Hallgrímsson Benedikt, Donnabháin Barra O, Walters G Bragi, Cooper David M L, Gudbjartsson Daníel, Stefánsson Kari
Department of Cell Biology and Anatomy, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta T2T 4N1, Canada.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 2004 Jul;124(3):257-74. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.10365.
We examined the composition of the founding population of Iceland through the study of morphological traits in skeletons from Iceland, Ireland, Norway, and Greenland. This is the first study to address this issue from the Settlement Period of Iceland and contemporary samples from Ireland. We pose the following questions: 1) Was the founding population of Iceland of mixed or homogeneous origin? 2) Is there evidence for a significant Irish cohort in the founding population, as suggested in medieval Icelandic literature? Analysis of biodistance revealed that both Settlement Age and later samples from Iceland showed a greater degree of phenetic similarity to contemporary Viking Age Norwegians than to samples obtained from early medieval Ireland. Analysis of among-individual morphological variation showed that the Settlement Age population of Iceland did not exhibit an increase in variation in comparison to other populations in the sample, suggesting a relatively homogenous origin. However, estimation of admixture between the Irish and Norwegian populations indicated that 66% of the Icelandic settlers were of Norwegian origin. Comparison of the Icelandic samples to hybrid samples produced by resampling the Viking Age Norwegian and early medieval Irish samples revealed that the Icelandic samples are much closer to the Norwegian samples than expected, based on a 66:34 mixture of Norwegian and Irish settlers. We conclude that the Settlement Age population of Iceland was predominantly (60-90%) of Norwegian origin. Although this population was relatively homogenous, our results do not preclude significant contributions from Ireland as well as other sources not represented in our analysis.
我们通过研究冰岛、爱尔兰、挪威和格陵兰岛骨骼的形态特征,考察了冰岛最初定居者群体的构成。这是第一项从冰岛定居时期以及爱尔兰当代样本的角度来探讨该问题的研究。我们提出以下问题:1)冰岛的最初定居者群体是混合起源还是同源起源?2)如中世纪冰岛文献中所暗示的那样,在最初定居者群体中是否有大量爱尔兰人群体的证据?生物距离分析表明,冰岛定居时期及之后的样本与当代维京时代的挪威人在表型相似性上,比与中世纪早期爱尔兰的样本更高。个体间形态变异分析表明,与样本中的其他群体相比,冰岛定居时期的人群在变异方面并未表现出增加,这表明其起源相对同源。然而,爱尔兰和挪威人群体间混合比例的估计表明,66%的冰岛定居者来自挪威。将冰岛样本与通过对维京时代挪威样本和中世纪早期爱尔兰样本重新抽样产生的混合样本进行比较后发现,基于挪威和爱尔兰定居者66:34的混合比例,冰岛样本比预期的更接近挪威样本。我们得出结论,冰岛定居时期的人群主要(60 - 90%)来自挪威。尽管这个群体相对同源,但我们的研究结果并不排除爱尔兰以及我们分析中未涉及的其他来源做出的重大贡献。