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Sicily is a key region for understanding the agricultural transition in the Mediterranean because of its central position. Here, we present genomic and stable isotopic data for 19 prehistoric Sicilians covering the Mesolithic to Bronze Age periods (10,700-4,100 yBP). We find that Early Mesolithic hunter-gatherers (HGs) from Sicily are a highly drifted lineage of the Early Holocene western European HGs, whereas Late Mesolithic HGs carry ∼20% ancestry related to northern and (south) eastern European HGs, indicating substantial gene flow. Early Neolithic farmers are genetically most similar to farmers from the Balkans and Greece, with only ∼7% of ancestry from local Mesolithic HGs. The genetic discontinuities during the Mesolithic and Early Neolithic match the changes in material culture and diet. Three outlying individuals dated to ∼8,000 yBP; however, suggest that hunter-gatherers interacted with incoming farmers at , resulting in a mixed economy and diet for a brief interlude at the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.isci.2022.104244 | DOI Listing |
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
April 2025
De la Préhistoire à l'Actuel: Culture, Environnement et Anthropologie, Ministère de la Culture, UMR 5199, CNRS, University of Bordeaux, Pessac 33600, France.
Transitions from foraging to food-production represent a worldwide turning point in recent human history. In the Middle Nile Valley this cultural shift occurred between the sixth and beginning of the fifth millennium BCE. Significant craniodental morphological differences remain inadequately tested by biometric analyses of ancestry and may reflect population origins or diet change between the last hunter-fisher-gatherers (Mesolithic) and first food-producers (Neolithic).
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August 2024
PACEA, UMR 5199, Université de Bordeaux, CNRS, Ministère de la Culture, Pessac, France.
Objectives: This study presents biological affinities between the last hunter-fisher-gatherers and first food-producing societies from the Nile Valley. We investigate odontometric and dental tissue proportion changes between these populations from the Middle Nile Valley and acknowledge the biological processes behind them.
Materials And Methods: Dental remains of 329 individuals from Nubia and Central Sudan that date from the Late Pleistocene to the mid-Holocene are studied.
iScience
May 2022
Department of Archaeogenetics, Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History (MPI-SHH), Kahlaische Strasse 10, 07745 Jena, Germany.
PLoS One
January 2019
Etablissement Français du Sang PACA Corse, Biologie des Groupes Sanguins, Marseille, France.
Nat Commun
June 2014
1] School of Archaeology, University College Dublin, Belfield, Dublin 4, Ireland [2] Smurfit Institute of Genetics, Trinity College Dublin, Dublin 2, Ireland.
The Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) represents the most significant climatic event since the emergence of anatomically modern humans (AMH). In Europe, the LGM may have played a role in changing morphological features as a result of adaptive and stochastic processes. We use craniometric data to examine morphological diversity in pre- and post-LGM specimens.
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