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Ancient DNA reveals a major genetic change during the transition from hunting economy to reindeer husbandry in northern Scandinavia

Authors :
Knut Røed
Anne Karin Hufthammer
Gro Bjørnstad
Øystein Flagstad
Source :
Journal of Archaeological Science. 39:102-108
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2012.

Abstract

The timing and origin of reindeer domestication has been highly debated. Recent molecular analyses show several mitochondrial lineages of domestic reindeer across Eurasia suggesting different origins of Fennoscandian and Siberian domestic reindeer. In order to investigate the origin of domestic Fennoscandian reindeer, we sequenced a mitochondrial control region fragment of 68 ancient reindeer remains from archaeological sites in Finnmark, the major county for extant reindeer husbandry in Norway, spanning from ca. BC 3400 to AD 1800. The majority of the Stone and Iron Age reindeer assemblages in Finnmark are from settlements in the eastern part of the county, in the Varangerfjord area. The reindeer remains from these settlements show affiliation to the large and complex Beringian haplotype cluster, found in extant reindeer from the Kola Peninsula to north-eastern Russia. A distinct haplotype shift is observed in the late medieval period, when the typical haplotype signatures of extant domestic Fennoscandian reindeer appeared in coastal regions of both eastern and western Finnmark. These haplotypes were not found among the Stone and Iron Age wild reindeer samples of Finnmark, suggesting that this population was not ancestral to extant domestic reindeer of Fennoscandia.

Details

ISSN :
03054403
Volume :
39
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Archaeological Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........9ca5fa1e9ce2d4c487f5942a0eefa6dc
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jas.2011.09.006