Neves Walter A, Hubbe Mark, Correal Gonzalo
Laboratório de Estudos Evolutivos Humanos, Departamento de Genética e Biologia Evolutiva, Instituto de Biociências, Universidade de São Paulo, C.P. 11461, 05422.970 São Paulo, Brazil.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 2007 Aug;133(4):1080-98. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.20637.
Human skeletal remains of the first Americans are scarce, especially in North America. In South America the situation is less dramatic. Two important archaeological regions have generated important collections that allow the analysis of the cranial morphological variation of the Early Americans: Lagoa Santa, Brazil, and Sabana de Bogotá, Colombia. Human crania from the former region have been studied by one of us (WAN) and collaborators, showing that the cranial morphology of the first South Americans was very different from that prevailing today in East Asia and among Native Americans. These results have allowed for proposing that the New World may have been colonized by two different biological populations in the final Pleistocene/early Holocene. In this study, 74 human skulls dated between 11.0 and 3.0 kyr, recovered in seven different sites of Sabana de Bogotá, Colombia, were compared with the world cranial variation by different multivariate techniques: Principal Components Analysis, Multidimensional Scaling, and Cluster of Mahalanobis distance matrices. The Colombian skeletal remains were divided in two chronological subgroups: Paleocolombians (11.0-6.0 kyr) and Archaic Colombians (5.0-3.0 kyr). Both quantitative techniques generated convergent results: the Paleocolombians show remarkable similarities with Lagoa Santa and with modern Australo-Melanesians. Archaic Colombians exhibited the same morphological patterns and associations. These findings support our long-held proposition that the early American settlement may have involved two very distinct biological populations coming from Asia. On the other hand, they suggest the possibility of late survivals of the Paleoamerican pattern not restricted to isolated or marginal areas, as previously thought.
最早美洲人的人类骨骼遗骸十分稀少,在北美地区尤其如此。在南美,情况则没那么严峻。有两个重要的考古区域出土了重要的藏品,使得对早期美洲人的颅骨形态变异进行分析成为可能:巴西的拉戈阿圣塔和哥伦比亚的波哥大萨瓦纳。我们中的一人(WAN)及合作者对来自前一地区的人类颅骨进行了研究,结果表明最早南美人的颅骨形态与当今东亚人和美洲原住民中普遍存在的形态大不相同。这些结果使得人们提出,在末次更新世/全新世早期,新世界可能是由两个不同的生物种群殖民的。在本研究中,通过主成分分析、多维尺度分析和马氏距离矩阵聚类等不同多变量技术,将在哥伦比亚波哥大萨瓦纳七个不同地点发现的74个年代在11.0至3.0千年前的人类头骨与全球颅骨变异进行了比较。哥伦比亚的骨骼遗骸被分为两个按时间顺序排列的亚组:古哥伦比亚人(11.0 - 6.0千年前)和古风哥伦比亚人(5.0 - 3.0千年前)。这两种定量技术得出了趋同的结果:古哥伦比亚人与拉戈阿圣塔人和现代澳大利亚 - 美拉尼西亚人有显著相似之处。古风哥伦比亚人表现出相同的形态模式和关联。这些发现支持了我们长期以来的观点,即美洲早期的定居可能涉及来自亚洲的两个非常不同的生物种群。另一方面,它们表明古美洲模式后期可能不仅限于此前认为的孤立或边缘地区,而是有可能存在遗存。