Reconstructing Prehistoric African Population Structure.

Cell
Authors
Keywords
Abstract

We assembled genome-wide data from 16 prehistoric Africans. We show that the anciently divergent lineage that comprises the primary ancestry of the southern African San had a wider distribution in the past, contributing approximately two-thirds of the ancestry of Malawi hunter-gatherers ∼8,100-2,500 years ago and approximately one-third of the ancestry of Tanzanian hunter-gatherers ∼1,400 years ago. We document how the spread of farmers from western Africa involved complete replacement of local hunter-gatherers in some regions, and we track the spread of herders by showing that the population of a ∼3,100-year-old pastoralist from Tanzania contributed ancestry to people from northeastern to southern Africa, including a ∼1,200-year-old southern African pastoralist. The deepest diversifications of African lineages were complex, involving either repeated gene flow among geographically disparate groups or a lineage more deeply diverging than that of the San contributing more to some western African populations than to others. We finally leverage ancient genomes to document episodes of natural selection in southern African populations. PAPERCLIP.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
Cell
Volume
171
Issue
1
Pages
59-71.e21
Date Published
2017 Sep 21
ISSN
1097-4172
DOI
10.1016/j.cell.2017.08.049
PubMed ID
28938123
PubMed Central ID
PMC5679310
Links
Grant list
Wellcome Trust / United Kingdom
263441 / European Research Council / International
R01 GM100233 / GM / NIGMS NIH HHS / United States
R01 HG006399 / HG / NHGRI NIH HHS / United States