作者
Tao Le,Haibing Yuan,Kongyang Zhu,Xiangyu Liu,Jianxin Guo,Rui Min,Haifeng He,Doudou Cao,Xiaomin Yang,Zhiqing Zhou,Rui Wang,Deyun Zhao,Hao Ma,Jian Chen,Jing Zhao,Yingfu Li,Yuanhong He,Dehao Suo,Ruojing Zhang,Shuai Li,Lan Li,Yalan Yan,Haichao Li,Liang Zhang,Jin Li,Chuan‐Chao Wang
摘要
The study of southwest China is vital for understanding the dispersal and development of farming because of the coexistence of millet and rice in this region since the Neolithic period. 1 Guedes J.D. Jiang M. He K.Y. Wu X.H. Jiang Z.H. Site of Baodun yields earliest evidence for the spread of rice and foxtail millet agriculture to south-west China. Antiquity. 2013; 87: 758-771https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003598X00049449 Crossref Google Scholar ,2 Wang X.B. Liu X.Y. Yan X. Jiang M. Zhou Z.Q. Chen J. Jin G.Y. Agricultural practices of the Early Baodun Culture: from the perspective of the plant remains at Gaoshan site in Dayi County, Sichuan Province. Quat. Sci. 2023; 43: 1429-1443 Google Scholar However, the process of the Neolithic transition in southwest China is largely unknown, mainly due to the lack of ancient DNA from the Neolithic period. Here, we report genome-wide data from 11 human samples from the Gaoshan and Haimenkou sites with mixed farming of millet and rice dating to between 4,500 and 3,000 years before present in southwest China. The two ancient groups derived approximately 90% of their ancestry from the Neolithic Yellow River farmers, suggesting a demic diffusion of millet farming to southwest China. We inferred their remaining ancestry to be derived from a Hòabìnhian-related hunter-gatherer lineage. We did not detect rice farmer-related ancestry in the two ancient groups, which indicates that they likely adopted rice farming without genetic assimilation. We, however, observed rice farmer-related ancestry in the formation of some present-day Tibeto-Burman populations. Our results suggested the occurrence of both demic and cultural diffusion in the development of Neolithic mixed farming in some parts of southwest China.