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Demography and social structure of Polynesian outliers: genomic investigations of over 100 individuals buried in Namu, Taumako island

Descripción del proyecto

Un análisis más profundo de las interacciones entre los oceánicos

Los habitantes de Oceanía, que descienden de dos olas migratorias principales —de África hace más de cincuenta mil años y de Taiwán hace unos cinco mil años—, tienen una historia demográfica compleja y constituyen un entorno genético complejo. Sin embargo, las interacciones entre los oceánicos siguen sin comprenderse bien. El equipo del proyecto NAMU, financiado con fondos europeos, estudiará los datos genéticos de ciento catorce individuos primitivos del antiguo emplazamiento de las islas periféricas polinesias denominado «Namu», un cementerio en la isla de Taumako (Islas Salomón). Con el objetivo principal de comprender la estructura de las sociedades de Oceanía y su relación con su historia migratoria, en el proyecto NAMU se emplearán métodos paleogenómicos para estudiar los procesos de asentamiento y la historia demográfica de Taumako, así como la organización social y la estratificación socioeconómica de Namu.

Objetivo

Oceanians are descendants of two main migration waves: the early migration of modern humans out-of-Africa more than 50,000 years ago (ya), which ended in the Solomon Islands (Near Oceania); and the Austronesian expansion, that started around 5,000 ya in Taiwan and peopled the remaining unexplored territories of Oceania (Remote Oceania) up to Polynesia from 3,000 ya. Subsequent migrations within the region created a complex genetic landscape. Near Oceanian populations moved into Remote Oceania at least 2,500 ya. Afterwards, Polynesian-speaking groups expanded westward, outside the Polynesian triangle, to other Oceanian islands, giving rise to the so-called Polynesian Outlier communities. This complex population history created a highly differentiated sociocultural background among Oceanians, whose interactions remain poorly understood. We will leverage genetic data for 114 ancient individuals from the ancient Polynesian Outlier site of Namu, a burial in the Taumako island, occupied from the 13th to the 18th centuries AD, which represents, to our knowledge, the largest ancient DNA dataset ever studied from a single site. We will use cutting-edge paleogenomic methods to study: the settlement processes and the demographic history of Taumako, and the social organization and socioeconomic stratification of the Namu site, according to genetic ancestry, sex, kin relations and age. The ultimate objective is to understand the structure of Oceanian societies and its relation with their migratory history. To achieve the project’s goals, I will integrate in the Archaeo- and Palaeogenetics group at the University of Tübingen, under the supervision of Prof. Dr. Cosimo Posth, who is a worldwide known expert in paleogenomics. This innovative and multidisciplinary project is a unique opportunity for me to learn the full range of paleogenomic techniques from a leading group in the field and to establish myself as an interdisciplinary leader in this expanding research area.

Coordinador

EBERHARD KARLS UNIVERSITAET TUEBINGEN
Aportación neta de la UEn
€ 189 687,36
Dirección
GESCHWISTER-SCHOLL-PLATZ
72074 Tuebingen
Alemania

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Región
Baden-Württemberg Tübingen Tübingen, Landkreis
Tipo de actividad
Higher or Secondary Education Establishments
Enlaces
Coste total
Sin datos