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Paths and timings of the peopling of Polynesia inferred from genomic networks

Authors :
María C. Ávila-Arcos
Alexandra Sockell
Consuelo D. Quinto-Cortés
Alexander J. Mentzer
Keolu Fox
Mauricio Moraga
Scott Huntsman
Karla Sandoval
Javier Blanco-Portillo
Tom Parks
Celeste Eng
Kathryn J. H. Robson
Julian R. Homburger
Adrian V. S. Hill
Abdul Salam M. Sofro
Ricardo A. Verdugo
Andrés Moreno-Estrada
Esteban G. Burchard
Sonia Haoa-Cardinali
Carlos Bustamante
Juan Esteban Rodríguez-Rodríguez
Kathryn Auckland
Juan Francisco Miquel-Poblete
Christopher R. Gignoux
Alexander G. Ioannidis
Erika Hagelberg
Carmina Barberena-Jonas
Source :
Nature
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Polynesia was settled in a series of extraordinary voyages across an ocean spanning one third of the Earth1, but the sequences of islands settled remain unknown and their timings disputed. Currently, several centuries separate the dates suggested by different archaeological surveys2–4. Here, using genome-wide data from merely 430 modern individuals from 21 key Pacific island populations and novel ancestry-specific computational analyses, we unravel the detailed genetic history of this vast, dispersed island network. Our reconstruction of the branching Polynesian migration sequence reveals a serial founder expansion, characterized by directional loss of variants, that originated in Samoa and spread first through the Cook Islands (Rarotonga), then to the Society (Tōtaiete mā) Islands (11th century), the western Austral (Tuha’a Pae) Islands and Tuāmotu Archipelago (12th century), and finally to the widely separated, but genetically connected, megalithic statue-building cultures of the Marquesas (Te Henua ‘Enana) Islands in the north, Raivavae in the south, and Easter Island (Rapa Nui), the easternmost of the Polynesian islands, settled in approximately ad 1200 via Mangareva. Analysis of genomic networks from 430 modern individuals across 21 Pacific island populations reveals the human settlement history of Polynesia.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a244291fa627ede3dded7d49250b31b9