Chaubey Gyaneshwer, Endicott Phillip
Estonian Biocenter, Riia 23b, Tartu, 51010, Estonia.
Hum Biol. 2013 Feb-Jun;85(1-3):153-72. doi: 10.3378/027.085.0307.
The indigenous inhabitants of the Andaman Islands were considered by many early anthropologists to be pristine examples of a "negrito" substrate of humanity that existed throughout Southeast Asia. Despite over 150 years of research and study, questions over the extent of shared ancestry between Andaman Islanders and other small-bodied, gracile, dark-skinned populations throughout the region are still unresolved. This shared phenotype could be a product of shared history, evolutionary convergence, or a mixture of both. Recent population genetic studies have tended to emphasize long-term physical isolation of the Andaman Islanders and an affinity to ancestral populations of South Asia. We reexamine the genetic evidence from genome-wide autosomal single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) data for a shared history between the tribes of Little Andaman (Onge) and Great Andaman, and between these two groups and the rest of South and Southeast Asia (both negrito and non-negrito groups).
许多早期人类学家认为,安达曼群岛的原住民是遍布东南亚的人类“尼格利陀”底层的原始范例。尽管经过了150多年的研究,但安达曼岛民与该地区其他身材矮小、体型纤瘦、皮肤黝黑的人群之间共同祖先的程度问题仍未得到解决。这种共同的表型可能是共同历史、进化趋同或两者兼而有之的产物。最近的群体遗传学研究倾向于强调安达曼岛民长期的身体隔离以及与南亚祖先群体的亲缘关系。我们重新审视了来自全基因组常染色体单核苷酸多态性(SNP)数据的遗传证据,以探究小安达曼岛(昂格人)部落与大安达曼岛部落之间,以及这两个群体与南亚和东南亚其他地区(包括尼格利陀和非尼格利陀群体)之间的共同历史。