Friedlaender J S, Gentz Fred, Green K, Merriwether D A
Department of Anthropology, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA 19122, USA.
Hum Biol. 2002 Jun;74(3):453-71. doi: 10.1353/hub.2002.0029.
Over the past decade, the origin of the first Malayo-Polynesian settlers of the island Pacific has become a contentious issue in molecular anthropology as well as in archaeology and historical linguistics. Whether the descendants of the ancestral Malayo-Polynesian speakers moved rapidly through Indonesia and Island Melanesia in a few hundred years, or whether they were the product of considerable intermingling within the more westerly part of the latter region, it is widely accepted that they were the first humans to colonize the distant Pacific islands beyond the central Solomon Islands approximately 3,000 years ago. The Santa Cruz Islands in the Eastern Solomons would have most likely been the first in Remote Oceania to be colonized by them. Archaeologically, the first Oceanic Austronesian settlement of this region appears to have been overlain by various later influences from groups farther west in a complex manner. Molecular anthropologists have tended to equate the spread of various Austronesian-speaking groups with a particular mitochondrial variant (a 9-base-pair [bp] deletion with specific D-loop variants). We have shown before that this is an oversimplified picture, and assumed that the Santa Cruz situation, with its series of intrusions, would be informative as to the power of mitochondrial DNA haplotype interpretations. In the Santa Cruz Islands, the 9-bp deletion is associated with a small number of very closely related hypervariable D-loop haplotypes resulting in a star-shaped Bandelt median network, suggesting a recent population expansion. This network is similar to Polynesian median networks. In a pairwise mismatch comparison, the Santa Cruz haplotypes have a bimodal distribution, with the first cluster being composed almost entirely of the 9-bp-deleted haplotypes-again attesting to their recent origins. Conversely, the nondeleted haplogroups bear signatures of more ancient origins within the general region. Therefore, while the profiles of the two sets of haplotypes indicate very distinctive origins in different populations with divergent expansion histories, the sequence of their introduction into the Santa Cruz Islands clearly does not follow simply.
在过去十年中,太平洋岛屿上首批南岛语系定居者的起源问题,在分子人类学以及考古学和历史语言学领域都引发了争议。这些说南岛语系原始语言的人的后代,是在几百年间迅速穿越印度尼西亚和美拉尼西亚群岛,还是在后者区域更靠西的部分经过大量混合后产生的,人们普遍认为,大约3000年前,他们是第一批殖民所罗门群岛中部以外遥远太平洋岛屿的人类。所罗门群岛东部的圣克鲁斯群岛很可能是他们在偏远大洋洲最早殖民的地方。从考古学角度看,该地区最早的南岛语系大洋洲定居点似乎以复杂的方式受到了来自更西部群体的各种后期影响。分子人类学家倾向于将各种说南岛语系群体的扩散与一种特定的线粒体变体(一种带有特定D环变体的9个碱基对[bp]缺失)联系起来。我们之前已经表明,这是一幅过于简化的图景,并假设圣克鲁斯群岛的情况,由于其一系列的入侵事件,对于线粒体DNA单倍型解释的效力会具有参考价值。在圣克鲁斯群岛,9个碱基对的缺失与少数非常密切相关的高变D环单倍型相关联,形成了一个星状的班德尔特中位数网络,表明最近有群体扩张。这个网络与波利尼西亚的中位数网络相似。在成对错配比较中,圣克鲁斯群岛的单倍型具有双峰分布,第一个聚类几乎完全由9个碱基对缺失的单倍型组成——这再次证明了它们的近期起源。相反,未缺失的单倍群在该地区总体范围内显示出更古老起源的特征。因此,虽然两组单倍型的分布表明它们在不同群体中有着截然不同的起源和不同的扩张历史,但它们被引入圣克鲁斯群岛的顺序显然并非简单直接。