1. The genetic history of the Southern Andes from present-day Mapuche ancestry.
- Author
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Arango-Isaza, Epifanía, Capodiferro, Marco Rosario, Aninao, María José, Babiker, Hiba, Aeschbacher, Simon, Achilli, Alessandro, Posth, Cosimo, Campbell, Roberto, Martínez, Felipe I., Heggarty, Paul, Sadowsky, Scott, Shimizu, Kentaro K., and Barbieri, Chiara
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MAPUCHE (South American people) , *INDIGENOUS peoples of South America , *TRADITIONAL knowledge , *GENETIC profile , *GENEALOGY - Abstract
The southernmost regions of South America harbor some of the earliest evidence of human presence in the Americas. However, connections with the rest of the continent and the contextualization of present-day indigenous ancestries remain poorly resolved. In this study, we analyze the genetic ancestry of one of the largest indigenous groups in South America: the Mapuche. We generate genome-wide data from 64 participants from three Mapuche populations in Southern Chile: Pehuenche, Lafkenche, and Huilliche. Broadly, we describe three main ancestry blocks with a common origin, which characterize the Southern Cone, the Central Andes, and Amazonia. Within the Southern Cone, ancestors of the Mapuche lineages differentiated from those of the Far South during the Middle Holocene and did not experience further migration waves from the north. We find that the deep genetic split between the Central and Southern Andes is followed by instances of gene flow, which may have accompanied the southward spread of cultural traits from the Central Andes, including crops and loanwords from Quechua into Mapudungun (the language of the Mapuche). Finally, we report close genetic relatedness between the three populations analyzed, with the Huilliche characterized additionally by intense recent exchanges with the Far South. Our findings add new perspectives on the genetic (pre)history of South America, from the first settlement through to the present-day indigenous presence. Follow-up fieldwork took these results back to the indigenous communities to contextualize the genetic narrative alongside indigenous knowledge and perspectives. [Display omitted] [Display omitted] • Mapuche's genetic profile belongs to the Southern Cone broad genetic ancestry • Their ancestors exchanged genes, words, crops, and ceramics with the Central Andes • They are connected to ancient individuals in Chile up to 5,100 years ago • They present relatively high isolation from other South American groups Arango-Isaza et al. provide a genetic analysis of the South American Indigenous Mapuche ancestry that reveals local origin up to the Middle Holocene, relatively high isolation, and connections with the Central Andes. The study connects present-time Indigenous roots to the ancient history of southern South America. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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