ADELAIDE, AUSTRALIA—Phys.org reports that Viridiana Villa-Islas of the National Autonomous University of Mexico and her colleagues analyzed genomes and mitochondrial DNA samples from 27 individuals whose remains were recovered from eight different archaeological sites in Mexico dating back some 2,300 years, in order to investigate the possible movements of ancient peoples. Study of archaeological evidence had suggested that during periods of drought, hunter-gatherers from the north of Mexico, or Aridoamerica, migrated south to Mesoamerica, where people farmed. But the new genetic study detected no evidence of such migrations—no genetic trace of people from Aridoamerica was detected in the DNA of people who lived farther south. The researchers think northerners may have relied on the trade of cinnabar, a mineral that was abundant in the north and highly desirable in the south, for their survival. Read the original scholarly article about this research in Science. To read about the movement of people and the introduction of improved maize varieties to the Yucatán, go to "The Great Maize Migration."
New Thoughts on Migration in Ancient Mexico
News May 16, 2023
SHARE:
Recommended Articles
Digs & Discoveries July/August 2022
The Great Maize Migration
(Keith M. Prufer)
Digs & Discoveries November/December 2024
Matchbox Memories
Courtesy Charlotte Williams
SLUB Dresden, Mscr.Dresd.R.310, http://digital.slub-dresden. de/id280742827 (Public Domain Mark 1.0)
Digs & Discoveries July/August 2024
Rubber Ball Recipe
-
Features March/April 2023
The Shaman's Secrets
9,000 years ago, two people were buried in Germany with hundreds of ritual objects—who were they?
Photographs Juraj Lipták -
Letter from the Faroes March/April 2023
Lost History of the Sheep Islands
New evidence shows that the remote North Atlantic archipelago was settled hundreds of years before the Vikings reached its shores
(Polhansen/Adobe Stock) -
Artifacts March/April 2023
Andean Wind Instruments
(Luis Manuel González La Rosa) -
Digs & Discoveries March/April 2023
Peru’s Lost Temple
(Courtesy Sâm Ghavami)