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Ancient genomes show social and reproductive behavior of early Upper Paleolithic foragers
Author(s) -
Martin Sikora,
Andaine SeguinOrlando,
Vítor C. Sousa,
Anders Albrechtsen,
Thorfinn Sand Korneliussen,
Amy Ko,
Simon Rasmussen,
Isabelle Dupanloup,
Philip R. Nigst,
Marjolein D. Bosch,
Gabriel Renaud,
Morten E. Allentoft,
Ashot Margaryan,
Sergey Vasilyev,
Elizaveta Veselovskaya,
Svetlana Borutskaya,
Thibaut Devièse,
Dan Comeskey,
Thomas Higham,
Andrea Manica,
Robert Foley,
David J. Meltzer,
Rasmus Nielsen,
Laurent Excoffier,
Marta Mìrazón Lahr,
Ludovic Orlando,
Eske Willerslev
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 12.556
H-Index - 1186
eISSN - 1095-9203
pISSN - 0036-8075
DOI - 10.1126/science.aao1807
Subject(s) - kinship , upper paleolithic , inbreeding , population , effective population size , evolutionary biology , biology , geography , demography , mating system , mating , ecology , archaeology , anthropology , sociology , genetic variation
Present-day hunter-gatherers (HGs) live in multilevel social groups essential to sustain a population structure characterized by limited levels of within-band relatedness and inbreeding. When these wider social networks evolved among HGs is unknown. To investigate whether the contemporary HG strategy was already present in the Upper Paleolithic, we used complete genome sequences from Sunghir, a site dated to ~34,000 years before the present, containing multiple anatomically modern human individuals. We show that individuals at Sunghir derive from a population of small effective size, with limited kinship and levels of inbreeding similar to HG populations. Our findings suggest that Upper Paleolithic social organization was similar to that of living HGs, with limited relatedness within residential groups embedded in a larger mating network.

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