
Iceman Mummy Finds His Closest Relatives
2012-11-12 00:47:10
SAN FRANCISCO أ¢â‚¬â€ Ötzi the Iceman, an astonishingly well-preserved
Neolithic mummy found in the Italian Alps in 1991, was a native of Central
Europe, not a first-generation أƒآ©migrأƒآ© from Sardinia, new research shows. And
genetically, he looked a lot like other Stone Age farmers throughout Europe.
The new findings, reported Thursday (Nov. 8) here at the American Society of
Human Genetics conference, support the theory that farmers, and not just the
technology of farming, spread during prehistoric times from the Middle East all
the way to Finland.
"The idea is that the spread of farming and agriculture, right now we have good
evidence that it was also associated with a movement of people and not only
technology," said study co-author Martin Sikora, a geneticist at Stanford
University.
In what may be the world's oldest cold case, Ötzi was pierced by an arrow and bled to death on a glacier in the Alps between Austria and Italy more than 5,000 years ago.
Scientists sequenced Ötzi's genome earlier this year, yielding a
surprising result: The Iceman was more closely related to present-day Sardinians
than he was to present-day Central Europeans.
But the researchers sequenced only part of the genome, and the results didn't
resolve an underlying question: Did most of the Neolithic people in Central
Europe have genetic profiles more characteristic of Sardinia, or had Ötzi's
family recently emigrated from Southern Europe?
"Maybe Ötzi was just a tourist, maybe his parents were Sardinian and he decided
to move to the Alps," Sikora said.
That would have required Ötzi's family to travel hundreds of miles, an unlikely
prospect, Sikora said.
"Five thousand years ago, it's not really expected that our populations were so
mobile," Sikora told LiveScience.
To answer that question, Sikora's team sequenced Ötzi's entire genome and
compared it with those from hundreds of modern-day Europeans, as well as the
genomes of a Stone Age hunter-gatherer found in Sweden, a farmer from Sweden, a
7,000-year-old hunter-gatherer iceman found in Iberia, and an Iron Age man found
in Bulgaria.
The team confirmed that, of modern people, Sardinians are Ötzi's closest
relatives. But among the prehistoric quartet, Ötzi most closely resembled the
farmers found in Bulgaria and Sweden, while the Swedish and Iberian
hunter-gatherers looked more like present-day Northern Europeans.
The findings support the notion that people migrating from the Middle East all
the way to Northern Europe brought agriculture with them and mixed with the
native hunter-gatherers, enabling the population to explode, Sikora said.
While the traces of these ancient migrations are largely lost in most of Europe,
Sardinian islanders remained more isolated and therefore retain larger genetic
traces of those first Neolithic farmers, Sikora said.
The findings add to a growing body of evidence showing that farming played a
major role in shaping the people of Europe, said Chris Gignoux, a geneticist at
the University of California San Francisco, who was not involved in the study.
"I think it's really intriguing," Gignoux said. "The more that people are
sequencing these ancient genomes from Europe, that we're really starting to see
the impact of farmers moving into Europe."
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