Language continuity despite population replacement in Remote Oceania

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Posth, Cosimo | Nägele, Kathrin | Colleran, Heidi | Valentin, Frédérique | Bedford, Stuart | Kami, Kaitip | Shing, Richard | Buckley, Hallie | Kinaston, Rebecca | Walworth, Mary | Clark, Geoffrey | Reepmeyer, Christian | Flexner, James | Maric, Tamara | Moser, Johannes | Gresky, Julia | Kiko, Lawrence | Robson, Kathryn J. | Auckland, Kathryn | Oppenheimer, Stephen J. | Hill, Adrian V.S. | Mentzer, Alexander | Zech, Jana | Petchey, Fiona | Roberts, Patrick | Jeong, Choongwon | Gray, Russell D. | Krause, Johannes | Powell, Adam

Edité par CCSD ; Nature -

International audience. Recent genomic analyses show that the earliest peoples reaching Remote Oceania-associated with Austronesian-speaking Lapita culture-were almost completely East Asian, without detectable Papuan ancestry. However, Papuan-related genetic ancestry is found across present-day Pacific populations, indicating that peoples from Near Oceania have played a significant, but largely unknown, ancestral role. Here, new genome-wide data from 19 ancient South Pacific individuals provide direct evidence of a so-far undescribed Papuan expansion into Remote Oceania starting -2,500 yr BP, far earlier than previously estimated and supporting a model from historical linguistics. New genome-wide data from 27 contemporary ni-Vanuatu demonstrate a subsequent and almost complete replacement of Lapita-Austronesian by Near Oceanian ancestry. Despite this massive demographic change, incoming Papuan languages did not replace Austronesian languages. Population replacement with language continuity is extremely rare-if not unprecedented-in human history. Our analyses show that rather than one large-scale event, the process was incremental and complex, with repeated migrations and sex-biased admixture with peoples from the Bismarck Archipelago.

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