Neolithic genomes from modern-day Switzerland indicate parallel ancient societies

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Genetic research throughout Europe shows evidence of drastic population changes near the end of the Neolithic period, as shown by the arrival of ancestry related to pastoralists from the Pontic-Caspian steppe. But the timing of this change and the arrival and mixture process of these peoples, particularly in Central Europe, is little understood. 
Neolithic genomes from modern-day Switzerland indicate parallel ancient societies
Top view of the Dolmen of Oberbipp, one of the largest burial sites in the study. In this study, researchers analyze 96
 ancient genomes to trace the arrival and demographic structure of peoples with Steppe-related ancestry into late
Neolithic, early Bronze Age Switzerland and povide new insights into the ancestry of modern Europeans
[Credit: Urs Dardel, Archaologischer Dienst des Kanton Bern]

In a new study published in Nature Communications, researchers analyze 96 ancient genomes, providing new insights into the ancestry of modern Europeans.




Scientists sequence almost one hundred ancient genomes from Switzerland
With Neolithic settlements found everywhere from lake shore and bog environments to inner alpine valleys and high mountain passes, Switzerland’s rich archeological record makes it a prime location for studies of population history in Central Europe. Towards the end of the Neolithic period, the emergence of archaeological finds from Corded Ware Complex cultural groups (CWC) coincides with the arrival of new ancestry components from the Pontic-Caspian steppe, but exactly when these new peoples arrived and how they mixed with indigenous Europeans remains unclear.
Neolithic genomes from modern-day Switzerland indicate parallel ancient societies
Aerial view of the Dolmen of Oberbipp at the beginning of the excavation
[Credit: Archaologischer Dienst des Kanton Bern, Urs Dardel]

To find out, an international team led by researchers from the University of Tubingen, the University of Bern and the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History (MPI-SHH) sequenced the genomes of 96 individuals from 13 Neolithic and early Bronze Age sites in Switzerland, southern Germany and the Alsace region of France. They detect the arrival of this new ancestry as early as 2800 BCE, and suggest that genetic dispersal was a complex process, involving the gradual mixture of parallel, highly genetically structured societies. The researchers also identified one of the oldest known Europeans that was lactose tolerant, dating to roughly 2100 BCE.




Slow genetic turnover indicates highly structured societies
“Remarkably, we identified several female individuals without any detectable steppe-related ancestry up to 1000 years after this ancestry arrives in the region,” says lead author Anja Furtwangler of the University of Tubingen’s Institute for Archaeological Sciences. Evidence from genetic analysis and stable isotopes suggest a patrilocal society, in which males stayed local to where they were born and females came from distant families that did not carry steppe ancestry.
Neolithic genomes from modern-day Switzerland indicate parallel ancient societies
Layer of the human remains found in situ in the Dolmen of Oberbipp (Switzerland). In a new study researchers
analyze 96 ancient genomes from 13 Neolithic and early Bronze Age sites in Switzerland, southern Germany
and the Alsace region of France to provide new insights into the ancestry of modern Europeans
[Credit: Archaologischer Dienst des Kanton Bern, Marianne Ramstein]

These results show that CWC was a relatively homogenous population that occupied large parts of Central Europe in the early Bronze Age, but they also show that populations without steppe-related ancestry existed parallel to the CWC cultural groups for hundreds of years.

“Since the parents of the mobile females in our study couldn’t have had steppe-related ancestry either, it remains to be shown where in Central Europe such populations were present, possibly in the Alpine mountain valleys that were less connected to the lower lands” says Johannes Krause, director of the Department of Archaeogenetics at MPI-SHH and senior author of the study. The researchers hope that further studies of this kind will help to illuminate the cultural interactions that precipitated the transition from the Neolithic to the Early Bronze age in Central Europe.

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