AncientDNA and the Americas: current projects and challenges in anthropologicalresearch
Distinguished Lecturer Seminar Series
- Date: Sep 21, 2016
- Time: 03:00 PM - 04:30 PM (Local Time Germany)
- Location: MPI SHH Jena
- Room: Villa V14
- Host: Department of Archaeogenetics
- Contact: kerpen@shh.mpg.de
Archaeologicaland genetic research about the timing and process of the
colonization of theAmericas has revealed an early colonization
15,000-20,000 years ago followed bya “Beringian standstill”, and
subsequent expansion from the North as well as alater expansion of
Inuit-Aleut peoples. Ancient DNA analyses have contributed toour
understanding of this process using first mitochondrial DNA and more
recentlynuclear DNA data. While this larger picture is fairly
well-resolved, researchabout the population history within different
regions of the Americas bothpre-contact and during the contact period as
well as at very local scales isstill uncommon. In this talk, I will
discuss three projects in my laboratorythat focus on the regional and
local scales. First, we are examining thepopulation history of the
Caribbean using ancient DNA obtained from humanskeletal remains (dated
590 - 1280 cal AD) from three pre-contact Puerto Ricansites: Paso del
Indio, Punta Candelero and Tibes. At the regional scale,
recentarchaeological research suggests that indigenous groups in Puerto
Rico stemmedfrom multiple and continuous migrations of continental
indigenous populations,and we are testing hypotheses about these
migrations. At the local level, weare investigating tomb and cemetery
organization at two sites: the Maya Yaxunásite in the Yucatán peninsula
(250-550 CE) and the MisiónSalesiana (AD 1893-1920) inTierra del Fuego.
These different investigations also illuminate differences
inpreservation as well as ethical concerns of descendant communities.