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A minimally-invasive method for ancient DNA sampling of Prehistoric bone and antler tools and hunting weapons

Authors :
José-Miguel Tejero
Olivia Cheronet
Pere Gelabert
Brina Zagorc
Esteban Alvarez
Aline Averbouh
Guy Bar-Oz
Anna Belfer-Cohen
Marjolein D. Bosch
Florian Brück
Marián Cueto
Martin Dockner
Josep Maria Fullola
Diego Gárate
Michael Giannakoulis
Cynthia González
Nino Jakeli
Xavier Mangado
Tengiz Meshveliani
Petr Neruda
Philip Nigst
Petra G. Šimková
Jesús Tapia
Marta Sánchez de la Torre
Catherine Schwab
Gerhard Weber
Ron Pinhasi
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2023.

Abstract

Internal and external bony tissues from diverse mammalian taxa are one of the primary animal raw materials exploited for technical and symbolic purposes by Eurasian Upper Palaeolithic hunter-gatherers. Identifying the source species used for osseous raw material is critical to gain insights into these populations’ behaviour, technology, and subsistence. The study of osseous tools has advanced in the last few years by combining archaeological and biomolecular methods. Ancient genomics opens many new analytical opportunities. Ancient DNA (aDNA) can provide a wealth of information about the animal sources of these objects. Unfortunately, aDNA analyses often involve destructive sampling. Here, we develop and apply a minimally-invasive aDNA sampling method for an assemblage of 42 prehistoric hunting weapons and tools from various Eurasian archaeological sites. We evaluated the impact of our approach on the specimens visually, microscopically and through Micro-CT scans. The surface impacts are marginal, ranging from 0.3-0.4 mm. Using a custom-made DNA capture kit for 54 mammalian species, we obtained sufficient aDNA to identify the taxa of 33% of the objects. For one of the tools, we recovered enough endogenous aDNA to infer the genetic affinities of the individual. Our results also demonstrate that ancient antler, one of the primary raw materials used during a large part of prehistory, is a reliable source of aDNA. Our minimally-invasive aDNA sampling method is therefore effective while preserving osseous objects for potential further analyses: morphometric, technical, genetic, radiometric and more.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........f0c698156a890e354e07d72d64b93f7a