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3,000 years ago, Britain got half its genes from… France?

- FRANZ LIDZ Lidz is a journalist with NYT©2021

Three years ago in the journal Nature, a vast internatio­nal research team led in part by Harvard geneticist David Reich shined a torchlight on one of prehistori­c Britain’s murkier mysteries.

By analysing the degraded DNA from the remains of 400 ancient Europeans, the researcher­s showed that 4,500 years ago nomadic pastoralis­ts from the steppes on the eastern edge of Europe surged into Central Europe and in some areas their progeny replaced around 75 percent of the genetic ancestry of the existing population­s.

Descendant­s of the nomads then moved west into Britain, where they mixed with the Neolithic inhabitant­s so thoroughly that within a few hundred years the newcomers accounted for more than 90 percent of the island’s gene pool. In effect, the research suggested, Britain was almost completely repopulate­d by immigrants.

In a paper published Wednesday in Nature,

Dr. Reich again targeted the genomic history of Britain, the country from which geneticist­s have mined more ancient samples than any other. The study, which has 223 co-authors, documents a subsequent and previously unknown major migration into Britain from 1,300 B.C. to 800 B.C.

Analysing DNA from 793 individual­s, the investigat­ors discovered that a massive Late Bronze Age movement displaced around half the ancestry of England and Wales and, possibly solving another longstandi­ng riddle about British history, may have brought early Celtic languages to the island from Europe.

According to the findings, from 1,000 B.C. to 875 B.C. the ancestry of early European farmers increased in southern Britain but not in northern Britain (now Scotland). Dr. Reich proposed that this resulted from an influx of foreigners who arrived at this time and over previous centuries, and who — no doubt to the disbelief of 21st-century British nativists — were geneticall­y most similar to ancient inhabitant­s of France. These newcomers accounted for as much as half the genetic makeup of the populace in southern Britain during the Iron Age, which began around 750 B.C. and lasted until the coming of the Romans in A.D. 43. DNA evidence from that period led Dr. Reich to believe that migration to Britain from continenta­l Europe was negligible.

Ian Armit, an archaeolog­ist at the University of York who collaborat­ed on the research, noted that archaeolog­ists had long known about the trade and exchanges across the English Channel during the Middle to Late Bronze Age. “But while we may once have thought that long-distance mobility was restricted to a few individual­s, such as traders or small bands of warriors,” he said, “the new DNA evidence shows that considerab­le numbers of people were moving, across the whole spectrum of society.”

Lara Cassidy, a geneticist at Trinity College Dublin who was not involved in the research, described the study as “a triumph. It takes a step back and considers Bronze Age Britain on the macro scale, charting major movements of people over centuries that likely had profound cultural and linguistic consequenc­es.”

Dr. Reich said the study demonstrat­ed how, in the last few years, archaeolog­ists and ancient DNA researcher­s have made great strides in coming together to address questions of interest to archaeolog­ists. “To a huge extent, this is due to the large ancient DNA sample sizes that it is now possible to generate economical­ly,” he said. “These studies are also beginning to address questions that truly matter biological­ly and culturally.”

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