May 8, 2024

A high-resolution picture of kinship practices in an Early Neolithic tomb – Nature

  • 1.

    Saville, A. Hazleton North, Gloucestershire, 1979–82: the Excavation of a Neolithic Long Cairn of the Cotswold-Severn Group (Historic Buildings & Monuments Commission for England, 1990).

  • 2.

    Brace, S. et al. Ancient genomes indicate population replacement in Early Neolithic Britain. Nat. Ecol. Evol. 3, 765–771 (2019).

    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 3.

    Olalde, I. et al. The Beaker phenomenon and the genomic transformation of northwest Europe. Nature 555, 190–196 (2018).

    ADS 
    CAS 
    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 4.

    Cassidy, L. M. et al. A dynastic elite in monumental Neolithic society. Nature 582, 384-388 (2020).

    ADS 
    CAS 
    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 5.

    Mittnik, A. et al. Kinship-based social inequality in Bronze Age Europe. Science 366, 731–734 (2019).

    ADS 
    CAS 
    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 6.

    Yaka, R. et al. Variable kinship patterns in Neolithic Anatolia revealed by ancient genomes. Curr. Biol. 31, 2455-2468.e18 (2021).

    CAS 
    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 7.

    Amorim, C. E. G. et al. Understanding 6th-century barbarian social organization and migration through paleogenomics. Nat. Commun. 9, 3547 (2018).

    ADS 
    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 8.

    Sánchez-Quinto, F. et al. Megalithic tombs in western and northern Neolithic Europe were linked to a kindred society. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 116, 9469–9474 (2019).

    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 9.

    Scheib, C. L. et al. East Anglian early Neolithic monument burial linked to contemporary Megaliths. Ann. Hum. Biol. 46, 145–149 (2019).

    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 10.

    Schneider, D. M. A Critique of the Study of Kinship (Univ. Michigan Press, 1984).

  • 11.

    Carsten, J. After Kinship (Cambridge Univ. Press, 2003).

  • 12.

    Brück, J. Ancient DNA, kinship and relational identities in Bronze Age Britain. Antiquity 95, 228–237 (2021).

    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 13.

    Meadows, J., Barclay, A. & Bayliss, A. A short passage of time: the dating of the hazleton long cairn revisited. Cambridge Archaeol. J. 17, 45–64 (2007).

    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 14.

    Rowley-Conwy, P. & Legge, T. in The Oxford Handbook of Neolithic Europe (eds. Fowler, C., Hofmann, D. & Harding, J.) 429–446 (Oxford Univ. Press, 2015).

  • 15.

    Cuthbert, G. S. Enriching the Neolithic: the Forgotten People of the Barrows. PhD thesis, Univ. Exeter (2019).

  • 16.

    Rogers, J. et al. in Hazleton North, Gloucestershire, 1979-82: The Excavation of a Neolithic Long Cairn of the Cotswold-Severn Group (ed. A. Saville) 182–198 (Historic Buildings & Monuments Commission for England, 1990).

  • 17.

    Hedges, R., Saville, A. & O’Connell, T. Characterizing the diet of individuals at the Neolithic chambered tomb of Hazleton North, Gloucestershire, England, using stable isotopic analysis. Archaeometry 50, 114–128 (2008).

    CAS 
    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 18.

    Charlton, S. et al. New insights into Neolithic milk consumption through proteomic analysis of dental calculus. Archaeol. Anthropol. Sci. 11, 6183–6196 (2019).

    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 19.

    Neil, S., Evans, J., Montgomery, J. & Scarre, C. Isotopic evidence for residential mobility of farming communities during the transition to agriculture in Britain. R. Soc. Open Sci. 3, 150522 (2016).

    ADS 
    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 20.

    Smith, M. & Brickley, M. People of the Long Barrows: Life, Death and Burial in Earlier Neolithic Britain (The History Press, 2009).

  • 21.

    Surowiec, A., Snyder, K. T. & Creanza, N. A worldwide view of matriliny: using cross-cultural analyses to shed light on human kinship systems. Philos. Trans. R. Soc. B Biol. Sci. 374, 20180077 (2019).

    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 22.

    Fowler, C. Social arrangements: kinship, descent and affinity in the mortuary architecture of Early Neolithic Britain and Ireland. Archaeol. Dialogues (in the press).

  • 23.

    Robb, J. & Harris, O. J. T. Becoming gendered in European prehistory: was Neolithic gender fundamentally different? Am. Antiq. 83, 128–147 (2018).

    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 24.

    Stone, L. & King, D. E. Kinship and Gender: An Introduction (Routledge, 2018).

  • 25.

    Robb, J. What can we really say about skeletal part representation, MNI and funerary ritual? A simulation approach. J. Archaeol. Sci. Reports 10, 684–692 (2016).

    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 26.

    Rohland, N., Glocke, I., Aximu-Petri, A. & Meyer, M. Extraction of highly degraded DNA from ancient bones, teeth and sediments for high-throughput sequencing. Nat. Protoc. 13, 2447–2461 (2018).

    CAS 
    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 27.

    Gansauge, M. T., Aximu-Petri, A., Nagel, S. & Meyer, M. Manual and automated preparation of single-stranded DNA libraries for the sequencing of DNA from ancient biological remains and other sources of highly degraded DNA. Nat. Protoc. 15, 2279–2300 (2020).

    CAS 
    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 28.

    Rohland, N., Harney, E., Mallick, S., Nordenfelt, S. & Reich, D. Partial uracil–DNA–glycosylase treatment for screening of ancient DNA. Philos. Trans. R. Soc. Lond. B 370, 20130624 (2015).

    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 29.

    Fu, Q. et al. An early modern human from Romania with a recent Neanderthal ancestor. Nature 524, 216–219 (2015).

    ADS 
    CAS 
    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 30.

    Fu, Q. et al. DNA analysis of an early modern human from Tianyuan Cave, China. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 110, 2223–2227 (2013).

    ADS 
    CAS 
    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 31.

    Olalde, I. et al. The genomic history of the Iberian Peninsula over the past 8000 years. Science 363, 1230–1234 (2019).

    ADS 
    CAS 
    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 32.

    Li, H. & Durbin, R. Fast and accurate short read alignment with Burrows–Wheeler transform. Bioinformatics 25, 1754–1760 (2009).

    CAS 
    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 33.

    Korneliussen, T. S., Albrechtsen, A. & Nielsen, R. ANGSD: analysis of next generation sequencing data. BMC Bioinformatics 15, 356 (2014).

    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 34.

    Fu, Q. et al. A revised timescale for human evolution based on ancient mitochondrial genomes. Curr. Biol. 23, 553–559 (2013).

    CAS 
    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 35.

    Weissensteiner, H. et al. HaploGrep 2: mitochondrial haplogroup classification in the era of high-throughput sequencing. Nucleic Acids Res. 44, W58-W63 (2016).

    CAS 
    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 36.

    Kennett, D. J. et al. Archaeogenomic evidence reveals prehistoric matrilineal dynasty. Nat. Commun. 8, 14115 (2017).

    ADS 
    CAS 
    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 37.

    van de Loosdrecht, M. et al. Pleistocene North African genomes link Near Eastern and sub-Saharan African human populations. Science 360, 548–552 (2018).

    ADS 
    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 38.

    Busing, F. M. T. A., Meijer, E. & Van Der Leeden, R. Delete- m Jackknife for Unequal m. Stat. Comput. 9, 3–8 (1999).

    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 39.

    Monroy Kuhn, J. M., Jakobsson, M. & Günther, T. Estimating genetic kin relationships in prehistoric populations. PLoS ONE 13, e0195491 (2018).

    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 40.

    Williams, C. et al. A rapid, accurate approach to inferring pedigrees in endogamous populations. Preprint at https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.02.25.965376 (2020).

  • 41.

    Kong, A. et al. Fine-scale recombination rate differences between sexes, populations and individuals. Nature 467, 1099–1103 (2010).

    ADS 
    CAS 
    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 42.

    Hanghøj, K., Moltke, I., Andersen, P. A., Manica, A. & Korneliussen, T. S. Fast and accurate relatedness estimation from high-throughput sequencing data in the presence of inbreeding. Gigascience 8, giz034 (2019).

    PubMed 
    PubMed Central 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 43.

    Patterson, N. et al. Ancient admixture in human history. Genetics 192, 1065–1093 (2012).

    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 44.

    Cassidy, L. M. et al. Neolithic and Bronze Age migration to Ireland and establishment of the insular Atlantic genome. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 113, 368–373 (2016).

    ADS 
    CAS 
    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 45.

    Lazaridis, I. et al. Ancient human genomes suggest three ancestral populations for present-day Europeans. Nature 513, 409–413 (2014).

    ADS 
    CAS 
    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 46.

    Biagini, S. A. et al. People from Ibiza: an unexpected isolate in the Western Mediterranean. Eur. J. Hum. Genet. 27, 941–951 (2019).

    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • 47.

    Ringbauer, H., Novembre, J. & Steinrücken, M. Parental relatedness through time revealed by runs of homozygosity in ancient DNA. Nat. Commun. 12, 5425 (2021).

    ADS 
    CAS 
    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Source link