4.8 Article

The genomic history of the Iberian Peninsula over the past 8000 years

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 363, Issue 6432, Pages 1230-+

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.aav4040

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Generalitat de Catalunya, AGAUR agency [HAR2017-86509-P, HAR2017-87695-P, SGR2017-11]
  2. Obra Social La Caixa
  3. FEDER-MINECO [BFU2015-64699-P]
  4. Plan Nacional I+ D+ I, MINECO [REDISCO-HAR2017-88035-P]
  5. MINECO [HAR2016-77600-P, HAR2009-10105, HAR2013-43851-P]
  6. NSF [BCS-1460367, BCS-1153568]
  7. Gobierno Vasco [IT622-13]
  8. Diputacion Foral de Alava
  9. Diputacion Foral de Gipuzkoa
  10. Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology [PTDC/EPH-ARQ/4164/2014]
  11. FEDER-COMPETE 2020 project [016899]
  12. FCT Investigator Program [IF/01641/2013]
  13. FCT IP
  14. ERDF (COMPETE2020 -POCI)
  15. Leverhulme Trust Doctoral Scholarship
  16. Allen Discovery Center grant from the Paul Allen Foundation
  17. NIH [GM100233]
  18. Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  19. Max Planck Society
  20. Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia [PTDC/EPH-ARQ/4164/2014] Funding Source: FCT

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We assembled genome-wide data from 271 ancient Iberians, of whom 176 are from the largely unsampled period after 2000 BCE, thereby providing a high-resolution time transect of the Iberian Peninsula. We document high genetic substructure between northwestern and southeastern hunter-gatherers before the spread of farming. We reveal sporadic contacts between Iberia and North Africa by similar to 2500 BCE and, by similar to 2000 BCE, the replacement of 40% of Iberia's ancestry and nearly 100% of its Y-chromosomes by people with Steppe ancestry. We show that, in the Iron Age, Steppe ancestry had spread not only into Indo-European-speaking regions but also into non-Indo-European-speaking ones, and we reveal that present-day Basques are best described as a typical Iron Age population without the admixture events that later affected the rest of Iberia. Additionally, we document how, beginning at least in the Roman period, the ancestry of the peninsula was transformed by gene flow from North Africa and the eastern Mediterranean.

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