Publication:
The Genomic Impact of European Colonization of the Americas.

No Thumbnail Available

Date

2019-11-14

Authors

Ongaro, Linda
Scliar, Marilia O
Flores, Rodrigo
Raveane, Alessandro
Marnetto, Davide
Sarno, Stefania
Gnecchi-Ruscone, Guido A
Alarcón-Riquelme, Marta E
Patin, Etienne
Wangkumhang, Pongsakorn

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Metrics
Google Scholar
Export

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

The human genetic diversity of the Americas has been affected by several events of gene flow that have continued since the colonial era and the Atlantic slave trade. Moreover, multiple waves of migration followed by local admixture occurred in the last two centuries, the impact of which has been largely unexplored. Here, we compiled a genome-wide dataset of ∼12,000 individuals from twelve American countries and ∼6,000 individuals from worldwide populations and applied haplotype-based methods to investigate how historical movements from outside the New World affected (1) the genetic structure, (2) the admixture profile, (3) the demographic history, and (4) sex-biased gene-flow dynamics of the Americas. We revealed a high degree of complexity underlying the genetic contribution of European and African populations in North and South America, from both geographic and temporal perspectives, identifying previously unreported sources related to Italy, the Middle East, and to specific regions of Africa.

Description

MeSH Terms

American Indian or Alaska Native
Black People
Caribbean Region
Central America
Gene Flow
Genome, Human
Humans
North America
South America
White People

DeCS Terms

CIE Terms

Keywords

Atlantic Slave Trade, European colonization, admixture history of the Americas, sex-biased admixture

Citation