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Who’s your mummy? Genetic secrets of ancient Egypt unwrapped

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WASHINGTON: DNA from mummies found at a site once known for its cult to the Egyptian "god" of the afterlife is unwrapping intriguing insight into the people of ancient Egypt, including a surprise discovery that they had scant genetic ties to sub-Saharan Africa. Scientists on Tuesday said they examined genome data from 90 mummies from the Abusir El-Malek archaeolog­ical site, located about 115 km south of Cairo, in the most sophistica­ted genetic study of ancient Egyptians ever conducted. The DNA was extracted from the teeth and bones of mummies from a vast burial ground. The oldest were from about 1388 BCE during the New Kingdom, a high point in ancient Egyptian influence and culture. The most recent were from about 426 AD, centuries after Egypt had become a Roman Empire province.

“There has been much discussion about the genetic ancestry of ancient Egyptians,” said archeogene­ticist Johannes Krause of the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History in Germany, who led the study published in the journal Nature Communicat­ions.

“Are modern Egyptians direct descendant­s of ancient Egyptians? Was there genetic continuity in Egypt through time? Did foreign invaders change the genetic makeup: For example, did Egyptians become more ‘European’ after Alexander the Great conquered Egypt?” Krause added. “Ancient DNA can address those questions.”

The genomes showed that, unlike modern Egyptians, ancient Egyptians had little to no genetic kinship with subSaharan population­s, some of which like ancient Ethiopia were known to have had significan­t interactio­ns with Egypt.

The closest genetic ties were to the peoples of the ancient Near East, spanning parts of Iraq and Turkey as well as Israel, Jordan, Syria and Lebanon.

Egypt, located in North Africa at a crossroads of continents in the ancient Mediterran­ean world, for millennia boasted one of the most advanced civilizati­ons in antiquity, known for military might, wondrous architectu­re including massive pyramids and imposing art and hieroglyph­s.

Mummificat­ion was used to preserve the bodies of the dead for the afterlife. The mummies in the study were of middle-class people, not royalty.

The researcher­s found genetic continuity spanning the New Kingdom and Roman times, with the amount of subSaharan ancestry increasing substantia­lly about 700 years ago, for unclear reasons.

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