4115 articles – 7313 references  [version française]
HAL: hal-00153469, version 1

Short view  Export this paper
Evolution of populations from Oriental Siberia and the spatial Altaï/Baïkal complex using mt DNA haplogroup frequencies.
Gibert M., Amory S., Le Berre Semenov M., Sevin A., Alekseev A. N., Keyser C., Ludes B., Crubezy E.
Biennial Books of EAA 4 (2006) 139-158 - http://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00153469
Article in peer-reviewed journal
Humanities and Social Sciences/Biological anthropology
Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and Ecology
Evolution of populations from Oriental Siberia and the spatial Altaï/Baïkal complex using mt DNA haplogroup frequencies.
Morgane Gibert ( ) 1, Sylvain Amory () 1, 2, Marine Le Berre Semenov (), André Sevin () 1, Anatoly N. Alekseev 3, Christine Keyser () 1, 2, Bertrand Ludes () 1, 2, Eric Crubezy () 1
1:  Laboratoire d'Anthropobiologie (LA)
http://www-sv.cict.fr/anthropologie/
CNRS : FRE2960 – Université Paul Sabatier [UPS] - Toulouse III – Université Toulouse le Mirail - Toulouse II – École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales [EHESS]
37 allées Jules Guesde 31400 Toulouse
France
2:  Laboratoire d'Anthropologie Moléculaire, Institut de Médecine Légale, Strasbourg, France (IML)
Université Louis Pasteur - Strasbourg I
11 rue Humann 67085 Strasbourg Cedex
France
3:  Université d'Etat de Yakutsk
Université d'Etat de Yakoutsk
Russian Federation
Central Asia has been a zone of contact between Asian and European travellers since the beginning of the XXth century for anthropologist and as far back as the middle ages for travellers. With new archaeological data and extended collaborations between European, Siberian and Chinese researchers, the area of contact is now thought to have been much larger, encompassing the entire zone of Central Asia, south Siberia and the peri-Baikal area. Nowadays, it seems, in fact, that central Asia was only an extension of an initial zone delimited by what we call the Altaï/Baïkal spatial complex, originally a natural border and a zone of admixture between people from Asia in the south, and from Siberia in the north. Understanding the peopling of this spatial complex in relation to adjacent areas is of special interest for the study of European, Asian and American populations. In this paper, we discuss the maternal population history of this spatial complex by re-analyzing mt DNA data from modern populations at the haplogroup frequencies level and rather than the molecular level. This approach allows to apply original statistical analyses that offer a global view of the processes that shaped the population differentiation in Siberia.
English

Biennial Books of EAA
international
2006
4
139-158

evolution of populations – Oriental Siberia – Altaï/Baïkal complex – mtDNA – haplogroup frequencies

:N°ANR-05-JCJC-0115-01 ; MAFSO
Project Id ANR-05-JCJC-0115
Year 2005
Project acronyme Sibérie
Project title Diversité génétique des populations modernes et histoire du peuplement de la Sibérie Orientale
Intitule Jeunes chercheuses et jeunes chercheurs
Acronyme JCJC