Insights Into Aboriginal Australian Mortuary Practices: Perspectives From Ancient DNA

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Dokumenter

  • Sally Wasef
  • Joanne L. Wright
  • Shaun Adams
  • Michael C. Westaway
  • Clarence Flinders
  • Willerslev, Eske
  • David Lambert

Paleogenetics is a relatively new and promising field that has the potential to provide new information about past Indigenous social systems, including insights into the complexity of burial practices. We present results of the first ancient DNA (aDNA) investigation into traditional mortuary practices among Australian Aboriginal people with a focus on North-East Australia. We recovered mitochondrial and Y chromosome sequences from five ancestral Aboriginal Australian remains that were excavated from the Flinders Island group in Cape York, Queensland. Two of these individuals were sampled from disturbed beach burials, while the other three were from bundle burials located in rock shelters. Genomic analyses showed that individuals from all three rock shelter burials and one of the two beach burials had a close genealogical relationship to contemporary individuals from communities from Cape York. In contrast the remaining male individual, found buried on the beach, had a mitochondrial DNA sequence that suggested that he was not from this location but that he was closely related to people from central Queensland or New South Wales. In addition, this individual was associated with a distinctive burial practice to the other four people. It has been suggested that traditionally non-locals or lower status individuals were buried on beaches. Our findings suggest that theories put forward about beach burials being non-local, or less esteemed members of the community, can potentially be resolved through analyses of uniparental genomic data. Generally, these results support the suggestion often derived from ethnohistoric accounts that inequality in Indigenous Australian mortuary practices might be based on the status, sex, and/or age of individuals and may instead relate to place of geographic origin. There is, however, some departure from the traditional ethnohistoric account in that complex mortuary internments were also offered to female individuals of the community, with genomic analyses helping to confirm that the gender of one of the rockshelter internments was that of a young female.

OriginalsprogEngelsk
Artikelnummer217
TidsskriftFrontiers in Ecology and Evolution
Vol/bind8
Antal sider10
ISSN2296-701X
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 7 jul. 2020

Bibliografisk note

Funding Information:
We thank all the Aboriginal Australian participants for supporting this research. We would like to acknowledge the QLD Police, DATSIP, and QPWS for assistance in the field. We also thank David McGahan for his assistant in the excavation of Stanley Island. We thank the National Throughput DNA Sequencing Centre at the University of Copenhagen for ancient DNA sequencing. We also thank Assoc. Prof. Craig Millar from The University of Auckland, New Zealand for valuable comments on the original manuscript. We would like to thank Prof. Andrew Smith, Pro Vice Chancellor (Griffith Sciences) for his guidance and support. Funding. This research was possible due to funding from the Australian Research Council LP140100387.

Publisher Copyright:
© Copyright © 2020 Wasef, Wright, Adams, Westaway, Flinders, Willerslev and Lambert.

Antal downloads er baseret på statistik fra Google Scholar og www.ku.dk


Ingen data tilgængelig

ID: 269527157