نتایج جستجو برای: neolithic

تعداد نتایج: 3054  

Journal: :Biology letters 2006
R Bollongino C J Edwards K W Alt J Burger D G Bradley

We present an extensive ancient DNA analysis of mainly Neolithic cattle bones sampled from archaeological sites along the route of Neolithic expansion, from Turkey to North-Central Europe and Britain. We place this first reasonable population sample of Neolithic cattle mitochondrial DNA sequence diversity in context to illustrate the continuity of haplotype variation patterns from the first Eur...

Journal: :Journal of the Royal Society, Interface 2015
Juan José Ibáñez David Ortega Daniel Campos Lamya Khalidi Vicenç Méndez

In this paper, we explore the conditions that led to the origins and development of the Near Eastern Neolithic using mathematical modelling of obsidian exchange. The analysis presented expands on previous research, which established that the down-the-line model could not explain long-distance obsidian distribution across the Near East during this period. Drawing from outcomes of new simulations...

Journal: :Systems 2016
David Ortega Juan-José Ibáñez Daniel Campos Lamya Khalidi Vicenç Méndez Luís Teira

In the Near East, nomadic hunter-gatherer societies became sedentary farmers for the first time during the transition into the Neolithic. Sedentary life presented a risk of isolation for Neolithic groups. As fluid intergroup interactions are crucial for the sharing of information, resources and genes, Neolithic villages developed a network of contacts. In this paper we study obsidian exchange b...

2017
Eppie R. Jones Gunita Zarina Vyacheslav Moiseyev Emma Lightfoot Philip R. Nigst Andrea Manica Ron Pinhasi Daniel G. Bradley

The Neolithic transition was a dynamic time in European prehistory of cultural, social, and technological change. Although this period has been well explored in central Europe using ancient nuclear DNA [1, 2], its genetic impact on northern and eastern parts of this continent has not been as extensively studied. To broaden our understanding of the Neolithic transition across Europe, we analyzed...

2016
Gülşah Merve Kılınç Ayça Omrak Füsun Özer Torsten Günther Ali Metin Büyükkarakaya Erhan Bıçakçı Douglas Baird Handan Melike Dönertaş Ayshin Ghalichi Reyhan Yaka Dilek Koptekin Sinan Can Açan Poorya Parvizi Maja Krzewińska Evangelia A. Daskalaki Eren Yüncü Nihan Dilşad Dağtaş Andrew Fairbairn Jessica Pearson Gökhan Mustafaoğlu Yılmaz Selim Erdal Yasin Gökhan Çakan İnci Togan Mehmet Somel Jan Storå Mattias Jakobsson Anders Götherström

The archaeological documentation of the development of sedentary farming societies in Anatolia is not yet mirrored by a genetic understanding of the human populations involved, in contrast to the spread of farming in Europe [1-3]. Sedentary farming communities emerged in parts of the Fertile Crescent during the tenth millennium and early ninth millennium calibrated (cal) BC and had appeared in ...

2010
Neus Isern Joaquim Fort

The front speed of the Neolithic (farmer) spread in Europe decreased as it reached Northern latitudes, where the Mesolithic (huntergatherer) population density was higher. Here, we describe a reaction–diffusion model with (i) an anisotropic dispersion kernel depending on the Mesolithic population density gradient and (ii) a modified population growth equation. Both effects are related to the sp...

2017
Francesca Tassi Stefania Vai Silvia Ghirotto Martina Lari Alessandra Modi Elena Pilli Andrea Brunelli Roberta Rosa Susca Alicja Budnik Damian Labuda Federica Alberti Carles Lalueza-Fox David Reich David Caramelli Guido Barbujani

It is unclear whether Indo-European languages in Europe spread from the Pontic steppes in the late Neolithic, or from Anatolia in the Early Neolithic. Under the former hypothesis, people of the Globular Amphorae culture (GAC) would be descended from Eastern ancestors, likely representing the Yamnaya culture. However, nuclear (six individuals typed for 597 573 SNPs) and mitochondrial (11 complet...

Journal: :Science 2013
Guido Brandt Wolfgang Haak Christina J Adler Christina Roth Anna Szécsényi-Nagy Sarah Karimnia Sabine Möller-Rieker Harald Meller Robert Ganslmeier Susanne Friederich Veit Dresely Nicole Nicklisch Joseph K Pickrell Frank Sirocko David Reich Alan Cooper Kurt W Alt

The processes that shaped modern European mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) variation remain unclear. The initial peopling by Palaeolithic hunter-gatherers ~42,000 years ago and the immigration of Neolithic farmers into Europe ~8000 years ago appear to have played important roles but do not explain present-day mtDNA diversity. We generated mtDNA profiles of 364 individuals from prehistoric cultures in ...

Journal: :American journal of physical anthropology 2011
Marie-France Deguilloux Ludovic Soler Marie-Hélène Pemonge Chris Scarre Roger Joussaume Luc Laporte

Recent paleogenetic studies have confirmed that the spread of the Neolithic across Europe was neither genetically nor geographically uniform. To extend existing knowledge of the mitochondrial European Neolithic gene pool, we examined six samples of human skeletal material from a French megalithic long mound (c.4200 cal BC). We retrieved HVR-I sequences from three individuals and demonstrated th...

2012
Neus Isern Joaquim Fort Marc Vander Linden

Space competition effects are well-known in many microbiological and ecological systems. Here we analyze such an effect in human populations. The Neolithic transition (change from foraging to farming) was mainly the outcome of a demographic process that spread gradually throughout Europe from the Near East. In Northern Europe, archaeological data show a slowdown on the Neolithic rate of spread ...

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