Williams J T
Department of Anthropology, University of Kansas, Lawrence 66045.
Hum Biol. 1993 Apr;65(2):167-91.
The Norse and Celtic contributions to the founding population of Iceland have been estimated previously on a pan-Icelandic basis using gene frequency data for the entire island. Accounts of the settlement of Iceland, however, suggest that different regions received different proportions of Norse and Celtic settlers, indicating the need to incorporate geographic variation into Icelandic admixture studies. A formal likelihood ratio test rejects the null hypothesis of regional homogeneity in admixture proportions. Here, regional admixture estimates for Iceland are reported; they are in agreement with the settlement pattern inferred from historical accounts. The western, northern, and southern regions of Iceland exhibit a moderate Celtic component, consistent with historical indications that these regions were settled by Norse Vikings from the British Isles, accompanied by Celtic wives and slaves. Eastern Iceland, believed to have been settled chiefly by Vikings from Scandinavia, is characterized by a large Norse component of admixture. The northwestern peninsula is also found to be predominantly Norse. Regional genetic data are used to elucidate the contemporary population structure of Iceland. The observed structure correlates well with patterns of Icelandic geography, history, economy, marriage, urbanization, and internal migration. The northeastern region is strongly isolated, the urbanized areas of the north and southwest are representative of the overall population, and the remaining regions exhibit small-scale variation about the genetic central tendency. A high level of genetic homogeneity is indicated (RST = 0.0005), consistent with the high internal migration rate of the Icelanders. A regression of mean per-locus heterozygosity on distance from the gene frequency centroid reveals a greater than average external gene flow into the eastern region, whereas the northwestern peninsula has received less than average external gene flow. Iceland is compared with possible founding populations and was found to have diverged markedly from other northern European countries.
此前,基于整个冰岛的基因频率数据,在全冰岛范围内估算了北欧人和凯尔特人对冰岛创始人口的贡献。然而,关于冰岛定居情况的记载表明,不同地区接收的北欧和凯尔特定居者比例不同,这表明有必要将地理差异纳入冰岛混合血统研究。一项正式的似然比检验拒绝了混合比例区域同质性的零假设。在此,报告了冰岛的区域混合血统估计值;它们与从历史记载推断出的定居模式相符。冰岛的西部、北部和南部地区呈现出适度的凯尔特成分,这与历史记载一致,即这些地区是由来自不列颠群岛的北欧维京人定居的,他们还带着凯尔特妻子和奴隶。冰岛东部据信主要由来自斯堪的纳维亚的维京人定居,其特点是混合血统中有很大一部分是北欧成分。还发现西北半岛主要是北欧血统。区域遗传数据被用于阐明冰岛当代的人口结构。观察到的结构与冰岛的地理、历史、经济、婚姻、城市化和内部移民模式密切相关。东北地区高度隔离,北部和西南部的城市化地区代表了总体人口,其余地区围绕遗传中心趋势呈现出小规模变化。这表明冰岛具有高度的遗传同质性(RST = 0.0005),与冰岛人较高的内部移民率一致。对每个基因座平均杂合度与距基因频率质心距离的回归分析显示,东部地区的外部基因流入量高于平均水平,而西北半岛的外部基因流入量低于平均水平。将冰岛与可能的创始人口进行比较,发现它与其他北欧国家有明显差异。