An Ancient Harappan Genome Lacks Ancestry from Steppe Pastoralists or Iranian Farmers.
| Authors | |
| Abstract | We report an ancient genome from the Indus Valley Civilization (IVC). The individual we sequenced fits as a mixture of people related to ancient Iranians (the largest component) and Southeast Asian hunter-gatherers, a unique profile that matches ancient DNA from 11 genetic outliers from sites in Iran and Turkmenistan in cultural communication with the IVC. These individuals had little if any Steppe pastoralist-derived ancestry, showing that it was not ubiquitous in northwest South Asia during the IVC as it is today. The Iranian-related ancestry in the IVC derives from a lineage leading to early Iranian farmers, herders, and hunter-gatherers before their ancestors separated, contradicting the hypothesis that the shared ancestry between early Iranians and South Asians reflects a large-scale spread of western Iranian farmers east. Instead, sampled ancient genomes from the Iranian plateau and IVC descend from different groups of hunter-gatherers who began farming without being connected by substantial movement of people. |
| Year of Publication | 2019
|
| Journal | Cell
|
| Date Published | 2019 Sep 04
|
| ISSN | 1097-4172
|
| DOI | 10.1016/j.cell.2019.08.048
|
| PubMed ID | 31495572
|
| Links |