Back to Search Start Over

Patrilocality and hunter-gatherer-related ancestry of populations in East-Central Europe during the Middle Bronze Age

Authors :
Chylenski, Maciej
Makarowicz, Przemyslaw
Juras, Anna
Krzewinska, Maja
Pospieszny, Lukasz
Ehler, Edvard
Breszka, Agnieszka
Gorski, Jacek
Taras, Halina
Szczepanek, Anita
Polanska, Marta
Wlodarczak, Piotr
Lasota-Kus, Anna
Wojcik, Irena
Romaniszyn, Jan
Szmyt, Marzena
Kosko, Aleksander
Ignaczak, Marcin
Sadowski, Sylwester
Matoga, Andrzej
Grossman, Anna
Ilchyshyn, Vasyl
Yahodinska, Maryna O.
Romanska, Adriana
Tunia, Krzysztof
Przybyla, Marcin
Grygiel, Ryszard
Szostek, Krzysztof
Dabert, Miroslawa
Gotherstrom, Anders
Jakobsson, Mattias
Malmström, Helena
Chylenski, Maciej
Makarowicz, Przemyslaw
Juras, Anna
Krzewinska, Maja
Pospieszny, Lukasz
Ehler, Edvard
Breszka, Agnieszka
Gorski, Jacek
Taras, Halina
Szczepanek, Anita
Polanska, Marta
Wlodarczak, Piotr
Lasota-Kus, Anna
Wojcik, Irena
Romaniszyn, Jan
Szmyt, Marzena
Kosko, Aleksander
Ignaczak, Marcin
Sadowski, Sylwester
Matoga, Andrzej
Grossman, Anna
Ilchyshyn, Vasyl
Yahodinska, Maryna O.
Romanska, Adriana
Tunia, Krzysztof
Przybyla, Marcin
Grygiel, Ryszard
Szostek, Krzysztof
Dabert, Miroslawa
Gotherstrom, Anders
Jakobsson, Mattias
Malmström, Helena
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The demographic history of East-Central Europe after the Neolithic period remains poorly explored, despite this region being on the confluence of various ecological zones and cultural entities. Here, the descendants of societies associated with steppe pastoralists form Early Bronze Age were followed by Middle Bronze Age populations displaying unique characteristics. Particularly, the predominance of collective burials, the scale of which, was previously seen only in the Neolithic. The extent to which this re-emergence of older traditions is a result of genetic shift or social changes in the MBA is a subject of debate. Here by analysing 91 newly generated genomes from Bronze Age individuals from present Poland and Ukraine, we discovered that Middle Bronze Age populations were formed by an additional admixture event involving a population with relatively high proportions of genetic component associated with European hunter-gatherers and that their social structure was based on, primarily patrilocal, multigenerational kin-groups. By analysing 91 Bronze Age genomes from East-Central Europe, the authors discovered that Middle Bronze Age populations were formed by an admixture event involving hunter-gatherers and that the social structure of resulting population was primarily patrilocal.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1400065007
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038.s41467-023-40072-9