INVESTIGADORES
DE AZEVEDO Soledad
artículos
Título:
The first human settlement of the New World: A closer look at craniofacial variation and evolution of early and late Holocene Native American groups
Autor/es:
DE AZEVEDO, SOLEDAD; QUINTO-SÁNCHEZ, MIRSHA; PASCHETTA, CAROLINA; GONZÁLEZ-JOSÉ, ROLANDO
Revista:
QUATERNARY INTERNATIONAL
Editorial:
PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
Referencias:
Año: 2017 vol. 431 p. 152 - 167
ISSN:
1040-6182
Resumen:
During its expansion across the globe, Homo sapiens successfully survived to major adaptive challenges as a species, inviting scientific research to plunge into the particularities of continental settlement dynamics. A recurrent paleoanthropological concern is about the understanding of the great deal of craniofacial diversity that evolved into the Americas, which includes a vector of continuum variation between a generalized morphology observed among humans groups leading the Out-of-Africa dispersion, and a derived set of craniofacial traits classically labeled as ?mongoloid? and that would have arise in Asia during the Holocene. Here, we use geometric morphometric techniques and multivariate statistics along with quantitative genetic approaches to look more closely into the human craniofacial evolutionary history during the Late Pleistocene?Early Holocene from Asia and the New World. We detected significant signals of deviation of the neutral evolutionary expectations, suggesting an important action of non-stochastic evolution (e.g. natural selection, phenotypic plasticity) in the Americas. We also found further support to the Recurrent Gene Flow model that refers to an ancestral, founder population experiencing a standstill in Beringia, and exhibiting high within-group craniofacial variation. This original, internally variable stock would have been the ancestral source of variation that fuelled the subsequent local micro evolution of other derived phenotypic patterns, giving origin to the craniofacial diversity observed among Holocene Native American samples.