DNA analysis of 6,500-year-old human remains in Israel points to origin of ancient culture

Date:

Share post:

An international team of researchers from Tel Aviv University, the Israel Antiquities Authority and Harvard University has discovered that waves of migration from Anatolia and the Zagros mountains (today’s Turkey and Iran) to the Levant helped develop the Chalcolithic culture that existed in Israel’s Upper Galilee region some 6,500 years ago.

DNA analysis of 6,500-year-old human remains in Israel points to origin of ancient culture
Physical anthropologist Hila May next to a pile of bones and artifacts in the Peki’in cave
[Credit: Israel Hershkovitz]

The study is one of the largest ancient DNA studies ever conducted in Israel and for the first time sheds light on the origins of the Chalcolithic culture in the Levant, approximately 6,000-7,000 years ago.




Research for the study was led by Dr. Hila May and Prof. Israel Hershkovitz of the Department of Anatomy and Anthropology, Dan David Center for Human Evolution and Biohistory Research, at TAU’s Sackler Faculty of Medicine; Dr. Dina Shalem of the Institute for Galilean Archaeology at Kinneret College and the Israel Antiquities Authority; and Éadaoin Harney and Prof. David Reich of Harvard University. It was published in Nature Communications.

In 1995, Zvi Gal, Dina Shalem and Howard Smithline of the Israel Antiquities Authority began excavating the Peqi’in Cave in northern Israel, which dates to the Chalcolithic Period in the Levant. The team unearthed dozens of burials in the natural stalactite cave that is 17 meters long and 5-8 meters wide.

DNA analysis of 6,500-year-old human remains in Israel points to origin of ancient culture
Child burial at Peki’in, Israel, around 6,500 years ago [Credit: Ariel David]

The large number of unique ceramic ossuaries and the variety of burial offerings discovered in the cave suggest that it was once used as a mortuary center by the local Chalcolithic people.




“The uniqueness of the cave is evident in the number of people buried in it — more than 600 — and the variety of ossuaries and jars and the outstanding motifs on them, including geometric and anthropomorphic designs,” Dr. Shalem says. “Some of the findings in the cave are typical to the region, but others suggest cultural exchange with remote regions.

“The study resolves a long debate about the origin of the unique culture of the Chalcolithic people. Did the cultural change in the region follow waves of migration, the infiltration of ideas due to trade relations and/or cultural exchange, or local invention? We now know that the answer is migration.”

DNA analysis of 6,500-year-old human remains in Israel points to origin of ancient culture
Ossuaries and other artifacts embedded in the flowstone over nearly 6000 years in the sealed Peki’in cave
[Credit: Hila May]

The researchers subjected 22 of the skeletons excavated at Peqi’in, dating to the Chalcolithic Period, to a whole genome analysis.




“This study of 22 individuals is one of the largest ancient DNA studies carried out from a single archaeological site, and by far the largest ever reported in the Near East,” Dr. May says.

“The genetic analysis provided an answer to the central question we set out to address,” says Prof. Reich. “It showed that the Peqi’in people had substantial ancestry from northerners — similar to those living in Iran and Turkey — that was not present in earlier Levantine farmers.”

DNA analysis of 6,500-year-old human remains in Israel points to origin of ancient culture
Ossuaries from the Chalcolithic Period, excavated at Peqi’in Cave
[Credit: Mariana Salzberger, Israel Antiquities Authority]

“Certain characteristics, such as genetic mutations contributing to blue eye color, were not seen in the DNA test results of earlier Levantine human remains,” adds Dr. May. “The chances for the success of such a study seemed slim, since most of the ancient DNA studies carried out in Israel have failed due to difficult climatic conditions in the region that destroy DNA.”

“Fortunately, however, human DNA was preserved in the bones of the buried people in Peqi’in cave, likely due to the cool conditions within the cave and the limestone crust that covered the bones and preserved the DNA,” says Prof. Hershkovitz.

“We also find that the Peqi’in population experienced abrupt demographic change 6,000 years ago,” concludes Harney, who led the statistical analysis for the study.

“Indeed, these findings suggest that the rise and falls of the Chalcolithic culture are probably due to demographic changes in the region,” says Dr. May.

Source: Tel Aviv University [August 20, 2018]

ADVERTISEMENT

spot_img

Related articles

Catacombs of Marcellinus and Peter restored

The culmination of a one year project to restore the paleochristian frescoes that decorate the Roman catacombs of...

Humans evolved by sharing technology and culture

Blombos Cave in South Africa has given us vast knowledge about our early ancestors. In 2015, four open...

Why and how far hunter-gatherers groups migrate

Hunter-gathers around the world often migrate when food resources become scarce. Just how far and how often they...

1,800-year-old ‘Venus’ figurine uncovered in Gloucester dig at the Forum

An 1,800-year-old figurine has been uncovered by archaeologists on a dig in a city centre. The statuette was...

Aid workers should read through archaeologists’ notebooks on building houses

Aid workers who provide shelter following natural disasters, such as hurricanes or earthquakes, should consider long-term archaeological information...

1,500-year-old farming and carpentry tools found in Northwest Turkey

Archaeologists have found 1,500-year-old agricultural and carpentry tools in the ancient Greek city of Alexandria Troas in the...

Neanderthals made repeated use of the ancient settlement of ‘Ein Qashish, Israel

The archaeological site of 'Ein Qashish in northern Israel was a place of repeated Neanderthal occupation and use...

Police recover 4,600 antiquities after busting archaeological crime gang in Bulgaria

An international crime gang that ransacked ancient sites in Bulgaria and trafficked stolen archaeological goods whose total worth...