Periodic Reporting for period 1 - NEO (Living in Europe in the late Neolithic: A trans-disciplinary temporal perspective on present-day Europeans)
Período documentado: 2018-05-01 hasta 2020-04-30
By the second half of the Vth millennium BC in western Europe, as Neolithisation has completed and social stratification is emerging, Neolithic individuals started to bury their deceased in collective burials, which can host the remains of dozen if not hundreds, of individuals. On present-day France, more than 3,000 of these collective burials have been excavated, each of them potentially representing one community. In the NEO project, ancient DNA extracted from bones and teeth of Neolithic individuals interred in some of these collective burials were investigated to assess their genetic ancestry as well as the diet, health, mobility patterns, residential and funerary rules characterising western European Neolithic societies. Within NEO, a multi-disciplinary approach combining archaeology, physical anthropology and molecular analyses was applied to a rich collection of remains from the late Neolithic, excavated both in northern and southern parts of France, potentially representing the ending points of the Danubian and Mediterranean neolithisation routes, respectively. The general objective of the NEO project was to observe how almost contemporary Neolithic societies developed, with regards to possible regional specificities, in order to advance our knowledge on the building of European populations in prehistory.
This project combines archaeological, anthropological and genomic data from a high number of individuals, highlighting the importance of data management, curation and traceability. The collaborators’ team has published one article presenting an open-source Laboratory Information Management System (LIMS) that can account for the specificities of ancient DNA samples processing and include all sample-related metadata (CASCADE: A Custom-Made Archiving System for the Conservation of Ancient DNA Experimental Data, Dolle et al., Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution, 2020. https://doi.org/10.3389/fevo.2020.00185(se abrirá en una nueva ventana)).
In addition, novel approaches in ancient DNA research open for a characterization of the epigenomes of past individuals. The epigenome plays an essential role in regulating gene expression, according to lifestyles and environmental, cultural and social exposure.
NEO enables a critical comparison of archaeological, anthropological and molecular (genome-epigenome-microbiome) data, leading to more confident assessments of Neolithic populations in Europe, but also strengthening the contribution of each discipline, paving the way for future similar work in anthropological sciences.