lockdownboredom
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I shared this post on X, great insights.It is not strictly a scientific paper but rather a master’s thesis from a Turkish university, not even a doctoral dissertation. The thesis reiterates the conclusions of previously published studies (Antonio, Lazaridis, Moots, Posth...) and includes 95 newly sequenced genomes from various regions of Anatolia, covering the period from the 6th century BCE to the 10th century CE. The historical section contains numerous significant errors. In the future, this thesis could be revised to become a peer-reviewed article.
I read quickly and it doesn't seem to me that this work offers significant new insights, it merely repeats established findings with several errors. It aligns with the conclusions of prior studies: central Italy during the Iron Age was populated by locals; there was a gradual increase in migrants from the eastern Mediterranean; during the Roman Empire, these migrants caused a demographic shift; and the arrival of migrants from central and northern Europe in central Italy after the fall of the Roman Empire contributed to the formation of modern Italians. However, since all the new samples come from Anatolia, it cannot be said that it further confirms the Anatolian-Levantine shift in Roman times. Such confirmation would have required samples from the European regions of the Roman Empire rather than Anatolia. As Lazaridis has already argued, the findings are consistent with the hypothesis that Anatolia in the Second Iron Age was a significant source of eastern migrants during the Roman Imperial period. Regarding Italy, Iron Age samples from many areas of northern and southern Italy are still lacking. Geneticists continue to focus on central Italy, as the most comprehensive studies to date have concentrated on Rome and its surrounding areas. Some specific studies on Southern Italy, for example, would be very useful at this point.
Interesting that a Turkish university on the one hand advocates a migrationist thesis for Europe and on the other a genetic continuity for Turkey, a bit in contradiction to the recent study of modern Turks where samples from the Balkans to the areas closest to the Levant of Turkey were used, trying to emphasize the idea that Turks range from Europe to West Asia.
Are they not considering only ancient Anatolians pop's?Sure modern Turks are another thing. Complicated history.It is not strictly a scientific paper but rather a master’s thesis from a Turkish university, not even a doctoral dissertation. The thesis reiterates the conclusions of previously published studies (Antonio, Lazaridis, Moots, Posth...) and includes 95 newly sequenced genomes from various regions of Anatolia, covering the period from the 6th century BCE to the 10th century CE. The historical section contains numerous significant errors. In the future, this thesis could be revised to become a peer-reviewed article.
I read quickly and it doesn't seem to me that this work offers significant new insights, it merely repeats established findings with several errors. It aligns with the conclusions of prior studies: central Italy during the Iron Age was populated by locals; there was a gradual increase in migrants from the eastern Mediterranean; during the Roman Empire, these migrants caused a demographic shift; and the arrival of migrants from central and northern Europe in central Italy after the fall of the Roman Empire contributed to the formation of modern Italians. However, since all the new samples come from Anatolia, it cannot be said that it further confirms the Anatolian-Levantine shift in Roman times. Such confirmation would have required samples from the European regions of the Roman Empire rather than Anatolia. As Lazaridis has already argued, the findings are consistent with the hypothesis that Anatolia in the Second Iron Age was a significant source of eastern migrants during the Roman Imperial period. Regarding Italy, Iron Age samples from many areas of northern and southern Italy are still lacking. Geneticists continue to focus on central Italy, as the most comprehensive studies to date have concentrated on Rome and its surrounding areas. Some specific studies on Southern Italy, for example, would be very useful at this point.
Interesting that a Turkish university on the one hand advocates a migrationist thesis for Europe and on the other a genetic continuity for Turkey, a bit in contradiction to the recent study of modern Turks where samples from the Balkans to the areas closest to the Levant of Turkey were used, trying to emphasize the idea that Turks range from Europe to West Asia.
Are they not considering only ancient Anatolians pop's?Sure modern Turks are another thing. Complicated history.
a small s(say 5 to 10)I have a general observation that applies to all studies, not just this one: while I'm not a statistician, I understand that small sample sizes can lead to unreliable conclusions. Specifically, limited samples are more prone to overrepresenting extreme cases, which can distort the true incidence rates found in the general population.
It is, for example, apparent to me that a sample size around 10 (or even 20?) should not even be put out there for a serious debate. Am I wrong?
A small sample (say: 5 to 10) in the same place at the same period of time, showing homogeneity without familial links is reliable at the allover autosomes level. Otherwise, I agree, it isn't of great value.I have a general observation that applies to all studies, not just this one: while I'm not a statistician, I understand that small sample sizes can lead to unreliable conclusions. Specifically, limited samples are more prone to overrepresenting extreme cases, which can distort the true incidence rates found in the general population.
It is, for example, apparent to me that a sample size around 10 (or even 20?) should not even be put out there for a serious debate. Am I wrong?
I have a general observation that applies to all studies, not just this one: while I'm not a statistician, I understand that small sample sizes can lead to unreliable conclusions. Specifically, limited samples are more prone to overrepresenting extreme cases, which can distort the true incidence rates found in the general population.
It is, for example, apparent to me that a sample size around 10 (or even 20?) should not even be put out there for a serious debate. Am I wrong?
We've had proto-/early Turkic samples for a while and we can look for that ancestry in modern Turks. It ranges from 0 to 5-10% depending on the area. If you assume a C. Asian proxy then just double it to 0-20%. It's safe to assume modern Turks are largely (>80%) IA Anatolians, although I haven't looked into the possibility of Armenian/Caucasus influence, which would offer a similar result to what already exists. (And I'm aware there are sides very invested into it being true, and others sides very invested in wanting it not to be true, so there's no point going there unless a paper addresses it explicitly)The idea of strong genetic continuity in Anatolia from 600BC-1000AD is something pretty well evidenced and this can be further extended to the Chalcolithic era. I don't see that part as controversial. All bets are off after 1000AD and the migration of the Turks of course.
Influence from the Armenian highlands diluted the neolithic Anatolian base genome heavily during the Chalcolithic era. If we use the four neolithic Armenian/Azeri genomes we have access to as a source for this profile the ancestry displacement of Barcin Neolithic ancestry in Anatolia is something like 60% and we begin to see this type of caucasian ancestry creep into Greece and Sicily even by the end of the neolithic (in very small proportions). Anatolia stabalizes after the Chalcolithic and retains its Caucasian heavy structure up until the arrival of the Turks in ~1000AD, but during the full extent of the bronze age, iron age and antiquity it perpetually displaces the Greek genetic structure as time marches on. This influence is felt strongest in the islands and peloponese. Northern Greece remains to be seen - there will certainly be influence there but it will probably be lesser. Similarly the Greeks which arrived in Italy during the Magna Graecian era also displaced the local Oscan/IA latin like structure in favor of their Caucasian heavy aegean derived ancestry. The ladder is of course retained and normalized in Southern italy to this day, albeit under the Italian ethnological context instead of that of Greek.We've had proto-/early Turkic samples for a while and we can look for that ancestry in modern Turks. It ranges from 0 to 5-10% depending on the area. If you assume a C. Asian proxy then just double it to 0-20%. It's safe to assume modern Turks are largely (>80%) IA Anatolians, although I haven't looked into the possibility of Armenian/Caucasus influence, which would offer a similar result to what already exists. (And I'm aware there are sides very invested into it being true, and others sides very invested in wanting it not to be true, so there's no point going there unless a paper addresses it explicitly)
ed.* with some Balkan/Greek influence in the West although this could already exist there since the IA or Hellenistic times.
Yep, that's what I meant by "Chalcolithic". Late Neolithic Greece is synchronous with this, and in Greece it was actually a pretty decent amount. In Minoans it even reached roughly half(!) of their ancestry.Influence from the Armenian highlands diluted the neolithic Anatolian base genome heavily during the Chalcolithic era. If we use the four neolithic Armenian/Azeri genomes we have access to as a source for this profile the ancestry displacement of Barcin Neolithic ancestry in Anatolia is something like 60% and we begin to see this type of caucasian ancestry creep into Greece and Sicily even by the end of the neolithic (in very small proportions). Anatolia stabalizes after the Chalcolithic and retains its Caucasian heavy structure up until the arrival of the Turks in ~1000AD, but during the full extent of the bronze age, iron age and antiquity it perpetually displaces the Greek genetic structure as time marches on. This influence is felt strongest in the islands and peloponese. Northern Greece remains to be seen - there will certainly be influence there but it will probably be lesser. Similarly the Greeks which arrived in Italy during the Magna Graecian era also displaced the local Oscan/IA latin like structure in favor of their Caucasian heavy aegean derived ancestry. The ladder is of course retained and normalized in Southern italy to this day, albeit under the Italian ethnological context instead of that of Greek.
The Minoans certainly had influence from BA anatolia, yes, but it was much less than what is seen in LBA Crete under the Mycenaean context.Yep, that's what I meant by "Chalcolithic". Late Neolithic Greece is synchronous with this, and in Greece it was actually a pretty decent amount. In Minoans it even reached roughly half(!) of their ancestry.
IIrc Anatolia retains a stable average of CHG/Iran but has increased fluctuations during the Iron Age (see Lazaridis et al 2022). Basically a Mycenaean influence resulting in slightly lower CHG/Iran in some parts. Then the Hellenistic/Late Antiquity era is similar, same average but with outliers. I think this mostly corresponds with geography.
Btw wasn't Bronze Age Sicily already somewhat similar to Mycenaeans? But I might remember wrong.
~50% was less than in LBA Mycenaean Crete? Or do you mean something else? Mycenaeans themselves in general have an Eastern pull which is additional to the one Minoans had (otherwise their CHG/Iran would be lower than it is due to dilution) but it's definitely lower than 50% iirc.The Minoans certainly had influence from BA anatolia, yes, but it was much less than what is seen in LBA Crete under the Mycenaean context.
BA Sicily also had some minor incoming BA anatolian-like influence but this was more likely from Greece itself than direct Anatolian population movements. You can think of Sicily as downstream from Greece which itself was downstream from Anatolia, which during the Chalcolithic was downstream from the Armenian highlands. Ancestry seems to expand from east to west in this fashion.
This is what I'm getting at. This "Eastern" pull was just further progressive Anatolian genetic influence. There was also a simultaneous increase of EHG ancestry which corresponds to influence from the northern or north east Balkans, which should not be ignored as well. The differential input of both of these ancestries will likely create a north/south cline once we have more northern Greek samples to compare against our southern Greeks for these same time periods.~50% was less than in LBA Mycenaean Crete? Or do you mean something else? Mycenaeans themselves in general have an Eastern pull which is additional to the one Minoans had (otherwise their CHG/Iran would be lower than it is due to dilution) but it's definitely lower than 50% iirc.