Ancient nuclear genomes enable repatriation of Indigenous human remains

After European colonization, the ancestral remains of Indigenous people were often collected for scientific research or display in museum collections. For many decades, Indigenous people, including Native Americans and Aboriginal Australians, have fought for their return. However, many of these rema...

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Published in:Science advances Vol. 4; no. 12; p. eaau5064
Main Authors: Wright, Joanne L, Wasef, Sally, Heupink, Tim H, Westaway, Michael C, Rasmussen, Simon, Pardoe, Colin, Fourmile, Gudju Gudju, Young, Michael, Johnson, Trish, Slade, Joan, Kennedy, Roy, Winch, Patsy, Pappin, Sr, Mary, Wales, Tapij, Bates, William Badger, Hamilton, Sharnie, Whyman, Neville, van Holst Pellekaan, Sheila, McAllister, Peter J, Taçon, Paul S C, Curnoe, Darren, Li, Ruiqiang, Millar, Craig, Subramanian, Sankar, Willerslev, Eske, Malaspinas, Anna-Sapfo, Sikora, Martin, Lambert, David M
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: United States American Association for the Advancement of Science 01-12-2018
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Summary:After European colonization, the ancestral remains of Indigenous people were often collected for scientific research or display in museum collections. For many decades, Indigenous people, including Native Americans and Aboriginal Australians, have fought for their return. However, many of these remains have no recorded provenance, making their repatriation very difficult or impossible. To determine whether DNA-based methods could resolve this important problem, we sequenced 10 nuclear genomes and 27 mitogenomes from ancient pre-European Aboriginal Australians (up to 1540 years before the present) of known provenance and compared them to 100 high-coverage contemporary Aboriginal Australian genomes, also of known provenance. We report substantial ancient population structure showing strong genetic affinities between ancient and contemporary Aboriginal Australian individuals from the same geographic location. Our findings demonstrate the feasibility of successfully identifying the origins of unprovenanced ancestral remains using genomic methods.
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These authors contributed equally to this work.
Deceased.
ISSN:2375-2548
2375-2548
DOI:10.1126/sciadv.aau5064