Department of Anthropology MSC01-1040, Anthropology 1, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 2021 Jun;175(2):497-505. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.24258. Epub 2021 Mar 11.
While genetic studies have documented variation in admixture proportions in contemporary African Americans across the US, relatively little is known about the socio-historical roots of this variation. Our goal in this study is to use dental morphology to explore the socio-historical correlates of admixture, localized gene flow, and drift in African Americans.
Our data are ordinally-graded dental morphological traits scored in 196 Africans, 335 Europeans and European Americans, 291 pre-Spanish-contact Native Americans, and 722 African Americans. The African American data derived from contemporary and historic samples. We eliminated from analysis individuals and traits with greater than 20% missing data. We summarized the major axes of trait variation using principal component analysis (PCA), estimated biological distance, constructed multidimensional scaling (MDS) plots of the distances, and measured the correlation between geographic and biological distance.
In the PCA, African American groups clustered between Africans and Europeans on PC 1, reflecting admixture between the groups. PC 2 separated African American samples, possibly reflecting movement, isolation, and drift. MDS analyses confirmed the existence of sizable biological distances between African American samples, especially between contemporary and past African American samples. We found no relationship between biological and geographic distances.
We demonstrate that admixture and drift can be inferred from multi-variable analyses of patterns of dental morphology in admixed populations. Localized gene flow has not affected patterns of trait variation in African Americans, but long-range movement, isolation, and drift have. We connect patterns of dental trait variation to efforts to flee oppression during the Great Migration, and the repeal of anti-miscegenation laws.
虽然遗传研究已经记录了美国当代非裔美国人的混合比例存在差异,但对于这种差异的社会历史根源知之甚少。我们的研究目标是利用牙齿形态学来探索非裔美国人混合、局部基因流动和漂变的社会历史相关性。
我们的数据是对 196 名非洲人、335 名欧洲人和欧洲裔美国人、291 名西班牙裔前美洲原住民和 722 名非裔美国人进行的有序分级牙齿形态特征评分。非裔美国人的数据来自当代和历史样本。我们从分析中排除了有超过 20%数据缺失的个体和特征。我们使用主成分分析(PCA)总结了特征变异的主要轴,估计了生物距离,构建了距离多维尺度(MDS)图,并测量了地理距离和生物距离之间的相关性。
在 PCA 中,非裔美国人组在 PC1 上聚集在非洲人和欧洲人之间,反映了两组之间的混合。PC2 分离了非裔美国人样本,可能反映了群体的迁移、隔离和漂变。MDS 分析证实了非裔美国人样本之间存在相当大的生物距离,尤其是在当代和过去的非裔美国人样本之间。我们没有发现生物距离和地理距离之间的关系。
我们证明,混合和漂变可以从混合人群牙齿形态模式的多变量分析中推断出来。局部基因流动尚未影响非裔美国人的特征变异模式,但长距离迁移、隔离和漂变已经产生了影响。我们将牙齿特征变异模式与大迁徙期间逃避压迫的努力以及反混血法律的废除联系起来。