• OT pre-medieval, Scandinavia's first farmers slaughtered the hunter-gatherer population

    From a425couple@a425couple@hotmail.com to soc.history.medieval,soc.history.war.misc on Sun Feb 25 16:59:24 2024
    From Newsgroup: soc.history.medieval

    from https://phys.org/news/2024-02-scandinavia-farmers-slaughtered-hunter-population.html

    FEBRUARY 12, 2024
    Editors' notes

    Scandinavia's first farmers slaughtered the hunter-gatherer population,
    DNA analysis suggests

    by Lund University
    Overview of dataset. Credit: Nature (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-023-06862-3

    Following the arrival of the first farmers in Scandinavia 5,900 years
    ago, the hunter-gatherer population was wiped out within a few
    generations, according to a new study from Lund University in Sweden,
    among others. The results, which are contrary to prevailing opinion, are
    based on DNA analysis of skeletons and teeth found in what is now Denmark.

    The extensive study has been published as four separate articles in the journal Nature. An international research team, of which Lund University
    in Sweden is a member, has been able to draw new conclusions about the
    effects of migration on ancient populations by extracting DNA from
    skeletal parts and teeth of prehistoric people.

    The study shows, among other things, that there have been two almost
    total population turnovers in Denmark over the past 7,300 years. The
    first population change happened 5,900 years ago when a farmer
    population, with a different origin and appearance, drove out the
    gatherers, hunters and fishers who had previously populated Scandinavia. Within a few generations, almost the entire hunter-gatherer population
    was wiped out.

    "This transition has previously been presented as peaceful. However, our
    study indicates the opposite. In addition to violent death, it is likely
    that new pathogens from livestock finished off many gatherers," says
    Anne Birgitte Nielsen, geology researcher and head of the Radiocarbon
    Dating Laboratory at Lund University.

    A thousand years later, about 4,850 years ago, another population change
    took place when people with genetic roots in YamnayarCoa livestock herding people with origins in southern RussiarCocame to Scandinavia and wiped out
    the previous farmer population. Once again, this could have involved
    both violence and new pathogens. These big-boned people pursued a
    semi-nomadic life on the steppes, tamed animals, kept domestic cattle
    and moved over large areas using horses and carts.

    The people who settled in our climes were a mix between Yamnaya and
    Eastern European Neolithic people. This genetic profile is dominant in
    today's Denmark, whereas the DNA profile of the first farmer population
    has been essentially erased.

    "This time there was also a rapid population turnover, with virtually no descendants from the predecessors. We don't have as much DNA material
    from Sweden, but what there is points to a similar course of events. In
    other words, many Swedes are to a great extent also descendants of these semi-nomads," says Birgitte Nielsen, who contributed quantitative pollen
    data that show how the vegetation changed in connection with the
    population changes.

    The results do not just overturn previous theories about amorous and
    peaceful meetings between groups of people. The study also provides a
    deepened understanding of historical migration flows, and the
    interpretation of archaeological finds and changes in vegetation and
    land use found in paleoecological data.

    "Our results help to enhance our knowledge of our heredity and our understanding of the development of certain diseases. Something that in
    the long term could be beneficial, for example in medical research,"
    concludes Birgitte Nielsen.

    More information: Morten E. Allentoft et al, 100 ancient genomes show
    repeated population turnovers in Neolithic Denmark, Nature (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-023-06862-3

    Journal information: Nature

    Provided by Lund University

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