mtDNA from hair and nail clarifies the genetic relationship of the 15th century Qilakitsoq Inuit mummies

No The 15th century Inuit mummies excavated at Qilakitsoq in Greenland in 1978 were exceptionally well preserved and represent the largest find of naturally mummified specimens from the Arctic. The estimated ages of the individuals, their distribution between two adjacent graves, the results of tiss...

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Published in:American Journal of Physical Anthropology
Main Authors: Gilbert, M.T.P., Djurhuus, D., Melchior, L., Lynnerup, N., Worobey, M., Wilson, Andrew S., Andreasen, C., Dissing, J.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10454/10947
https://doi.org/10.1002/ajpa.20602
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spelling ftunivbradford:oai:bradscholars.brad.ac.uk:10454/10947 2024-04-21T08:03:38+00:00 mtDNA from hair and nail clarifies the genetic relationship of the 15th century Qilakitsoq Inuit mummies Gilbert, M.T.P. Djurhuus, D. Melchior, L. Lynnerup, N. Worobey, M. Wilson, Andrew S. Andreasen, C. Dissing, J. 2007-06 http://hdl.handle.net/10454/10947 https://doi.org/10.1002/ajpa.20602 en eng Gilbert MT, Djurhuus D, Melchior L et al (2007) mtDNA from hair and nail clarifies the genetic relationship of the 15th century Qilakitsoq Inuit mummies. American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 133(2): 847-853. http://hdl.handle.net/10454/10947 https://doi.org/10.1002/ajpa.20602 mtDNA Hair Human remains Inuit Qilakitsoq Mummies Article No full-text in the repository 2007 ftunivbradford https://doi.org/10.1002/ajpa.20602 2024-03-27T15:48:32Z No The 15th century Inuit mummies excavated at Qilakitsoq in Greenland in 1978 were exceptionally well preserved and represent the largest find of naturally mummified specimens from the Arctic. The estimated ages of the individuals, their distribution between two adjacent graves, the results of tissue typing, and incomplete STR results led researchers to conclude that the eight mummies formed two distinct family groups: A grandmother (I/5), two daughters (I/3, I/4), and their two children (I/1, I/2) in one grave, and two sisters (II/6, II/8) and a daughter (II/7) of one of them in the other. Using mtDNA from hair and nail, we have reanalyzed the mummies. The results allowed the unambiguous assignment of each of the mummies to one of three mtDNA haplogroups: A2b (I/5); A2a (I/2, I/3, II/6, II/8); A2a-311 (I/1, I/4, II/7), excluded some of the previous relations, and pointed to new ones. I/5 is not the grandmother/mother of the individuals in Grave I, and she is not maternally related to any of the seven other mummies; I/3 and I/4 are not sisters and II/7 is neither the daughter of II/6 nor of II/8. However, I/1 may be the child of either I/4 or II/7 and these two may be sisters. I/2 may be the son of I/3, who may be the daughter of either II/6 or II/8, and these two may be sisters. The observation of haplogroups A2a and A2b amongst the 550-year-old Inuit puts a lower limit on the age of the two lineages in Greenland. Article in Journal/Newspaper Greenland inuit Bradford Scholars@University of Bradford American Journal of Physical Anthropology 133 2 847 853
institution Open Polar
collection Bradford Scholars@University of Bradford
op_collection_id ftunivbradford
language English
topic mtDNA
Hair
Human remains
Inuit
Qilakitsoq
Mummies
spellingShingle mtDNA
Hair
Human remains
Inuit
Qilakitsoq
Mummies
Gilbert, M.T.P.
Djurhuus, D.
Melchior, L.
Lynnerup, N.
Worobey, M.
Wilson, Andrew S.
Andreasen, C.
Dissing, J.
mtDNA from hair and nail clarifies the genetic relationship of the 15th century Qilakitsoq Inuit mummies
topic_facet mtDNA
Hair
Human remains
Inuit
Qilakitsoq
Mummies
description No The 15th century Inuit mummies excavated at Qilakitsoq in Greenland in 1978 were exceptionally well preserved and represent the largest find of naturally mummified specimens from the Arctic. The estimated ages of the individuals, their distribution between two adjacent graves, the results of tissue typing, and incomplete STR results led researchers to conclude that the eight mummies formed two distinct family groups: A grandmother (I/5), two daughters (I/3, I/4), and their two children (I/1, I/2) in one grave, and two sisters (II/6, II/8) and a daughter (II/7) of one of them in the other. Using mtDNA from hair and nail, we have reanalyzed the mummies. The results allowed the unambiguous assignment of each of the mummies to one of three mtDNA haplogroups: A2b (I/5); A2a (I/2, I/3, II/6, II/8); A2a-311 (I/1, I/4, II/7), excluded some of the previous relations, and pointed to new ones. I/5 is not the grandmother/mother of the individuals in Grave I, and she is not maternally related to any of the seven other mummies; I/3 and I/4 are not sisters and II/7 is neither the daughter of II/6 nor of II/8. However, I/1 may be the child of either I/4 or II/7 and these two may be sisters. I/2 may be the son of I/3, who may be the daughter of either II/6 or II/8, and these two may be sisters. The observation of haplogroups A2a and A2b amongst the 550-year-old Inuit puts a lower limit on the age of the two lineages in Greenland.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Gilbert, M.T.P.
Djurhuus, D.
Melchior, L.
Lynnerup, N.
Worobey, M.
Wilson, Andrew S.
Andreasen, C.
Dissing, J.
author_facet Gilbert, M.T.P.
Djurhuus, D.
Melchior, L.
Lynnerup, N.
Worobey, M.
Wilson, Andrew S.
Andreasen, C.
Dissing, J.
author_sort Gilbert, M.T.P.
title mtDNA from hair and nail clarifies the genetic relationship of the 15th century Qilakitsoq Inuit mummies
title_short mtDNA from hair and nail clarifies the genetic relationship of the 15th century Qilakitsoq Inuit mummies
title_full mtDNA from hair and nail clarifies the genetic relationship of the 15th century Qilakitsoq Inuit mummies
title_fullStr mtDNA from hair and nail clarifies the genetic relationship of the 15th century Qilakitsoq Inuit mummies
title_full_unstemmed mtDNA from hair and nail clarifies the genetic relationship of the 15th century Qilakitsoq Inuit mummies
title_sort mtdna from hair and nail clarifies the genetic relationship of the 15th century qilakitsoq inuit mummies
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/10454/10947
https://doi.org/10.1002/ajpa.20602
genre Greenland
inuit
genre_facet Greenland
inuit
op_relation Gilbert MT, Djurhuus D, Melchior L et al (2007) mtDNA from hair and nail clarifies the genetic relationship of the 15th century Qilakitsoq Inuit mummies. American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 133(2): 847-853.
http://hdl.handle.net/10454/10947
https://doi.org/10.1002/ajpa.20602
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1002/ajpa.20602
container_title American Journal of Physical Anthropology
container_volume 133
container_issue 2
container_start_page 847
op_container_end_page 853
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