追踪南美洲南锥体的人类多样性:语言学、形态测量学和遗传学观点

IF 1.7 2区 生物学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY
Lumila Paula Menéndez, Matthias Urban
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引用次数: 0

摘要

研究生物多样性和文化多样性之间的关系可以对人类历史产生丰富的见解。在这类研究中,南美洲相对被忽视了,尽管它有趣地展示出出乎意料的高度生物和文化多样性。在这里,我们将重点放在非洲大陆一个特别未被充分研究的部分,即南锥体,并研究五个群体的语言、颅骨测量和遗传变异:塞尔克南人、卡瓦斯卡尔人、马普切人、昆扎人和库姆人。材料和方法我们从公共数据库中检索颅骨测量和遗传数据,并对语言数据进行编码,捕获语音系统和语法结构的变化,专门用于本研究。我们计算了距离矩阵(Mahalanobis, Jaccard, FST),并使用部分Mantel, Procrustes分析和r中的多维尺度进行了比较。结果Selk'nam和Qawaskar表现出最强的语言和颅骨相似性,可能是由于地理邻近,而马普切和Qom在遗传上最相似,反映了最近的迁移。与全球研究一致,我们观察到相对可塑性的颅拱顶形态与快速发展的语言变量之间存在统计学上显著的相关性。遗传变异与地理位置的相关性中等,而颞骨形态与遗传变异的相关性最弱。尽管本研究样本量小,需要用更大的数据集进行进一步的研究验证,但我们的发现强调了整合多个数据集的重要性,以便更好地理解生物多样性和文化多样性在塑造人类历史中的相互作用。我们的研究结果还表明,结构语言数据有助于重建人口历史,特别是在近期和中期尺度上。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Tracing Human Diversity in South America's Southern Cone: Linguistic, Morphometric, and Genetic Perspectives
      Explorando la Diversidad Humana en el Cono Sur de América del Sur: Perspectivas Lingüísticas, Morfométricas y Genéticas

Tracing Human Diversity in South America's Southern Cone: Linguistic, Morphometric, and Genetic Perspectives Explorando la Diversidad Humana en el Cono Sur de América del Sur: Perspectivas Lingüísticas, Morfométricas y Genéticas

Objectives

Studying the relationship between biological and cultural diversity can lead to rich insights into human history. South America has been relatively neglected in this kind of work, even though it intriguingly exhibits unexpectedly high biological and cultural diversity. Here, we focus on a particularly understudied part of the continent, the Southern Cone, and examine linguistic, craniometric, and genetic variation across five groups: Selk'nam, Qawaskar, Mapuche, Kunza, and Qom.

Materials and Methods

We retrieved craniometric and genetic data from public databases and coded linguistic data capturing variation in sound systems and grammatical structures specifically for this study. We calculated distance matrices (Mahalanobis, Jaccard, FST) and compared them using partial Mantel, Procrustes analysis, and multidimensional scaling in R.

Results

Selk'nam and Qawaskar exhibit the strongest linguistic and craniometric similarities, likely due to geographic proximity, while Mapuche and Qom are the most genetically similar, reflecting recent migrations. Consistent with global studies, we observed a statistically significant correlation between the relatively plastic cranial vault morphology and the quickly evolving linguistic variables. Genetic variability was moderately related to geography, while the weakest correlation was found between the temporal bone morphology and genetic variation.

Discussion

Although this study is limited by a small sample size and requires further research validation with larger datasets, our findings highlight the importance of integrating multiple datasets to better understand the interplay between biological and cultural diversity in shaping human history. Our findings also indicate that structural linguistic data help reconstruct population history, particularly at recent and intermediate scales.

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