Recent breakthroughs in ancient DNA and isotope analysis are transforming our understanding of diversity, mobility and social dynamics in the human past. COMMIOS integrates these cutting-edge methods on a scale not previously attempted, to provide a radically new vision of Iron Age communities in Britain (800 BC – AD 100) within their wider European context. At the broad scale, we conducted the first concerted programme of genome-wide ancient DNA analysis on Iron Age populations anywhere in the world, extending our work into the Middle-Late Bronze Age as the project developed. Along with isotope analysis, underpinned by both osteoarchaeological and cultural archaeological approaches, this has enabled us to address issues of population movement and inter-regional connectivity. We have also used these new scientific methods to examine the structure and social dynamics of Iron Age societies.
COMMIOS represents a collaboration between archaeologists, geneticists and the wider heritage sector represented by museums and commercial archaeological organisations. As such, it has formed a powerful vector for the dissemination of knowledge and understanding of cutting-edge scientific approaches to the human past. Our work on long-term population history has generated new insights into the complex inter-relationships between past communities in Europe, prompting fresh perspectives on national identities and new understandings of the fluidity, diversity and mobility of European populations.
Our overall objectives were:
1: To establish the patterning of genetic diversity across Iron Age Britain and to examine the extent to which this corresponds with (a) traditional cultural boundaries, identified through settlement patterns, material culture and linguistic evidence, and (b) genetic clusters identified from analyses of modern DNA.
2: To examine the degree of mobility and connectivity within Iron Age communities in Britain through a suite of isotopic analyses.
3: To characterise the composition of Iron Age cemetery populations in Britain (as a proxy for living communities) in relation to age, sex, diet, health, disability and social inequality.
4: To identify familial relationships within Iron Age funerary contexts in Britain and the degree to which Iron Age communities practiced matrilocal or patrilocal marriage patterns.