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Northwest African Neolithic initiated by migrants from Iberia and Levant

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Author
Simoes, Luciana
Günter, Thorsten
Martínez Sánchez, Rafael M.
Vera Rodríguez, Juan Carlos
Iriarte, Eneko
Rodríguez Varela, Ricardo
Bokbot, Youssef
Valdiosera, Cristina
Jakobsson, Mattias
Publisher
Nature
Date
2023
Subject
Africa, Northern
Agriculture
Genome
History, Ancient
Human Migration
Humans
Transients and Migrants
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Abstract
In northwestern Africa, lifestyle transitioned from foraging to food production around 7,400 years ago but what sparked that change remains unclear. Archaeological data support conflicting views: (1) that migrant European Neolithic farmers brought the new way of life to North Africa1,2,3 or (2) that local hunter-gatherers adopted technological innovations4,5. The latter view is also supported by archaeogenetic data6. Here we fill key chronological and archaeogenetic gaps for the Maghreb, from Epipalaeolithic to Middle Neolithic, by sequencing the genomes of nine individuals (to between 45.8- and 0.2-fold genome coverage). Notably, we trace 8,000 years of population continuity and isolation from the Upper Palaeolithic, via the Epipaleolithic, to some Maghrebi Neolithic farming groups. However, remains from the earliest Neolithic contexts showed mostly European Neolithic ancestry. We suggest that farming was introduced by European migrants and was then rapidly adopted by local groups. During the Middle Neolithic a new ancestry from the Levant appears in the Maghreb, coinciding with the arrival of pastoralism in the region, and all three ancestries blend together during the Late Neolithic. Our results show ancestry shifts in the Neolithization of northwestern Africa that probably mirrored a heterogeneous economic and cultural landscape, in a more multifaceted process than observed in other regions
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10396/30700
Fuente
Simões, L.G., Günther, T., Martínez-Sánchez, R.M. et al. Northwest African Neolithic initiated by migrants from Iberia and Levant. Nature 618, 550–556 (2023)
Versión del Editor
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-023-06166-6
Nota
The National Genomics Infrastructure, Uppsala. Computations and data handling were enabled by resources provided by the Swedish National Infrastructure for Computing at the Uppsala Multidisciplinary Center for Advanced Computational Science, partially funded by the Swedish Research Council through grant agreement no. 2018-05973. This project was supported by the Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation (to M.J.), Vetenskapsrådet (grant nos. 2018-05537 and 2022-04642 to M.J. and 2017-05267 to T.G.) and Ramón y Cajal (grant no. RYC2018-025223-I to C.V.). The Spanish–Moroccan archaeological team was supported by the European Research Council (no. ERC AdG 230561).
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