Ancient DNA and the Archaeologist
- Five years later
Session Organiser: Keri A
Brown
(UMIST)
It has been five
years since the publication in 'Antiquity' of a paper introducing the potential
of Ancient DNAstudies to an audience of archaeologists. It is now time,
after the initial hype and overblown expectations from the media, to sit
back and take stock. What has Ancient DNA achieved that is of direct relevance
to archaeologists ? It is the aim of this session to present to you, the
archaeologist, the results of the last five years' worth of research endeavour
(involving the Ancient Biomolecules Initiative and nearly two million pounds
of funding),in fairly jargon-free presentations, and place these findings
in the context of archaeological theories. With some of the 'Big Questions'
in archaeology today, such as the origin(s) of agriculture, the identity
of the first farmers in Europe, the transmission of agriculture in the
Old World, the domestication of plants and animals, the peopling of the
New World, and human evolution itself, Ancient (and modern) DNA is an important
new line of evidence which can shed new light on the past and help to distinguish
between alternative hypotheses. Do the results agree with orthodox archaeological
interpretations, or will the textbooks have to be rewritten ? Or are the
scientific interpretations theoretically naive - will the scientists have
to rethink the implications of this research ? It's obviously not that
simple - most Ancient DNA researchers either work closely with archaeologists
or have archaeological training themselves, so the results of their work
are closely integrated with other forms of archaeological evidence. If
anything Ancient DNA research has helped to refine and define archaeological
interpretations of the past.
Prof.
Martin Jones
(Department
of Archaeology, University of Cambridge CB2 3DZ)
Introduction: The Impact
of Ancient DNA on Archaeology
Dr
Martin Richards
(Institute of
Molecular Medicine, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford OX3 9DU email mrichard@worf.molbiol.ox.ac.uk)
Hypothesis testing using
Ancient DNA
The phylogeographic
approach to the genetichistory of populations reconstructs ancestral distributions
of lineages for a given stretch of DNA in order to infer past demographic
expansions and migrations. This methodology, which has mainly been associated
with the analysis of mitochondrial DNA, suffers from the limitation that
only extant lineages are analysed. The recovery of ancient DNA from humans,
whilst presenting greater difficulties than are usually appreciated due
to problems of authentication, has the potential to address this limitation
by adding a temporal dimension to the DNA sequence analysis, enabling phylogeographic
hypotheses to be tested more directly. Examples concerning the origins
of anatomically modern humans and the spread of agriculture into Europe
will be discussed.
Dr
Martin Evison
(Department
of Forensic Pathology, University of Sheffield, Medico-Legal Centre, Watery
Street, Sheffield S3 7ES emailmartin@forensic.shef.ac.uk)
Genes and Ethnicity
Apart from some
notorious psychologists, most human scientists have abandoned the idea
that human communities can be classified into distinct 'races'. Modern
genetic studies have done much to dispel these scientifically-untenable
concepts, albeit in a political climate in which racism has become unacceptable.
Although races do not exist, there are still patterns in the distribution
of gene frequencies in human communities and many anthropologists continue
to equate gene distributions, language and culture. In this paper I will
consider some of the theoretical and empirical connotations of the study
of human biological and cultural diversity, focusing on case studies in
North West Europe and the Pacific.
In conclusion,
there are no genetic tests for ethnic identity any more than there are
archaeological ones. Nevertheless, it is still possible to use genetic
information to inform discussion of the processes of migration, settlement
travel or indigenous cultural development. More research is necessary,
for example, to relate macro-level studies of gene distributions with micro-level
studies of community structure, migration, settlement and intermarriage.
Keri
A Brown
(Department
of Biomolecular Sciences, UMIST, P.O. Box 88, Manchester, M60 1QD email:Keri.Brown@UMIST.ac.uk)
Sex identification of
human remains - some implications for gender archaeology
In prehistory,
gender archaeology depends on the analysis of representations of humans
in various media (rock art, cave paintings, statue stele, pottery) where
males and females can be distinguished by the presence of characteristic
sexual features; however, Interpreting prehistoric art is fraught with
difficulties. Another source of information for gender archaeology is from
burials accompanied by grave goods. With burials there are two types of
information which can be compared - the biological sex of the burials,
and the nature of the grave goods interred with them; these data can be
analysed to categorise the objects that typically accompany male and female
burials, and anomalies from the norm can be identified. To do this the
archaeologist needs a reliable method of identifying the sex of human remains.
Current physical
anthropological methods work well with complete remains, but with incomplete
skeletal material, cremations or juvenile/infant remains the accuracy of
these methods decreases and the element of subjectivity increases.
Much research
effort has been put into the development of a simple, PCR-based test to
identify the sex of human remains. The extraction of ancient DNA from human
remains and the amplification of sequences from the X and Y chromosomes
in theory should provide a robust and objective method of identifying the
genetic sex of an individual.
Examples where
this PCR-based sex identification has been applied will be discussed, along
with the as yet only study that has relevance for gender archaeology.
Dr.
Robin Allaby
(Department
of Biomolecular Sciences, UMIST, P.O. Box 88, Manchester M60 1QD)
Sorting seeds - using
ancient DNA to identify archaeological assemblages of wheat
The domestication
of wheat was the key to the evolution of agriculture in the Old World.
Accurate identification of the wheats used by early farmers is essential
to understand how this process took place. The most abundant source of
archaeological assemblages of wheat is in charred remains. Traditionally
such remains have been identified on the basis of phenotypic traits in
morphology of the grain and chaff. which have been presumed to reflect
the underlying genetic makeup. In the absence of chaff, identification
becomes less secure, often to the extent that ploidy cannot be assigned
with any certainty. The presence of ancient DNAwithin a small proportion
of charred grains has facilitated examination of some assemblages directly
on a genetic basis, allowing genome identification. Already there have
been some surprising enrichments of, and discrepancies with, conventional
archaeobotany.
Dr.
Terry Brown
(Department
of Biomolecular Sciences, UMIST, P.O. Box88, Manchester M60 1QD email:Terry.Brown@UMIST.ac.uk)
Origins of agriculture
- once is not enough
Our understanding
of the transition to agriculture would be greatly improved by a better
appreciation of the steps involved in establishment of the early Neolithic
crop assemblage. Was the domestication of each founder crop a unique event
, or did multiple domestications occur in parallel at distinct locations
within Southwest
Asia? Current
opinion favours a 'single origin' hypothesis for each founder crop with
the possible exception of barley. Genetic evidence, based on studies of
modern plant populations, has been used to support the notion of single
origins, but most of the existing data are inconclusive and much of it
can, in fact, be equally well used to support a 'multiple origins' hypothesis.
A new form of evidence is needed to break out of the current impasse. That
new form of evidence can be provided by ancient DNA.
Dr.
David MacHugh
(Bovine
Genetics, Department of Genetics, Trinity College, Dublin 2, Eire email
dmachugh@mail.tcd.ie)
The origins of domesticated
cattle - evidence from DNA studies
The origins
and development of domesticated cattle have always fascinated archaeologists,
prehistorians and biologists. Recent surveys of DNA variation among extant
cattle breeds representing the two major types of cattle (humpless Bos
taurus and humped Bos indicus ) have provided fundamental insights
into the biological history of cattle. Analysis of DNA sequence variation
in the maternally-inherited mitochondrial DNA molecule has revealed that
humpedzebu cattle do not share a common domestic origin with humpless taurine
cattle and were probably domesticated independently, possibly somewhere
on the Indian subcontinent. Nuclear DNAgenetic markers confirm this pattern
and also provide a high resolution perspective on genetic exchange and
admixture between taurine and zebu populations. In addition, the study
of ancient DNA preserved in archaeological cattle remains from Southwest
Asia, Africa and Europe promises to shed further light on the genetic origins
of domesticated cattle.
I.V. Ovchinnikov, E. Druzina, O. Ovtchinnikova,
A. Buzhilova , N. Makarov
(Genetic Identification Center, Moscow 111123;
Institute of Gerontology, Moscow 111539, Institute of Archaeology, Moscow
117036;)
DNA analysis and the study of sexual
sturcture in extinct human populations
Russia Anthropological and
archaeological methods are traditionally used for sex determination of
adult skeletons with obvious gender morphologies and where the remains
are from a grave with preserved grave goods. However, in the case of children,
fragmentary remains, and skeletons with unclear features and with no grave
goods, sex determination presents a difficult problem. A molecular-genetic
analysis of the sex of human remains from the Early Medieval cemetery (X
- XIII centuries AD) at Nefedievo, North Russia, was carried out and the
results were compared with archaeological and anthropological data. Teeth
(15 skeletons) and bones (9 skeletons) were used as the ancient DNA source.
The sequences in DYZ1, DYZ3, DXZ3 loci, and in the first intron of the
X-Y homologous gene amelogenin, were amplified. Sex was determined in 87.5%
of samples by archaeological criteria, in 95.8% of samples by anthropological
methods, and in 79.2% of samples by DNA analysis. PCR allowed the sex of
infant’s remains to be identified where the sex could not be determined
by anthropological methods and in three remains where sex could not be
inferred from archaeological data. We consider that development of molecular
technique will make it possible to improve the results of DNA analysis.