Article Synopsis

  • The Canaanites, who lived in the Levant during the Bronze Age, created a significant culture but left few written records, making their origins and connections to modern populations uncertain.
  • Recent genomic analysis of 3,700-year-old remains from Sidon, along with 99 modern Lebanese genomes, shows that the Canaanites had a widespread and influential ancestry in the region derived from local Neolithic groups and eastern migrants.
  • The study highlights that modern Lebanese people primarily descend from Canaanite-related populations, indicating genetic continuity in the Levant, while also revealing the presence of Eurasian ancestry that entered the region between 3,750-2,170 years ago due to later conquests.

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Article Abstract

The Canaanites inhabited the Levant region during the Bronze Age and established a culture that became influential in the Near East and beyond. However, the Canaanites, unlike most other ancient Near Easterners of this period, left few surviving textual records and thus their origin and relationship to ancient and present-day populations remain unclear. In this study, we sequenced five whole genomes from ∼3,700-year-old individuals from the city of Sidon, a major Canaanite city-state on the Eastern Mediterranean coast. We also sequenced the genomes of 99 individuals from present-day Lebanon to catalog modern Levantine genetic diversity. We find that a Bronze Age Canaanite-related ancestry was widespread in the region, shared among urban populations inhabiting the coast (Sidon) and inland populations (Jordan) who likely lived in farming societies or were pastoral nomads. This Canaanite-related ancestry derived from mixture between local Neolithic populations and eastern migrants genetically related to Chalcolithic Iranians. We estimate, using linkage-disequilibrium decay patterns, that admixture occurred 6,600-3,550 years ago, coinciding with recorded massive population movements in Mesopotamia during the mid-Holocene. We show that present-day Lebanese derive most of their ancestry from a Canaanite-related population, which therefore implies substantial genetic continuity in the Levant since at least the Bronze Age. In addition, we find Eurasian ancestry in the Lebanese not present in Bronze Age or earlier Levantines. We estimate that this Eurasian ancestry arrived in the Levant around 3,750-2,170 years ago during a period of successive conquests by distant populations.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5544389PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ajhg.2017.06.013DOI Listing

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