native american indian tribes of the US & Canada    | Add us to your Favorites |      | Shop
Art | Arts & Crafts | Craft Supplies | Clothing |Figurines | Jewelry | Home Decor | Knives | New Products | On Sale! | Closeouts
native americans pets and north american wildlife - us  indian tribes native americans alaska natives - alaskan villages Canada First Nations U.S. Indian Tribes ancient indian civilizations native american genealogy native american posters and art prints native american catalog online
aboriginal people of north america native people of north america - free pictures native american art native american directory
american indian legends
   Celebrating native american indian tribes of the US and Canada
 
Shop for native american themed gifts
 Native American Home |InfoWizzard |New Site | All Categories | Articles Master List | Topics Site Map |What's New |Mail Bag

Over 2,000 articles about native americans of the US and Canada First Nations.


Submit your own articles about american indians without knowing any HTML here
 Are you ready?
Today's Top Story:
Do indian reservations need summer volunteers?
Random Headlines

History
[ History ]

·Three Affiliated Tribes Time Line
·Ceremonies dedicate Sand Creek Memorial
·Native american code talkers came from 17 tribes, not just Navajo
·DNA extracted from a 10,300-year-old tooth reveals new line of people in the Americas
·The Nakota, Lakota and Dakota Nations
·Spirit Of Wounded Knee Lives On
·Closest look yet at Fort Clatsop leaves mystery
·two-hour documentary about the Pequot War
·History of the Pamunkey tribe
Traffic Ranking
indian tribeSite Sections
indian tribesShopping
indian tribesActivism &
indian tribesIssues
indian tribesAlaskan Natives
indian tribesAncient Cultures
indian tribesBlood Quantum
indian tribesIndian Dances
indian tribesFirst Nations
indian tribesNA Genealogy
indian tribesFree Pictures
indian tribesNA Poems
indian tribesNA Posters
indian tribesTribal Locations indian tribesMap
indian tribesUS Tribes

Guests
Login/Join
indian tribesYou are an Anonymous user. Anonymous users are not allowed to post stories or leave comments. You can register for FREE.Members have access to more features.
indian tribeSite Info
indian tribesAdd URL
indian tribesContact Us
indian tribesFAQs
indian tribesMail Bag
indian tribesRecommend Us
indian tribesShopping
indian tribesSite Info Index
indian tribesSurveys
indian tribesTop 100 Lists
indian tribesWeb Directory
indian tribesWhat's New

Link Partners
art & artists
birth defect info
earth science
california indians
dog breeds
flowers and gardening
greek mythology
health & diets
holiday ideas
learn the web
addicted to sports
pets and wildlife
travel guides
Spirit Guides
web design
Recent Articles
Monday, March 03
· Little Carpenter, Cherokee 1699 - 1797
· Casting Call given for The Lost Warrior
Friday, February 29
· How do I go about researching my Algonquin genealogy?
Wednesday, February 27
· National Indian Education Association is hiring
· Top 100 native american posters
Saturday, February 09
· What indian tribes originated in Kansas?
Sunday, January 27
· Native American themed checks
Tuesday, January 22
· photography competition for Native students
Friday, January 18
· New Aboriginal Film Site on the Web
Tuesday, January 15
· TV Review: 1st segment of Comanche Moon mini-series

Older Articles
Today's Featured Category

Kid's Pages
[ Kid's Pages ]

·Make your own paints
·How to make a corn husk doll
·Indian Corn
·How the Shoshone and Paiutes became allies (Shoshone - Paiute Legend)
·"Native Heroes" Art Contest Announced: Kids- Take Up Pen and Brush to Draw Peopl
·Student letters help make Thorpe cereal-box champ
·Graham Greene quick profile
·The Real Pocahontas
·The Princess Prisoner
Privacy Policy
Any information collected on our site is used for internal purposes only and will not be shared or sold to third parties!
Your transactions in our store are secure


Official PayPal Seal
Videos of the Week
Native Genocide
Native american history song by Baby Gurl with photo collage 4:22 minutes

Healing Heart of Humanity
Humanity Healing Network invites you to embrace a revolutionary concept. 4:39 minutes

Native American Chicken Dance
A native american chicken dance performed at a pow wow. 3:37 minutes

Leonard Peltier ~ Americas Mandela
The story of the more than 60 men and women who died during the "reign of terror." How all that relates to the case of Leonard Peltier. 11:58 minutes.

 Hist->General: DNA extracted from a 10,300-year-old tooth reveals new line of people in the Americas
Posted on Tuesday, February 20 @ 11:37:27 PST



DNA extracted from a 10,300-year-old tooth found in On Your Knees Cave on Prince of Wales Island off southern Alaska in 1996 reveals a previously unknown lineage for the people who first arrived in the Americas.

StumbleUpon Toolbar Stumble It!



A study of the oldest known sample of human DNA in the Americas suggests that humans arrived in the New World relatively recently, around 15,000 years ago.

The findings, published last week online in the American Journal of Physical Anthropology, shed light on how the descendants of the Alaskan caveman might have spread.

Comparing the DNA found in the tooth with that sampled from 3,500 Native Americans, researchers discovered that only one percent of modern tribal members have genetic patterns that matched the prehistoric sample.

Those who did lived primarily on the Pacific coast of North and South America, from California to Tierra del Fuego at the southernmost tip of South America.

This suggests that the first Americans may have spread through the New World along a coastal route.

Brian Kemp, a molecular anthropologist who sequenced the DNA, said the discovery underlines the importance of genetic research in understanding human migration.

"I think there's a lot of information in these old skeletons that's going to help us clarify the timing of the peopling of the Americas and perhaps where Native Americans originated in Asia," said Kemp, a research associate at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee.

Using material taken from the tooth, Kemp isolated fragments of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), which is passed down from mothers to their offspring, and Y chromosome DNA, which is passed from father to son.

Genetic Markers



All of the mtDNA lineages among Native Americans are associated with five founding lineages believed to have originated in Asia.

But the caveman DNA turned out to be an independent founding lineage.

Of the 47 samples that matched the tooth DNA, 4 were from descendants of Chumash Indians living along California's central coast.

"The distribution of people exhibiting this [genetic] type today are all distributed in the western Americas," Kemp said.

"More or less the individuals are smack down the coast. It's a very neat western distribution."

John Johnson, an archaeologist and ethnohistorian at the Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History in California, collected the Chumash DNA samples.

To Johnson, the matching of the Chumash samples to the On Your Knees Cave man is indirect evidence of an ancient coastal migration that may have occurred very rapidly.

"We're interested in who were those first people to arrive here at the Pacific coast," Johnson said.

"I believe the Chumash descended from a very early coastal migration that resulted in the distribution of people down to the tip of South America."

Fishing Cultures



But where did these coastal migrants come from?

DNA samples of people living in Japan and northeast Asia show some of the genetic mutations found in the cave-tooth and Chumash samples.

"I think that's a clue that there could be a genetic connection," Johnson said.

He said the Chumash ancestors may have been skilled fishers before they arrived in the Americas.

"Your techniques for exploiting coastal resources are easily [transferable] and something that maybe can allow you to migrate more quickly than people who are hunters and gatherers, who must get used to new environments as they move into uncharted territory," Johnson said.

"I think that may have allowed a more rapid migration along the Pacific margins of the Americas."

On Your Knees Cave



When and how the first people came to the Americas has been a subject of intense debate.

The prevailing theory has been that the first to arrive descended from prehistoric hunters who walked across a thousand-mile (1,600-kilometer) land bridge from Asia to Alaska.

This migration probably occurred at least 15,000 years ago—the oldest human remains discovered so far are 13,000 years old—but some scientists have proposed that the first Americans arrived up to 40,000 years ago.

The Alaskan tooth was discovered in a cavern called On Your Knees Cave, named by the explorer who first crawled inside it.

From a genetic database of 3,500 Native Americans, Kemp found 47 individuals in North and South America who exhibited the same genetic markers as the caveman. Some of the samples were drawn from living people and others from ancient bones.

He then compared the tooth DNA with the matching, modern samples and tracked the mutations that had occurred in that DNA over time.

By measuring the rate of mutation, Kemp found that so-called molecular evolution—the process by which genetic material changes over time—had taken place two to four times faster than researchers believed mtDNA could evolve.

That, Kemp said, suggests people entered the Americas within the last 15,000 years, because the DNA has evolved too fast for the arrival to have occurred any earlier.

"I would say that humans were probably not here much before that date," said Kemp. "A 15,000-year-old entry is [also] much more consistent with the archaeological record."

Kemp said rapidly advancing DNA technology will help scientists piece together the story of the first Americans.

"No expert in morphology could look at the bones and say this person resembles a Tierra del Fuego person. It was only the DNA that could seal the case," Kemp said.

"This really highlights the importance of adding a molecular component to the study of these really ancient remains."



18



 
Google

Web AAANativeArts.com

New Navigation
(New Site Design in Progress)
US Tribes
Canadian First Nations
Shopping

Related Links
· Submit an article
· History-Buff
· Shopping Index
· Native American History Index
· More about History
· News by aaanativearts


Most read story about History:
Into the West - An epic 6 part mini-series coming to TNT in June

Article Rating
Average Score: 0
Votes: 0

Please take a second and vote for this article:

Excellent
Very Good
Good
Regular
Bad

Options

 Printer Friendly Printer Friendly






©2002 - AAA Native Arts


Website Ranking

Website Designed by: Mazaska Web Design
Hosted by: HostIt4You.com

file: 1415 DNA extracted from a 10,300-year-old tooth reveals new line of people in the Americas