Ancient DNA uncovers population replacement near Paris around 3000 BC

Genetic analysis of remains from a megalithic tomb near Bury, 50 kilometers north of Paris, reveals a complete population turnover around 3000 BC. The earlier group shared genetics with northern European farmers, while newcomers arrived from southern France and the Iberian Peninsula. Researchers link the shift to disease, environmental stress, and social changes.

A study examining 132 individuals buried in a large megalithic tomb near Bury uncovered a sharp population decline around 3000 BC. The site was used in two distinct periods, with genetic evidence showing no relation between the groups buried before and after the gap. Researchers from the University of Copenhagen led the analysis, published in Nature Ecology & Evolution. Frederik Valeur Seersholm, an assistant professor at the Globe Institute, stated, 'We see a clear genetic break between the two periods.' The initial population resembled Stone Age farmers from northern France and Germany, while the later one had strong ties to southern regions. Pathogen DNA in the bones pointed to plague bacterium Yersinia pestis and Borrelia recurrentis, causing louse-borne relapsing fever. However, Martin Sikora, the senior author, noted, 'The evidence does not support [plague] as the sole cause of the population collapse.' Skeletal remains indicated high mortality, particularly among children and young adults, described by Laure Salanova of France's CNRS as 'a strong indicator of crisis.' The replacement also transformed burial practices, shifting from extended family groups to a focus on a single male lineage. Seersholm added that this reflected 'a shift in how society was structured.' The findings align with a broader Neolithic decline across northern and western Europe, coinciding with the end of megalith construction.

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Archaeological dig at Bronze Age Arkaim uncovering sheep skeleton with visualized ancient plague DNA against Eurasian steppe landscape.
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Ancient sheep DNA offers new clues to how a Bronze Age plague spread across Eurasia

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Researchers analyzing ancient DNA say they have detected the plague bacterium Yersinia pestis in the remains of a domesticated sheep from Arkaim, a Bronze Age settlement in the southern Ural region of present-day Russia. The team reports this is the first known identification of a Bronze Age plague lineage in a nonhuman host from that period, a finding that could help explain how an early, pre-flea-adapted form of plague traveled widely across Eurasia.

Analysis of ancient DNA shows that people who replaced Britain's population around 2400 BC came from the river deltas of the Low Countries. These migrants, linked to the Bell Beaker culture, carried a unique mix of hunter-gatherer and early farmer ancestry preserved in wetland regions. Within a century, they accounted for 90 to 100 percent of Britain's genetic makeup, displacing the Neolithic farmers who built Stonehenge.

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Researchers at Uppsala University have used ancient DNA to reveal that Stone Age burials in Sweden involved extended family members beyond immediate relatives. Analysis of shared graves at the Ajvide site on Gotland shows second- and third-degree kin were often buried together, suggesting strong community ties. The findings challenge assumptions about simple family structures in hunter-gatherer societies 5,500 years ago.

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A new computational analysis of Paleolithic artifacts reveals that humans over 40,000 years ago engraved structured symbols on tools and figurines, indicating early forms of information recording. These signs, found mainly in southwestern Germany, show complexity comparable to the earliest known writing systems that emerged millennia later. Researchers suggest these markings were purposeful, predating formal writing by tens of thousands of years.

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