生物
古代DNA
追踪
进化生物学
沉积岩
古生物学
计算生物学
人口
人口学
社会学
计算机科学
操作系统
作者
Giulia Zampirolo,Luke E. Holman,Rikai Sawafuji,Michaela Ptáková,Lenka Kovačíková,Petr Šída,Petr Pokorný,Mikkel Winther Pedersen,Matthew Walls
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.cub.2024.08.047
摘要
Central European forests have been shaped by complex human interactions throughout the Holocene, with significant changes following the introduction of domesticated animals in the Neolithic (∼7.5-6.0 ka before present [BP]). However, understanding early pastoral practices and their impact on forests is limited by methods for detecting animal movement across past landscapes. Here, we examine ancient sedimentary DNA (sedaDNA) preserved at the Velký Mamuťák rock shelter in northern Bohemia (Czech Republic), which has been a forested enclave since the early Holocene. We find that domesticated animals, their associated microbiomes, and plants potentially gathered for fodder have clear representation by the Late Neolithic, around 6.0 ka BP, and persist throughout the Bronze Age into recent times. We identify a change in dominant grazing species from sheep to pigs in the Bronze Age (∼4.1-3.0 ka BP) and interpret the impact this had in the mid-Holocene retrogressions that still define the structure of Central European forests today. This study highlights the ability of ancient metagenomics to bridge archaeological and paleoecological methods and provide an enhanced perspective on the roots of the "Anthropocene."
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI