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Human Biology A DNA Search for the First Americans Links Amazon Groups to Indigenous Australians

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dyno avatar
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The new genetic analysis takes aim at the theory that just one founding group settled the Americas

https://tf-cmsv2-smithsonianmag-media.s3.amazonaws.com/filer/9c/5b/9c5b6819-84f1-46c3-83e2-6ae116d13064/dwf15-475956_edit.jp g" alt="Surui man" />
Brazil's Surui people, like the man pictured above, share ancestry with indigenous Australians, new evidence suggests. PAULO WHITAKER/Reuters/Corbis

More than 15,000 years ago, humans began crossing a land bridge called Beringia that connected their native home in Eurasia to modern-day Alaska. Who knows what the journey entailed or what motivated them to leave, but once they arrived, they spread southward across the Americas.

The prevailing theory is that the first Americans arrived in a single wave, and all Native American populations today descend from this one group of adventurous founders. But now there’s a kink in that theory. The latest genetic analyses back up skeletal studies suggesting that some groups in the Amazon share a common ancestor with indigenous Australians and New Guineans. The find hints at the possibility that not one but two groups migrated across these continents to give rise to the first Americans.

“Our results suggest this working model that we had is not correct. There’s another early population that founded modern Native American populations,” says study coauthor David Reich, a geneticist at Harvard University.  

The origin of the first Americans has been hotly debated for decades, and the questions of how many migratory groups crossed the land bridge, as well as how people dispersed after the crossing, continue to spark controversy. In 2008, a team studying DNA from 10,800-year-old poop concluded that a group of ancient humans in Oregon has ancestral ties to modern Native Americans. And in 2014, genetic analysis linked a 12,000-year-old skeleton found in an underwater cave in Mexico to modern Native Americans.

Genetic studies have since connected both these ancient and modern humans to ancestral populations in Eurasia, adding to the case that a single migratory surge produced the first human settlers in the Americas. Aleutian Islanders are a notable exception. They descend from a smaller second influx of Eurasians 6,000 years ago that bear a stronger resemblance to modern populations, and some Canadian tribes have been linked to a third wave.

Reich’s group had also previously found genetic evidence for a single founding migration. But while sifting through genomes from cultures in Central and South America, Pontus Skoglund, a researcher in Reich’s lab, noticed that the Suruí and Karitiana people of the Amazon had stronger ties to indigenous groups in Australasia—Australians, New Guineans and Andaman Islanders—than to Eurasians.

Other analyses haven’t looked at Amazonian populations in depth, and genetic samples are hard to come by. So the Harvard lab teamed up with researchers in Brazil to collect more samples from Amazonian groups to investigate the matter. Together they scrutinized the genomes of 30 Native American groups in Central and South America. Using four statistical strategies, they compared the genomes to each other and to those of 197 populations from around the world. The signal persisted. Three Amazonian groups—Suruí, Karitiana and Xavante—all had more in common with Australasians than any group in Siberia. 

https://tf-cmsv2-smithsonianmag-media.s3.amazonaws.com/filer/dc/5c/dc5c95b1-bed2-4c40-845c-c9634a706cfb/image-2.jp g" alt="Native American Ancestery Map" />
Researchers mapped similarities in genes, mutations and random pieces of DNA of Central and South American tribes with other groups. Warmer colors indicate the strongest affinities. Pontus Skoglund, Harvard Medical School

The DNA that links these groups had to come from somewhere. Because the groups have about as much in common with Australians as they do with New Guineans, the researchers think that they all share a common ancestor that lived tens of thousands of years ago in Asia but that doesn’t otherwise persist today. One branch of this family tree moved north to Siberia, while the other spread south to New Guinea and Australia. The northern branch likely migrated across the land bridge in a separate surge from the Eurasian founders. The researchers have dubbed this hypothetical second group “Population y” for ypykuéra, or “ancestor” in Tupi, a language spoken by the Suruí and Karitiana.

When exactly Population y arrived in the Americans remains unclear—before, after or simultaneously with the first wave of Eurasians are all possibilities. Reich and his colleagues suspect the line is fairly old, and at some point along the way, Population y probably mixed with the lineage of Eurasian settlers. Amazonian tribes remain isolated from many other South American groups, so that’s probably why the signal remains strong in their DNA.  

The results line up with studies of ancient skulls unearthed in Brazil and Colombia that bear stronger resemblance to those of Australasians than the skulls of other Native Americans. Based on the skeletal remains, some anthropologists had previously pointed to more than one founding group, but others had brushed off the similarities as a byproduct of these groups living and working in similar environments. Bones can only be measured and interpreted so many ways, while genes usually make a more concrete case.

“The problem so far was that there has never been strong genetic evidence to support this notion,” says Mark Hubbe, an anthropologist at Ohio State University who was not affiliated with the latest study.

But even genetic evidence is subject to skepticism and scrutiny. Cecil Lewis Jr., an anthropological geneticist at the University of Oklahoma, cautions that Amazonian groups are low on genetic diversity and are more susceptible to genetic drift. “This raises very serious questions about the role of chance … in creating this Australasian affinity,” he says.

Another group led by Eske Willerslev and Maanasa Raghavan at the University if Copenhagen reports in Science today that Native Americans descend from just one line that crossed the land bridge no earlier than 23,000 years ago. While they didn’t look at Amazonian groups in-depth, the team did find a weak link between Australasians and some South American populations, which they chalk up to gene flow from Eskimos. 

There’s just one problem: Evidence of Population y doesn’t persist in modern Eurasian groups, nor does it seem to show up in other Native Americans. If Aleutian Islanders or their ancestors had somehow mixed with an Australasian group up north or made their way south to the Amazon, they'd leave genetic clues along the way. “It’s not a clear alternative,” argues Reich. 

Both studies therefore suggest that the ancestry of the first Americans is a lot more complicated than scientists had envisioned. “There is a greater diversity of Native American founding populations than previously thought,” says Skoglund. “And these founding populations connect indigenous groups in far apart places of the world.”

https://www.science.org/content/article/mysterious-link-emerges-between-native-americans-and-people-half-globe-away

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Bacano G
Posts: 1272
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Indigenous Australians are closer to Melanesians while the Brazilian Amerindians are closer to Filipinos in my opinion. 

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Elgin Productions
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The new research builds on earlier work, first published(opens in new tab) in 2015, which showed that ancient and modern Indigenous people in the Amazon shared specific genetic signatures — known as the Ypikuéra, or Y signal — with modern-day Indigenous groups in South Asia, Australia and Melanesia, a group of islands in Oceania. 

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Prau123 avatar
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I'm sure I'm not the first to suggest this, but I think the Australasian gene flow found on those Amazon tribes (Surui, Kariatiana, and Xavante) likely predate the arrival of the Native American groups into the New World if the Australasian gene flow migrated via the Bering Strait.  I can't see the Australasian gene flow migrating after the Native Americans through the Bering Strait.  Otherwise you would see this Australasian gene flow among Far East Asians, Coastal Siberians, and through a path in North and South American to the Amazon, and apparently we don't see that.

But if the Australasian gene flow arrived in the Amazon from a different path, well that's a different story.  Could they have island hopped across the Pacific especially when the sea levels were much lower?  But then why don't we see this Australasian gene flow west of the Andes Mountains?  Unless they were eradicated by the incoming waves of Native Americans that came later.  The Amazon would then preserve their genetic legacy east of the Andes in this scenario.  Perhaps the Australasian gene flow does still exist west of the Andes, but population geneticist just haven't detected it yet.  But another question begs, could these early Australasians have had the technology and skill to migrate to South America from Melanesia or Australia?  Yes, there are some islands in between these landmasses in the Pacific, and they do form a kind of a string especially in the western half of the Pacific, and perhaps some more islands were exposed in the past when the sea levels were lower.  But despite all this, it would still require very advance technology, skill, and knowledge for its time which was around 20,000 years ago. Perhaps they did have all that technology, skill, and knowledge, and it's just lost to time.  Another challenge is getting over the Andes Mountains.  Overtime, perhaps a few managed to get over the Andes Mountains and found populations on the eastern side in the Amazon and elsewhere. 

Another possibility is that they sailed from Southeast Asia to the southern tip of Africa, and crossed the Atlantic Ocean to Brazil which was suggested to me by someone from this forum or the previous one.  When this happened (assuming it happened at all) is anyone's guess.  One possibility is that Austronesians could have brought this Australasian gene flow from this direction.  But we would need to find Austronesian genes in those Amazon tribe groups also.  I think there was a study that showed that some Amazon tribes have some genes related to Austronesians (Mt DNA B or a subclade, it's been a while, please excuse me), but I haven't seen more studies on this.    

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