Ariane E. Thomas, Matthew E. Hill, Leah Stricker, Michael Lavin, David Givens, Alida de Flamingh, Kelsey E. Witt, Ripan S. Malhi, Andrew Kitchen
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引用次数: 0
摘要
多项研究表明,从公元 1492 年至今,欧洲对美洲的殖民导致了几乎所有北美犬线粒体血统的消亡,取而代之的是欧洲犬线粒体血统。历史记录表明,殖民者将狗从欧洲进口到北美,早在十七世纪,狗就成为人们感兴趣和交流的对象。然而,目前还不清楚最早从殖民地考古发现的狗是欧洲人、土著人还是混血儿。为了弄清弗吉尼亚詹姆斯敦殖民地狗的祖先,我们对 1609-1617 年间的六只考古狗进行了古老的线粒体 DNA 测序。我们的分析表明,詹姆斯敦犬的母系与北美古代土著犬的母系关系最为密切。此外,这些母系与晚期林地、霍普韦尔和弗吉尼亚阿尔冈基亚考古遗址中的犬类聚集在一起。我们从一个欧洲殖民地遗址中发现的土著犬血统表明,在早期殖民地时期,犬在土著居民和欧洲居民之间有着复杂的社会历史。
The Dogs of Tsenacomoco: Ancient DNA Reveals the Presence of Local Dogs at Jamestown Colony in the Early Seventeenth Century
Multiple studies have demonstrated that European colonization of the Americas led to the death of nearly all North American dog mitochondrial lineages and replacement with European ones sometime between AD 1492 and the present day. Historical records indicate that colonists imported dogs from Europe to North America, where they became objects of interest and exchange as early as the seventeenth century. However, it is not clear whether the earliest archaeological dogs recovered from colonial contexts were of European, Indigenous, or mixed descent. To clarify the ancestry of dogs from the Jamestown Colony, Virginia, we sequenced ancient mitochondrial DNA from six archaeological dogs from the period 1609–1617. Our analysis shows that the Jamestown dogs have maternal lineages most closely associated with those of ancient Indigenous dogs of North America. Furthermore, these maternal lineages cluster with dogs from Late Woodland, Hopewell, and Virginia Algonquian archaeological sites. Our recovery of Indigenous dog lineages from a European colonial site suggests a complex social history of dogs at the interface of Indigenous and European populations during the early colonial period.