Data di Pubblicazione:
2025
Abstract:
: The timing of the settlement of Sahul-the Pleistocene landmass formed by present-day New Guinea, Australia, and Tasmania that existed until ~9000 years ago (~9 ka)-remains highly contentious. The so-called "long chronology" posits the first main arrivals at ~60 to 65 ka, whereas a "short chronology" proposes 47 to 51 ka. Here, we exhaustively analyze an unprecedentedly large mitogenome dataset (n = 2456) encompassing the full range of diversity from the indigenous populations of Australia, New Guinea, and Oceania, including a lineage related to those of New Guinea in an archaeological sample from Wallacea. We assess these lineages in the context of variation from Southeast Asia and a reevaluation of the mitogenome mutation rate, alongside genome-wide and Y-chromosome variation, and archaeological and climatological evidence. In contrast to recent recombinational dating approaches, we find support for the long chronology, suggesting settlement by ~60 ka via at least two distinct routes into Sahul.
Tipologia CRIS:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Elenco autori:
Gandini, F.; Almeida, M.; Foody, M. G. B.; Nagle, N.; Bergstrom, A.; Olivieri, A.; Rodrigues, S.; Fichera, A.; Oteo-Garcia, G.; Torroni, A.; Achilli, A.; Pomat, W.; Zainuddin, Z.; Eng, K. K.; Shoeib, T.; Rito, T.; Bulbeck, D.; O'Connor, S.; Bryk, J.; Pala, M.; Grant, M. J.; Edwards, C. J.; Oppenheimer, S. J.; Mitchell, R. J.; Soares, P. A.; Farr, H.; Richards, M. B.
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