including two genes that are known from a previous study to influence facial features in Europeans and possibly in other populations 13 Kondo et al 2017 analyzed the regional morphological and craniometric characteristics of the Jōmon period population of Japan and found that they were morphologically heterogeneous and displayed differences along a Northeast to Southwest cline They concluded that the Jomon skulls especially in the neurocranium exhibit a discernible level of northeast to southwest geographical cline across the Japanese archipelago placing the Hokkaido and Okinawa samples at both extreme ends The following scenarios can be hypothesized with caution a the formation of Jomon population seemed to proceed in eastern or central Japan not western Japan Okinawa or Kyushu regions b the Kyushu Jomon could have a small sized and isolated population history and c the population history of Hokkaido Jomon could have been deeply rooted and or affected by long term extrinsic gene flows 14 In 2021 it was confirmed that the ancient population of Hokkaido formed from proper Jōmon people and from Terminal Upper Paleolithic people TUP people indigenous to Paleolithic Northern Eurasia The proper Jōmon groups arrived at about 15 000 BC from East Asia and merged with the earlier arrived Terminal Upper Paleolithic North Eurasians to form the local Hokkaido Jōmon 15 Previously Gakuhari et al 2020 similarly noted the possibility of geneflow from Ancient North Eurasians samplified by the MA 1 sample or a similar group into northern Japan which can be demonstrably linked to the introduction of the microblade culture of Siberia 16 Languages EditIt is not known what language or languages were spoken in Japan during the Jōmon period Suggested languages are the Ainu language Japonic languages Austronesian languages or unknown and today extinct languages 17 18 While the most supported view is to equate the Ainu language with the Jōmon language this view is not uncontroversial or easily acceptable as there were probably multiple distinct language families spoken by the Jōmon period population of the Japanese archipelago 2 Alexander Vovin 1993 argues that the Ainu languages originated in Central Honshu and were later pushed northwards into Hokkaido where the early Ainu speakers merged with local groups forming the historical Ainu ethnicity Bilingualism between Ainu and Japanese was common in Tohoku until the 10th century 19 20 A study by Lee and Hasegawa 2013 of the Waseda University however found evidence that the Ainu language originated from the Okhotsk population which expanded roughly 2 000 years ago from northern Hokkaido southwards into Tohoku 21 Vovin 2021 presented arguments for the presence of Austronesian peoples within the Japanese archipelago during the Jōmon period based on previous linguistic historical and cultural evidence specifically referring to the historical Hayato and Kumaso people Vovin found specific Austronesian vocabulary loaned into the core vocabulary of Insular Japanese He suggests that Austronesian speakers arrived in Japan during the Jōmon period and prior to the arrival of Yayoi period migrants associated with the spread of Japonic languages These Austronesian speakers were subsequently assimilated into the Japanese ethnicity Evidence for non Ainuic non Austronesian and non Korean loanwords are found among Insular Japonic languages and probably derived from unknown and extinct Jōmon languages 20 Some linguists suggest that the Japonic languages may have been already present within the Japanese archipelago and coastal Korea before the Yayoi period and can be linked to one of the Jōmon populations of southwestern Japan rather than the later Yayoi or Kofun period rice agriculturalists Japonic speakers then expanded during the Yayoi period assimilating the newcomers adopting rice agriculture and fusing mainland Asian technologies with local traditions 22 Culture EditThe culture of the Jōmon people was largely based on food collection and hunting but it is also suggested that the Jōmon people practiced early agriculture They gathered tree nuts and shellfish were involved in hunting and fishing and also practiced some degree of agriculture The Jōmon people also used stoneware and pottery and generally lived in pit dwellings 23 Some elements of modern Japanese culture may have come from the Jōmon culture Among these elements are the precursory beliefs to modern Shinto some marriage customs some architectural styles and possibly some technological developments such as lacquerware laminated yumi metalworking and glass making Pottery Edit The style of pottery created by the Jōmon people is identifiable for its cord marked patterns hence the name Jōmon 縄文 straw rope pattern The pottery styles characteristic of the first phases of Jōmon culture used decoration created by impressing cords into the surface of wet clay and are generally accepted to be among the oldest forms of pottery in East Asia and the world 24 Next to clay pots and vessels the Jōmon also made many highly stylized statues dogu clay masks stone batons or rods and swords 25 Craftsmanship Edit Magatama kidney shaped beads are commonly found in Jōmon period Japanese finds as well as in parts of Northeast Asia and Siberia There is evidence that the Jōmon people built ships out of large trees and used them for fishing and traveling however there is no agreement as to whether they used sails or paddles 26 The Jōmon people also used obsidian jade and different kinds of wood 27 The Jōmon people created many jewelry and ornamental items for instance magatama were likely invented by one of the Jōmon tribes and are commonly found throughout Japan and less in Northeast Asia 25 Religion Edit Main article Ko Shintō It is suggested that the religion of the Jōmon people was similar to early Shinto specifically Ko Shintō It was largely based on animism and possibly shamanism Other similar religions are the Ryukyuan and Ainu religions 28 Origins EditThe Jōmon people predominantly descended from an Ancestral East Asian population expanding out of Mainland Southeast Asia or the southeastern Himalayan region Geneflow from Upper Paleolithic groups of Northern Eurasia and Siberia was detected in local Jōmon period samples from Hokkaido and Tohoku Evidence suggests that the ethnic roots of the Jōmon period population was rather heterogeneous and that migration routes can be traced back to ancient Northeast Asia the Tibetan plateau ancient Taiwan and paleolithic Siberia 29 30 31 32 33 According to a 2009 study the Jōmon people are an admixture of several distinct ethnic groups 34 According to the review article Jōmon culture and the peopling of the Japanese archipelago by Schmidt and Seguchi 2014 the prehistoric Jōmon people descended from diverse paleolithic populations with multiple migrations into Jōmon period Japan They concluded In this respect the biological identity of the Jomon is heterogeneous and it may be indicative of diverse peoples who possibly belonged to a common culture known as the Jomon 35 Genetics Edit Further information Genetic history of East Asians Phylogenetic position of the Jōmon lineage among other East Eurasians Genetic structure of present day and ancient Eurasian and Ikawazu Jomon 36 Full genome analyses in 2020 and 2021 revealed further information regarding the origin of the Jōmon peoples The genetic results suggest early admixture between different groups in Japan already during the Paleolithic followed by constant geneflow from coastal East Asian groups resulting in a heterogeneous population which then homogenized until the arrival of the Yayoi people Geneflow from Northeast Asia during the Jōmon period is associated geneflow from the Tibetan Plateau and Southern China is associated with the D1a2a previously D1b and D1a1 previously D1a lineages Geneflow from ancient Siberia was also detected into the northern Jōmon people of Hokkaido with later geneflow from Hokkaido into parts of northern Honshu Tohoku The lineages K and F are suggested to have been presented during the early Jōmon period but got replaced by C and D The genetic evidence suggests that an East Asian source population near the Himalayan mountain range contributed ancestry to the Jōmon period population of Japan and less to ancient Southeast Asians The authors concluded that this points to an inland migration through southern or central China towards Japan during the Paleolithic Another ancestry component seem to have arrived from Siberia into Hokkaido 37 29 Archeological and biological evidence link the southern Jōmon culture of Kyushu Shikoku and parts of Honshu to cultures of southern China and Northeast India A common culture known as Broadleaved Evergreen Forest Culture ranged from southwestern Japan through southern China towards Northeast India and southern Tibet and was characterized by the cultivation of Azuki beans 38 Another study published in the Cambridge University Press in 2020 concluded that there was also a migration of ancient Northeast Asians at approximately 6000BC or already at 10 000BC which introduced the Incipient Jōmon culture typified by early ceramic cultures such as the ones found at Ōdai Yamamoto I Jōmon Site or Aoyagamiji site in the Tottori prefecture The authors argue that this migration may be the source of the Japonic languages rather than the later Yayoi migration 39 40 A 2021 study concluded that the Jōmon people descended from a common Basal East Asian source population in Mainland Southeast Asia which also gave rise to the other East Asian related populations The Jōmon people however became isolated from other East Asians on the Japanese archipelago at about 15 000 BCE which resulted in their relative more Basal position compared to other East Asians 41 A review article in 2022 by Professor and historian Melinda A Yang concluded that the main Jōmon lineage is closely related to other populations on the East and Southeast Asian lineage ESEA which descended from a source population in Mainland Southeast Asia and gave rise to all modern East and Southeast Asian people Indigenous peoples of Siberia and Indigenous peoples of the Americas as well as the ancient Hoabinhian lineage and the Tianyuan lineage and which is distinct from the Australasian AA or West Eurasian lineages 42 Paternal lineages Edit It is thought that the haplogroups D M55 D1a2a and C1a1 were frequent in Jōmon period people O M119 is also suggested to have been presented in at least some Jōmon period people One 3 800 year old Jōmon man excavated from Rebun Island was found to belong to Haplogroup D1a2b1 D CTS 220 43 Haplogroup D M55 is found in about 35 44 and haplogroup C1a1 in about 6 of modern Japanese people Presence of haplogroups C D and F in 2302 present day samples The map demonstrates how many of the three haplogroups of interest none one two or all three were found in different areas of the Old World and Near Oceania Black dots indicate the locations of the studied populations 45 D M55 is only found in Japanese Ainu Ryukyuans and Yamato 46 Haplogroup C1a1 has been found in modern Japanese at a frequency of 6 Elsewhere it was found at low frequency in Koreans and northeast Chinese 34 Recently it was confirmed that the Japanese branch of haplogroup D M55 is distinct and isolated from other D branches since more than 53 000 years The split between D1a2 M55 and D1a F6251 the latter of which is common in Tibetans other Tibeto Burmese groups and Altaians and has a moderate distribution in the rest of East Asia Southeast Asia and Central Asia may have occurred near the Tibetan Plateau 47 A DNA study in 2019 suggests that haplogroup D M55 increased to about 70 during the late Jōmon period suggesting a population boom and bust shortly before the Yayoi migration 48 Another study similar concluded that D M55 became the dominant haplogroup in Japan during the late Jōmon period 49 Maternal lineages Edit MtDNA Haplogroup Jōmon people is characterized by the presence of haplogroups M7a and N9b Studies published in 2004 and 2007 show the combined frequency of M7a and N9b observed in modern Japanese to be from 12 15 to 17 in mainstream Japanese 50 51 N9b is frequently found in the Hokkaido Jomons while M7a is found frequently in the Tohoku Jomons 52 However N9b is found at very low percent in the Kanto Jomons 53 M7a is estimated to share a most recent common ancestor with M7b c a clade whose members are found mainly in Japan including Jōmon people other parts of East Asia and Southeast Asia 33 500 95 CI 26 300 lt gt 42 000 years before present 54 All extant members of haplogroup M7a are estimated to share a most recent common ancestor 20 500 95 CI 14 700 lt gt 27 800 years before present 54 Haplogroup M7a now has its highest frequency in Okinawa Haplogroup N9b is estimated to share a most recent common ancestor with N9a and Y two clades that are widespread in eastern Asia 37 700 95 CI 29 600 lt gt 47 300 years before present 54 All extant members of haplogroup N9b are estimated to share a most recent common ancestor 21 100 95 CI 16 700 lt gt 26 200 years before present 54 Haplogroup N9b now has its highest frequency among Tungusic peoples in southeastern Siberia especially Udeges but it has been found to be very common in skeletal remains of Jōmon people of northern Japan Tōhoku and Hokkaidō In addition haplogroups D4 D5 M7b M8 M9a M10 G A B and F have been found in Jōmon people as well 55 56 57 These latter haplogroups are all distributed widely among populations of East Asia including modern Japanese Ryukyuans and Ainus and Southeast Asia but some of their subclades are distributed almost exclusively in Japan From a mtDNA study of ancient Jomon and Yayoi found that mtDNA D5 G M7a M7b M10 N9b are found exclusively in Jomon Ainu Ryukyuan Japanese in various percentages but not in the ancient Yayoi people of Japan 58 ATL retrovirus Edit A gene common in Jōmon people is a retrovirus of ATL human T lymphotropic virus HTVL I This virus was discovered as a cause of adult T cell leukemia ATL and research was advanced by Takuo Hinuma of Kyoto University Virus Research Institute Although it was known that many virus carriers existed in Japan it was not found at all in neighboring countries of East Asia Meanwhile it has been found in many Africans Native Americans Tibetans Siberians Burmese people Indigenous people of New Guinea Polynesians etc Looking at distribution in Japan it is seen particularly frequently in southern Kyushu Nagasaki Prefecture Okinawa and among the Ainu And it is seen at medium frequency in the southern part of Shikoku southern part of the Kii Peninsula the Pacific side of the Tōhoku region Sanriku and Oki Islands Overall carriers of the ATL retrovirus were found to be more common in remote areas and remote islands When examining the well developed areas of ATL in each region of Kyushu Shikoku and Tōhoku in detail carriers are preserved at high rates in small settlements that were isolated from the surroundings and inconvenient for traffic The path of natural infection of this virus is limited to vertical infection between women and children most often through breastfeeding and horizontal infection between males and females most often from males to females through sexual intercourse 59 Based on the above Hinuma concluded that the high frequency area of this virus indicates the high density remain of Jōmon people 60 Ikawazu Jōmon studies Edit A partial genome analysis by McColl et al in 2018 about the prehistoric peopling of Southeast Asia analysed 26 ancient samples from Southeast Asia spanning from the late Neolithic to the Iron Age They analysed an Ikawazu Jōmon named IK002 sample from the Ikawazu Shell Midden site 伊川津貝塚 on the Atsumi Peninsula of southern Aichi Prefecture in central Honshu and a draft sequence of the Jōmon genome was determined from IK002 This Jōmon individual was found to share some ancestry with prehistoric Hoabinhians who also share some ancestry with Onge and Jehai Peninsular Malaysia in mainland Southeast Asia which may represent gene flow from that group into the Jōmon period population The Ikawazu Jōmon sample could be modeled as possible admixture of Southeast Asian Hoabinhian and East Asian Amis people 61 62 Her mitochondrial mtDNA is Haplogroup N9b which is typical of Northeast Siberian populations this haplogroups in present day Japaneses people lt 2 0 but typically found in previous studies of Jomon mtDNA 63 N9b 4 in Okinawans 6 9 in modern Ulchi 8 in Modern Ainu 32 3 in the Udegey People of the Amur Ussuri where the region carry high frequencies of N9b 50 51 64 A more recent genetic analysis of the Ikawazu Jōmon sample IK002 by Gakuhari et al 2020 next to two additional Jōmon samples from northern Honshu and Hokkaido found contradicting results The Jōmon people descended predominantly from an Basal East Asian population and does not share ancestry with Hoabhinians or Onge as suggested by McColl in 2018 The authors note that there is no genetic evidence for admixture or that the ancestral Jōmon lineage is closer to Hoabinhians rejecting the conclusion by McColl They concluded that there is also no evidence that Jōmon formed from admixture of Onge Hoabhinians and Ami related groups but that the Jōmon are mostly the direct descendants of the East Asian related Upper Paleolithic population which arrived in Japan about 35 000 years ago from Mainland Southeast Asia or the Himalayan region The Jōmon samples including IK002 were found to be part of the basal East Asian cluster bEE an ancient population that had no divergence among the ancestors of East Asians Northeast Asians East Siberian and Native Americans The Jōmon are genetically basal to modern East and Northeast Asians as well as Native Americans suggesting that they share closer affinity towards the Ancient Northeast Asian Eastern Siberian and Native American cluster NA ES NA rather than the Southern East Asian component However IK002 shows some affinity to the Amis people one of the many Taiwanese indigenous peoples which may support a later coastal migration into Japan outgoing from Taiwan 16 Additionally the authors note the possible link between the microblade culture around Lake Baikal of Paleolithic Siberia and Jōmon period Hokkaido The microblade culture is suggested to have arrived in Japan about 25 000 years ago with an migration associated with the Ancient North Eurasians an ancient population distantly related to modern Europeans and Middle Easterners and which contributed about 30 ancestry into Native Americans and some other Paleo Siberian ethnic groups They further conclude that their results support the dual structure model for the origin of modern Japanese 16 Funadomari Jōmon study Edit A full genome analysis 65 using high confidence SNPs and functional SNP assessments to assign possible phenotypic characteristics as well as Y chromosome polymorphisms analysed a male and a female Jomon sample termed as F23 The Funadomari archaeological site is located on a sandbar separating Lake Kushu from Funadomari Bay on the north coast of Rebun Island a small island off the northwestern tip of Hokkaidō The study results suggest that the Hokkaido Jōmon are their own distinct population and not closely related to other populations The Jōmon generally are closer to East Eurasian populations and form a cluster near the Basal East Asians Modern Japanese share about 9 to 13 of their genome with the used Jōmon sample Jōmon specific genome is also found in minor percentage in populations of Northeast Asia and Southeast Asia suggesting gene flow from Jōmon related groups or more ancient shared source population Additionally the Hokkaido Jōmon share specific gene alleles with populations in the Arctic regions of Eurasia and northern America absent from other East Asians An analysis of phylogenetic relationship modeled the Funadomari Jōmon samples of Hokkaido with 86 East Asian related ancestry and 14 deeply European related ancestry 66 Rebun Jōmon study Edit Another full genome analysis of a 3 800 year old Jōmon woman shows that this sample shared gene variants which are found only in Arctic populations of Eurasia but are absent elsewhere According to the authors this provides evidence that the Jomon fished and hunted fatty sea and land animals The sample also showed a higher alcohol tolerance than other East Eurasian populations Further analysis suggest that the Jōmon sample was at high risk of developing liver spots if she spent to much time in the sun The Jōmon sample had wet earwax which is rare among modern East Asian populations Despite the strong differences the Rebun Jōmon sample is relative closest to modern Japanese Additionally the Rebun Jōmon sample is also relative closer to coastal groups such as Ulchi in Russia and some aboriginal Taiwanese 67 68 better source needed A facial reconstruction in 2018 based on genome information of a 3 800 year old Jomon women from Rebun Island in Hokkaido showed that the color of the woman s skin was slightly darker than that of modern Japanese her hair was thin and fine and that the color of her eyes was light brown Additionally analysis revealed that the woman had blood type A 69 Full genome analyses of 2020 Edit A full genome analysis published in 2020 analysed for the first time the complete genome of several Jōmon samples The study rejected previous arguments by McColl 2018 and Chuan Chao Wang et al who suggested a shared ancestry with Hoabhinians The Jōmon do not share a special relationship with Hoabinhians as previously suggested McColl et al 2018 Tests of genetic similarity do not show Hoabinhians or the Jōmon sharing exceptionally high genetic similarity with each other On the contrary evidence for geneflow from an Basal East Asian related group into the Hoabhinians and the Andamanese Onge was detected The Jōmon themselves share relatively most genome with East Asians and less with Paleolithic Siberians as well as with modern people in Japan and various groups around the Sea of Okhotsk 29 In another analysis in 2020 of modern and ancient East Eurasian samples from Southeast Asia East Asia and Siberia researchers found that the Jōmon people named Jōmon HG for Jomon period hunter gatherers could be modeled from two distinct components one East Asian related component and one currently unsamplified component or multiple components probably from Paleolithic Siberia They also could not reproduce the special affinity between Jōmon and Hoabhinians and Andamanese as suggested in a 2018 study by McColl but found contrary evidence that an ancient population related to the Tibetan lineage including the Chokhopani sample contributed to both the Jōmon hunter gatherers and less to ancient Southeast Asian hunter gatherers 37 Higashimyo Jōmon study Edit A study in 2021 by Adachi et al analyzed a Jōmon sample 5 000 BC from the Higashimyo cave near Saga on the island of Kyushu which adds further evidence to the regional differences among the Jōmon period populations The Higashimyo Jōmon sample was found to be genetically relative closest to other Jōmon samples and to various East Asian groups such as Taiwanese indigenous peoples Ami and Atayal Kankanaey and Ilocano of northern Philippines as well as Koreans and Japanese people However since only 6 9 of the nuclear genome was readable in the Higashimyo individual no reliable conclusion could be made According to the authors the main ancestry component of the Jōmon period population of Japan shares ancestry with contemporary East Asians but split about 22 000 years ago close to the split between East Asians and ancestral Native Americans However non East Asian geneflow into the Jōmon period population resulted in their unique position and internal diversity which got strengthened by later isolation migration and genetic drift Unlike Hokkaido Jomon samples the Higashimyo individual belonged to mitochondrial DNA haplogroup M7a1 rather than N9b Like previous studies a distinction between Northern and Southern Jōmon was detected with the Southern Jōmon represented by the Higashimyo sample likely being the source of Jōmon ancestry among modern Japanese rather than Northern Jōmon The authors note that more studies are needed to better understand the internal diversity of the Jōmon people and their historical formation 70 Reevaluation of the genetic position of the Jōmon lineage in 2021 Edit A study in 2021 by Cooke et al reevaluated the phylogenetic relationship of various Jōmon samples with other populations and estimated that the Jōmon lineage split from modern East Asians between 15 000BC and 20 000BC but after the divergence of Ancestral Native Americans in 25 000BC The authors then analyzed whether the Jōmon population had any contact with other continental Upper Paleolithic people after the divergence of their lineage but before they became isolated in the Japanese archipelago The inferred Jōmon ancestry among modern Japanese people is estimated at a mean average of 9 31 71 Descendants EditRecent studies note that the Jōmon people consisted of several ethnic groups that arrived in Japan at different times and later converged into the pre Yayoi population of Japan However the studies used to theorise the modern day descendents of the originally mixed ethnic group used modelled ancestry by comparing various Jōmon period samples with modern populations and they may not be indicative of actual shared ancestry 29 Ainu people Edit Two Sakhalin Ainu menIt is generally agreed that the Ainu people are the descendants of the Hokkaido Jōmon A recent genetic study Gakuhari et al 2020 suggests about 79 3 of the ancestry of the Ainu comes from the Hokkaido Jōmon 72 73 A study by Kanazawa Kiriyama et al 2019 suggests about 66 Hokkaido Jōmon ancestry in the Ainu people 65 Emishi Edit The Emishi a former non Yamato group in central Honshu are often linked to the Ainu people but several historians suggest that they either form their own Jōmon group and did not share close cultural connections to the Ainu or they consisted of several different tribes The Satsumon culture of northern Honshu one of the cultures that merged to later form Ainu culture is often speculated to be related to the Emishi culture 74 Other historians suggest that the Emishi were in fact largely Japanese people who spoke the Izumo dialect of the Japonic languages and resisted the imperial rule of the Yamato Dynasty 29 Yamato Japanese people Edit The Yamato Japanese are mostly descended from the Yayoi Kofun period people but also have admixture from the Jōmon period population It is estimated that the Jōmon ancestry found in the Yamato Japanese is less than 20 75 Another study estimates the Jōmon ancestry in people from Tokyo at approximately 12 32 One study estimates about 10 of Jōmon ancestry in modern Yamato people 76 Another study on autosomal DNA by Kanazawa Kiriyama et al 2019 finds about 9 13 Jōmon ancestry in the modern Japanese with the remainder being from the Yayoi 65 Ryukyuan people Edit According to several studies the Ryukyuan people share more alleles with the Jōmon period 16 000 3 000 years ago hunter gatherers and Ainu people than do the Yamato Japanese and have smaller genetic contributions from Asian continental populations 75 77 78 79 80 81 82 Within the Japanese population the Ryukyuans form a separate genome wide cluster as one of two along the main island of Honshu 83 84 The local Jōmon ancestry is estimated at 28 85 or 50 60 86 87 88 depending on various studies The admixture event which formed the admixed Ryukyuans was estimated to be at least 1100 1075 years ago which corresponds to the Gusuku period and is considered to be related to the arrival of migrants from Japan 85 Thus the Ryukyuans appear to be genetically closest to the Ainu from the Ainu viewpoint whereas it is exactly the opposite from the Ryukyuans viewpoint who are closest to the Yamato Japanese 87 According to recent genome studies Ryukyuans and especially Okinawans are the closest to other East Asians but are also relatively homogenous on a genetic level The study did not find much evidence for a strong Jōmon influence on Ryukyuans On average the Okinawans were found to share 80 8 admixture with the Japanese and 19 2 admixture with the Chinese Individual admixture estimates were quite variable and ranged from 5 84 to 57 82 Chinese admixture 79 which likely coincides with historical migrations of Chinese people to Okinawa 89 A study by Kanazawa Kiriyama et al 2019 suggests that Ryukyuans inherit about 27 of their ancestry from the local Jōmon with rest being from the Yayoi people 65 In popular culture EditAspects of the Jōmon culture and pottery were used in the video game The Legend of Zelda Breath of the Wild Nintendo s art director Takizawa Satoru said that the Jōmon culture was the inspiration for the Sheikah slates shrines and other ancient objects in the game 90 A recreated Jōmon village in the form of an experience park Sarashina no Sato which offers different activities can be visited in Chikuma Nagano 91 See also EditHistory of Japan Yayoi people Okhotsk culture Satsumon culture Emishi Indigenous peoples of the AmericasReferences Edit Professor Miura Sukeyuki University Rissho Director Shinoda Kenichi Anthropology Department of Nature Japanese National Museum of Science 2016 06 03 The Origins of Japanese Culture Uncovered Using DNA What happens when we cut into the world of the Kojiki myths using the latest science Discuss Japan Japan Foreign Policy Forum Archived from the original on 2019 01 21 Retrieved 2019 01 21 a b 蝦夷とアテルイ masakawai suppa jp Retrieved 2019 03 26 Jomon woman helps solve Japan s genetic mystery NHK WORLD JAPAN News NHK WORLD Retrieved 2019 07 09 a b Osada Naoki Kawai Yosuke 2021 Exploring models of human migration to the Japanese archipelago using genome wide genetic data Anthropological Science 129 1 45 58 doi 10 1537 ase 201215 S2CID 234247309 Cooke Niall P Mattiangeli Valeria Cassidy Lara M Okazaki Kenji Stokes Caroline A Onbe Shin Hatakeyama Satoshi Machida Kenichi Kasai Kenji Tomioka Naoto Matsumoto Akihiko Ito Masafumi Kojima Yoshitaka Bradley Daniel G Gakuhari Takashi Nakagome Shigeki 2021 Ancient genomics reveals tripartite origins of Japanese populations Science Advances 7 38 eabh2419 Bibcode 2021SciA 7 2419C doi 10 1126 sciadv abh2419 PMC 8448447 PMID 34533991 Cooke Niall P Mattiangeli Valeria Cassidy Lara M Okazaki Kenji Stokes Caroline A Onbe Shin Hatakeyama Satoshi Machida Kenichi Kasai Kenji Tomioka Naoto Matsumoto Akihiko September 2021 Ancient genomics reveals tripartite origins of Japanese populations Science Advances 7 38 eabh2419 Bibcode 2021SciA 7 2419C doi 10 1126 sciadv abh2419 PMC 8448447 PMID 34533991 Gakuhari Takashi Nakagome Shigeki Rasmussen Simon Allentoft Morten E Sato Takehiro Korneliussen Thorfinn Chuinneagain Blanaid Ni Matsumae Hiromi Koganebuchi Kae Schmidt Ryan Mizushima Souichiro Kondo Osamu Shigehara Nobuo Yoneda Minoru Kimura Ryosuke 2020 08 25 Ancient Jomon genome sequence analysis sheds light on migration patterns of early East Asian populations Communications Biology 3 1 437 doi 10 1038 s42003 020 01162 2 ISSN 2399 3642 PMC 7447786 PMID 32843717 http shinkan kahaku go jp kiosk nihon con N2 KA2 1 japanese TAB1 img M01 g03 con png in Japanese Matsumura Hirofumi Anezaki Tomoko Ishida Hajime 2001 A Morphometric Analysis of Jomon Skeletons from the Funadomari Site on Rebun Island Hokkaido Japan Anthropological Science 109 1 21 doi 10 1537 ase 109 1 上田正昭他 日本古代史の謎再考 エコール ド ロイヤル 古代日本を考える1 学生社 1983年 pp 52より Anthropological Science Journal of the Anthropological Society of Nippon Volume 101 1 Schmidt Seguchi 2014 Jōmon culture and the peopling of the Japanese archipelago PDF Jinam Timothy A Kanzawa Kiriyama Hideaki Inoue Ituro Tokunaga Katsushi Omoto Keiichi Saitou Naruya October 2015 Unique characteristics of the Ainu population in Northern Japan Journal of Human Genetics 60 10 565 571 doi 10 1038 jhg 2015 79 PMID 26178428 S2CID 205166287 These include two genes associated with facial structure in Europeans Kondo Osamu Fukase Hitoshi Fukumoto Takashi 2017 Regional variations in the Jomon population revisited on craniofacial morphology Anthropological Science 125 2 85 100 doi 10 1537 ase 170428 S2CID 91039001 Natsuki Daigo 2021 01 19 Migration and adaptation of Jomon people during Pleistocene Holocene transition period in Hokkaido Japan Quaternary International 608 609 49 64 doi 10 1016 j quaint 2021 01 009 ISSN 1040 6182 S2CID 234215606 The Incipient Jomon communities coexisted with the Terminal Upper Paleolithic TUP people that had continued to occupy the region since the stage prior to the LG warm period but the Incipient Jomon population was relatively small a b c Gakuhari Takashi Nakagome Shigeki Rasmussen Simon Allentoft Morten E Sato Takehiro Korneliussen Thorfinn Chuinneagain Blanaid Ni Matsumae Hiromi Koganebuchi Kae Schmidt Ryan Mizushima Souichiro 2020 08 25 Ancient Jomon genome sequence analysis sheds light on migration patterns of early East Asian populations Communications Biology 3 1 437 doi 10 1038 s42003 020 01162 2 ISSN 2399 3642 PMC 7447786 PMID 32843717 小泉保 1998 縄文語の発見 青土社 in Japanese 古代に真実を求めて 第七集 古田史学論集 2004年 古田史学の会 編集 in Japanese Vovin Alexander 1993 A Reconstruction of Proto Ainu BRILL ISBN 978 90 04 09905 0 a b Vovin Alexander 2021 12 21 Austronesians in the Northern Waters International Journal of Eurasian Linguistics 3 2 272 300 doi 10 1163 25898833 00320006 ISSN 2589 8833 S2CID 245508545 Lee Hasegawa Sean Toshikazu April 2013 Evolution of the Ainu Language in Space and Time PLOS ONE 8 4 e62243 Bibcode 2013PLoSO 862243L doi 10 1371 journal pone 0062243 PMC 3637396 PMID 23638014 In this paper we reconstructed spatiotemporal evolution of 19 Ainu language varieties and the results are in strong agreement with the hypothesis that a recent population expansion of the Okhotsk people played a critical role in shaping the Ainu people and their culture Together with the recent archaeological biological and cultural evidence our phylogeographic reconstruction of the Ainu language strongly suggests that the conventional dual structure model must be refined to explain these new bodies of evidence The case of the Ainu language origin we report here also contributes additional detail to the global pattern of language evolution and our language phylogeny might also provide a basis for making further inferences about the cultural dynamics of the Ainu speakers 44 45 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Chaubey Gyaneshwer Driem George van 2020 Munda languages are father tongues but Japanese and Korean are not Evolutionary Human Sciences 2 doi 10 1017 ehs 2020 14 ISSN 2513 843X The Japonic speaking Early Jōmon people must have been drawn in to avail themselves of the pickings of Yayoi agricultural yields and the Yayoi may have prospered and succeeded in multiplying their paternal lineages precisely because they managed to accommodate the Jōmon linguistically and in material ways The dual nature of Japanese population structure was advanced by Miller who proposed that the resident Jōmon population spoke an Altaic language ancestral to modern Japanese and this Altaic tongue underwent Austronesian influence when the islanders absorbed the bearers of the incursive Yayoi culture Crawford Gary W 2011 Advances in Understanding Early Agriculture in Japan Current Anthropology 52 S4 S331 S345 doi 10 1086 658369 JSTOR 10 1086 658369 S2CID 143756517 Kuzmin Y V 2006 Chronology of the Earliest Pottery in East Asia Progress and Pitfalls Antiquity 80 308 362 371 doi 10 1017 s0003598x00093686 a b Jomon crafts and what they were for Heritage of Japan 2007 07 12 Retrieved 2019 08 26 堤隆は旧石器時代の神津島での黒曜石採取については 丸木舟を建造出来るような石器が存在しなかったことから考えて カヤックのようなスキンボートを使用したのではないかと指摘している 堤隆 黒曜石3万年の旅 NHKブックス 2004年 93ページ 本節の典拠は橋口 前掲書 158 172ページ Richard Pilgrim Robert Ellwood 1985 Japanese Religion 1st ed Englewood Cliffs NJ Prentice Hall Inc pp 18 19 ISBN 978 0 13 509282 8 a b c d e Boer Elisabeth de Yang Melinda A Kawagoe Aileen Barnes Gina L 2020 Japan considered from the hypothesis of farmer language spread Evolutionary Human Sciences 2 doi 10 1017 ehs 2020 7 ISSN 2513 843X Yang Melinda A Fan Xuechun Sun Bo Chen Chungyu Lang Jianfeng Ko Ying Chin Tsang Cheng hwa Chiu Hunglin Wang Tianyi Bao Qingchuan Wu Xiaohong 2020 07 17 Ancient DNA indicates human population shifts and admixture in northern and southern China Science 369 6501 282 288 Bibcode 2020Sci 369 282Y doi 10 1126 science aba0909 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 32409524 S2CID 218649510 Jomon Culture and the peopling of the Japanese archipelago advancements in the fields of morphometrics and ancient DNA ResearchGate Retrieved 2019 08 18 a b 縄文人 は独自進化したアジアの特異集団だった 深読み 読売新聞オンライン in Japanese 2017 12 15 Retrieved 2019 02 21 Hammer Michael F Karafet Tatiana M Park Hwayong Omoto Keiichi Harihara Shinji Stoneking Mark Horai Satoshi 2006 Dual origins of the Japanese common ground for hunter gatherer and farmer Y chromosomes Journal of Human Genetics 51 1 47 58 doi 10 1007 s10038 005 0322 0 ISSN 1434 5161 PMID 16328082 a b 崎谷満 DNA 考古 言語の学際研究が示す新 日本列島史 勉誠出版 2009年 in Japanese Schmidt Seguchi 2014 Jōmon culture and the peopling of the Japanese archipelago PDF Gakuhari Takashi Nakagome Shigeki Rasmussen Simon Allentoft Morten E Sato Takehiro Korneliussen Thorfinn Chuinneagain Blanaid Ni Matsumae Hiromi Koganebuchi Kae Schmidt Ryan Mizushima Souichiro Kondo Osamu Shigehara Nobuo Yoneda Minoru Kimura Ryosuke Ishida Hajime Masuyama Tadayuki Yamada Yasuhiro Tajima Atsushi Shibata Hiroki Toyoda Atsushi Tsurumoto Toshiyuki Wakebe Tetsuaki Shitara Hiromi Hanihara Tsunehiko Willerslev Eske Sikora Martin Oota Hiroki 25 August 2020 Ancient Jomon genome sequence analysis sheds light on migration patterns of early East Asian populations Communications Biology 3 1 437 doi 10 1038 s42003 020 01162 2 ISSN 2399 3642 PMC 7447786 PMID 32843717 a b Yang Melinda A Fan Xuechun Sun Bo Chen Chungyu Lang Jianfeng Ko Ying Chin Tsang Cheng hwa Chiu Hunglin Wang Tianyi Bao Qingchuan Wu Xiaohong 2020 07 17 Ancient DNA indicates human population shifts and admixture in northern and southern China Science 369 6501 282 288 Bibcode 2020Sci 369 282Y doi 10 1126 science aba0909 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 32409524 S2CID 218649510 Isemura Takehisa 2011 Distribution of the Broadleaved Evergreen Forest Culture Laurel Forest Culture Chaubey Gyaneshwer Driem George van 2020 Munda languages are father tongues but Japanese and Korean are not Evolutionary Human Sciences 2 doi 10 1017 ehs 2020 14 ISSN 2513 843X Shinoda et al 2020 03 27 調査研究活動報告 鳥取県鳥取市青谷上寺地遺跡出土弥生後期人骨のDNA分析 Archived from the original on 2021 04 10 Retrieved 2021 05 15 Cooke Niall P Mattiangeli Valeria Cassidy Lara M Okazaki Kenji Stokes Caroline A Onbe Shin Hatakeyama Satoshi Machida Kenichi Kasai Kenji Tomioka Naoto Matsumoto Akihiko 2021 Ancient genomics reveals tripartite origins of Japanese populations Science Advances 7 38 eabh2419 Bibcode 2021SciA 7 2419C doi 10 1126 sciadv abh2419 PMC 8448447 PMID 34533991 Yang Melinda A 2022 01 06 A genetic history of migration diversification and admixture in Asia Human Population Genetics and Genomics 2 1 1 32 doi 10 47248 hpgg2202010001 ISSN 2770 5005 神澤ほか 2016 礼文島船泊縄文人の核ゲノム解析 第70回日本人類学大会 in Japanese Mayukh Monda Anders BergstromYali XueFrancesc CalafellHafid LaayouniFerran CasalsPartha P MajumderChris Tyler SmithEmail authorJaume Bertranpetit 2008 Human Genetics May 2017 Volume 136 Issue 5 pp 499 510 Hallast Pille Agdzhoyan Anastasia Balanovsky Oleg Xue Yali Tyler Smith Chris 1 February 2021 A Southeast Asian origin for present day non African human Y chromosomes Human Genetics 140 2 299 307 doi 10 1007 s00439 020 02204 9 PMC 7864842 PMID 32666166 Hammer Michael F Karafet Tatiana M Park Hwayong Omoto Keiichi Harihara Shinji Stoneking Mark Horai Satoshi 2006 Dual origins of the Japanese Common ground for hunter gatherer and farmer Y chromosomes Journal of Human Genetics 51 1 47 58 doi 10 1007 s10038 005 0322 0 PMID 16328082 Mondal Mayukh amp Bergstrom Anders amp Xue Yali amp Calafell Francesc amp Laayouni Hafid amp Casals Ferran amp Majumder Partha amp Tyler Smith Chris amp Bertranpetit Jaume 2017 Y chromosomal sequences of diverse Indian populations and the ancestry of the Andamanese Human Genetics 136 10 1007 s00439 017 1800 0 Ohashi Jun Tokunaga Katsushi Hitomi Yuki Sawai Hiromi Khor Seik Soon Naka Izumi Watanabe Yusuke 2019 06 17 Analysis of whole Y chromosome sequences reveals the Japanese population history in the Jomon period Scientific Reports 9 1 8556 Bibcode 2019NatSR 9 8556W doi 10 1038 s41598 019 44473 z ISSN 2045 2322 PMC 6572846 PMID 31209235 Archaeological mystery solved with modern genetics Y chromosomes reveal population boom and bust in ancient Japan ScienceDaily Retrieved 2021 02 24 a b M Tanaka V M Cabrera A M Gonzalez et al 2004 Mitochondrial Genome Variation in Eastern Asia and the Peopling of Japan a b Uchiyama Taketo Hisazumi Rinnosuke Shimizu Kenshi et al 2007 Mitochondrial DNA Sequence Variation and Phylogenetic Analysis in Japanese Individuals from Miyazaki Prefecture Japanese Journal of Forensic Science and Technology 12 1 83 96 doi 10 3408 jafst 12 83 Ancient mitochondrial DNA sequences of Jomon teeth samples from Sanganji Tohoku district Japan 2 Ancient mitochondrial DNA sequences of Jomon teeth samples from Sanganji Tohoku district Japan by Hideaki Kanzawa Kiriyama https www jstage jst go jp article ase 121 2 121 121113 html char en a b c d YFull MTree 1 01 5902 as of April 20 2019 2017 度第4回日本海学講座 2018年1月13日 土 富山県民会館611号室 14 00 15 30 日本海地域における日本人の歴史 小竹貝塚出土人骨を中心として 国立科学博物館 研究主幹 坂上和弘氏 篠田謙一 日本人になった祖先たち DNAから解明するその多元的構造 日本放送出版協会 NHKブックス 2007年 in Japanese Genetic structure of the Japanese and the formation of the Ainu population 3 Genetic structure of the Japanese and the formation of the Ainu population 4 Coffin JM Hughes SH Varmus HE editors Retroviruses Cold Spring Harbor NY Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press 1997 Hinuma Takeo 1998 From the virus to Japan Explore the Origin of Human Journal of Japanese Rural Medicine 46 6 908 911 doi 10 2185 jjrm 46 908 Willerslev Eske Lambert David M Higham Charles Oota Hiroki Phipps Maude E Sikora Martin Orlando Ludovic Lahr Marta Mirazon Foley Robert A 2018 07 06 The prehistoric peopling of Southeast Asia Science 361 6397 88 92 Bibcode 2018Sci 361 88M doi 10 1126 science aat3628 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 29976827 Finally the Jōmon individual is best modeled as a mix between a population related to group 1 Onge and a population related to East Asians Amis and The oldest layer consists of mainland Hoabinhians group 1 who share ancestry with present day Andamanese Onge Malaysian Jehai and the ancient Japanese Ikawazu Jōmon Consistent with the two layer hypothesis in MSEA we observe a change in ancestry by 4 ka ago supporting a demographic expansion from EA into SEA during the Neolithic transition to farming and Group 1 individuals differ from the other Southeast Asian ancient samples in containing components shared with the supposed descendants of the Hoabinhians the Onge and the Jehai Peninsular Malaysia along with groups from India and Papua New Guinea McColl Hugh Racimo Fernando Vinner Lasse Demeter Fabrice Gakuhari Takashi Moreno Mayar J Victor Van Driem George Gram Wilken Uffe Seguin Orlando Andaine de la Fuente Castro Constanza Wasef Sally Shoocongdej Rasmi Souksavatdy Viengkeo Sayavongkhamdy Thongsa Saidin Mohd Mokhtar Allentoft Morten E Sato Takehiro Malaspinas Anna Sapfo Aghakhanian Farhang A Korneliussen Thorfinn Prohaska Ana Margaryan Ashot De Barros Damgaard Peter Kaewsutthi Supannee Lertrit Patcharee Nguyen Thi Mai Huong Hung Hsiao Chun Minh Tran Thi Nghia Truong Huu et al 2018 The prehistoric peopling of Southeast Asia Science 361 6397 88 92 Bibcode 2018Sci 361 88M doi 10 1126 science aat3628 PMID 29976827 Jomon genome sheds light on East Asian population history Investigating the Prehistory of Tungusic Peoples of Siberia and the Amur Ussuri Region with Complete mtDNA Genome Sequences and Y chromosomal Markers 5 a b c d Late Jomon male and female genome sequences from the Funadomari site in Hokkaido Japan Hideaki Kanzawa Kiriyama Department of Anthropology National Museum of Nature and Science 2018 2019en Late Jomon male and female genome sequences from the Funadomari site in Hokkaido Japan Hideaki Kanzawa Kiriyama Department of Anthropology National Museum of Nature and Science 2018 2019en Quote When 10 different simple or admix tree models were tested to add F23 into the three population tree two trees were supported 1 the simple tree in which F23 first clustered with Han Z 2 073 and 2 the admix tree in which the admixture of East Eurasian Han 86 and West Eurasian Sardinian 14 explained the ancestor of F23 Z 0 011 History Laura Geggel 2019 05 22T13 04 40Z 22 May 2019 Freckled Woman with High Alcohol Tolerance Lived in Japan 3 800 Years Ago livescience com Retrieved 2019 08 14 DNA study Jomon woman could tolerate fatty foods booze The Asahi Shimbun The Asahi Shimbun Retrieved 2019 05 14 Genome info used to reconstruct face of Jomon Period woman from about 3 800 years ago Mainichi Daily News 2018 03 18 Retrieved 2019 08 13 Adachi Noboru Kanzawa Kiriyama Hideaki Nara Takashi Kakuda Tsuneo Nishida Iwao Shinoda Ken Ichi 2021 Ancient genomes from the initial Jomon period new insights into the genetic history of the Japanese archipelago Anthropological Science 129 1 13 22 doi 10 1537 ase 2012132 Cooke Niall P Mattiangeli Valeria Cassidy Lara M Okazaki Kenji Stokes Caroline A Onbe Shin Hatakeyama Satoshi Machida Kenichi Kasai Kenji Tomioka Naoto Matsumoto Akihiko 2021 Ancient genomics reveals tripartite origins of Japanese populations Science Advances 7 38 eabh2419 Bibcode 2021SciA 7 2419C doi 10 1126 sciadv abh2419 ISSN 2375 2548 PMC 8448447 PMID 34533991 Khan Razib 2019 05 24 The Jomon contributed little to the Japanese Gene Expression Retrieved 2019 11 17 Gakuhari Takashi Nakagome Shigeki Rasmussen Simon Allentoft Morten Sato Takehiro Korneliussen Thorfinn Chuinneagain Blanaid Matsumae Hiromi Koganebuchi Kae Schmidt Ryan Mizushima Souichiro March 15 2019 2019 Jomon genome sheds light on East Asian population history PDF bioRxiv pp 3 5 Imamura Keiji 1996 Prehistoric Japan New Perspectives on Insular East Asia University of Hawaii Press ISBN 9780824818524 a b Kanzawa Kiriyama Hideaki Kryukov Kirill Jinam Timothy A Hosomichi Kazuyoshi Saso Aiko Suwa Gen Ueda Shintaroh Yoneda Minoru Tajima Atsushi February 2017 A partial nuclear genome of the Jomons who lived 3000 years ago in Fukushima Japan Journal of Human Genetics 62 2 213 221 doi 10 1038 jhg 2016 110 ISSN 1434 5161 PMC 5285490 PMID 27581845 Jomon woman helps solve Japan s genetic mystery NHK WORLD JAPAN News NHK WORLD Retrieved 2020 11 19 Saitou Naruya Kanzawa Kiriyama Hideaki Jinam Timothy A 2015 06 01 Human genetic diversity in the Japanese Archipelago dual structure and beyond Genes amp Genetic Systems 90 3 147 152 doi 10 1266 ggs 90 147 ISSN 1341 7568 PMID 26510569 Oota Hiroki Mano Shuhei Kimura Ryosuke Yamaguchi Tetsutaro Hanihara Tsunehiko Ishida Hajime Sato Takehiro Nakagome Shigeki 2015 06 01 Model Based Verification of Hypotheses on the Origin of Modern Japanese Revisited by Bayesian Inference Based on Genome Wide SNP Data Molecular Biology and Evolution 32 6 1533 1543 doi 10 1093 molbev msv045 ISSN 0737 4038 PMID 25758010 a b Willcox Bradley J Suzuki Makoto Kwok Pui Yan Donlon Timothy A Nievergelt Caroline M Willcox D Craig He Qimei Hsueh Wen Chi Bendjilali Nasrine 2014 12 01 Who Are the Okinawans Ancestry Genome Diversity and Implications for the Genetic Study of Human Longevity From a Geographically Isolated Population The Journals of Gerontology Series A 69 12 1474 1484 doi 10 1093 gerona glt203 ISSN 1079 5006 PMC 4271021 PMID 24444611 Saitou Naruya Tokunaga Katsushi Omoto Keiichi Niikawa Norio Yanagi Kumiko Naritomi Kenji Kaname Tadashi Suto Yumiko Mano Shuhei December 2012 The history of human populations in the Japanese Archipelago inferred from genome wide SNP data with a special reference to the Ainu and the Ryukyuan populations Journal of Human Genetics 57 12 787 795 doi 10 1038 jhg 2012 114 ISSN 1435 232X PMID 23135232 Consortium The Asian Archival Dna Repository Oota Hiroki Kawamura Shoji Ishida Hajime Nakagome Shigeki Katsumura Takafumi Koganebuchi Kae 2012 Autosomal and Y chromosomal STR markers reveal a close relationship between Hokkaido Ainu and Ryukyu islanders Anthropological Science 120 3 199 208 doi 10 1537 ase 120322 ISSN 0918 7960 Matsukusa Hirotaka Oota Hiroki Haneji Kuniaki Toma Takashi Kawamura Shoji Ishida Hajime 2010 A genetic analysis of the Sakishima islanders reveals no relationship with Taiwan aborigines but shared ancestry with Ainu and main island Japanese American Journal of Physical Anthropology 142 2 211 223 doi 10 1002 ajpa 21212 ISSN 1096 8644 PMID 20091849 Yamaguchi Kabata Yumi Nakazono Kazuyuki Takahashi Atsushi Saito Susumu Hosono Naoya Kubo Michiaki Nakamura Yusuke Kamatani Naoyuki 2008 10 10 Japanese Population Structure Based on SNP Genotypes from 7003 Individuals Compared to Other Ethnic Groups Effects on Population Based Association Studies American Journal of Human Genetics 83 4 445 456 doi 10 1016 j ajhg 2008 08 019 ISSN 0002 9297 PMC 2561928 PMID 18817904 Kamatani Naoyuki Nakamura Yusuke Kubo Michiaki Naoya Hosono Takahashi Atsushi Kumasaka Natsuhiko Tsunoda Tatsuhiko Yamaguchi Kabata Yumi May 2012 Genetic differences in the two main groups of the Japanese population based on autosomal SNPs and haplotypes Journal of Human Genetics 57 5 326 334 doi 10 1038 jhg 2012 26 ISSN 1435 232X PMID 22456480 a b Saitou Naruya Omoto Keiichi Katsushi Tokunaga Inoue Ituro Kanzawa Kiriyama Hideaki Jinam Timothy A October 2015 Unique characteristics of the Ainu population in Northern Japan Journal of Human Genetics 60 10 565 571 doi 10 1038 jhg 2015 79 ISSN 1435 232X PMID 26178428 S2CID 205166287 Horai Satoshi Stoneking Mark Harihara Shinji Omoto Keiichi Park Hwayong Karafet Tatiana M Hammer Michael F January 2006 Dual origins of the Japanese common ground for hunter gatherer and farmer Y chromosomes Journal of Human Genetics 51 1 47 58 doi 10 1007 s10038 005 0322 0 ISSN 1435 232X PMID 16328082 a b Lounes Chikhi Rasteiro Rita June 2009 Revisiting the peopling of Japan an admixture perspective Journal of Human Genetics 54 6 349 354 doi 10 1038 jhg 2009 39 ISSN 1435 232X PMID 19424284 Consortium Pan Asia SNP Jin Li Xu Shuhua Wang Wei R He Yungang 2012 04 05 Paleolithic Contingent in Modern Japanese Estimation and Inference using Genome wide Data Scientific Reports 2 355 Bibcode 2012NatSR 2E 355H doi 10 1038 srep00355 ISSN 2045 2322 PMC 3320058 PMID 22482036 Tsai Shih shan Henry 1996 01 01 The Eunuchs in the Ming Dynasty SUNY Press ISBN 9780791426876 Secrets of Jomon the prehistoric Japanese art that inspired Zelda Breath of the Wild Mic Retrieved 2019 08 25 Go Jomon Experience Japan s Prehistoric Era Unique Nagano Unique Nagano www unique nagano com Retrieved 2019 08 25 Portal Ancient Japan Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jōmon people amp oldid 1171997986, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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