Department of Evolutionary Biology, Uppsala University, Sweden.
Curr Biol. 2009 Nov 3;19(20):1758-62. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2009.09.017. Epub 2009 Sep 24.
The driving force behind the transition from a foraging to a farming lifestyle in prehistoric Europe (Neolithization) has been debated for more than a century [1-3]. Of particular interest is whether population replacement or cultural exchange was responsible [3-5]. Scandinavia holds a unique place in this debate, for it maintained one of the last major hunter-gatherer complexes in Neolithic Europe, the Pitted Ware culture [6]. Intriguingly, these late hunter-gatherers existed in parallel to early farmers for more than a millennium before they vanished some 4,000 years ago [7, 8]. The prolonged coexistence of the two cultures in Scandinavia has been cited as an argument against population replacement between the Mesolithic and the present [7, 8]. Through analysis of DNA extracted from ancient Scandinavian human remains, we show that people of the Pitted Ware culture were not the direct ancestors of modern Scandinavians (including the Saami people of northern Scandinavia) but are more closely related to contemporary populations of the eastern Baltic region. Our findings support hypotheses arising from archaeological analyses that propose a Neolithic or post-Neolithic population replacement in Scandinavia [7]. Furthermore, our data are consistent with the view that the eastern Baltic represents a genetic refugia for some of the European hunter-gatherer populations.
史前欧洲从采集到农耕生活方式的转变(新石器时代化)的驱动力已经争论了一个多世纪[1-3]。特别感兴趣的是人口更替还是文化交流是造成这一转变的原因[3-5]。斯堪的纳维亚在这场争论中占有独特的地位,因为它保留了新石器时代欧洲最后一个主要的狩猎采集者群体之一——坑纹陶器文化[6]。有趣的是,这些晚期的狩猎采集者与早期农民共存了一千多年,直到大约 4000 年前消失[7,8]。这两种文化在斯堪的纳维亚的长期共存被认为是反对中石器时代和现在之间人口更替的论据[7,8]。通过对从古代斯堪的纳维亚人类遗骸中提取的 DNA 进行分析,我们表明坑纹陶器文化的人不是现代斯堪的纳维亚人的直接祖先(包括斯堪的纳维亚北部的萨米人),而是与波罗的海东部地区的当代人口更为密切相关。我们的研究结果支持了考古分析提出的斯堪的纳维亚新石器时代或后新石器时代人口更替的假设[7]。此外,我们的数据与这样一种观点一致,即波罗的海东部地区是一些欧洲狩猎采集者群体的遗传避难所。