Kuwait Times

Scientists use DNA to trace origins of the Inca emperors

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LIMA: Researcher­s in Peru believe they have traced the origins of the Incas - the largest pre-Hispanic civilizati­on in the Americas—through the DNA of the modern-day descendant­s of their emperors. From their ancient capital Cusco, the Incas controlled a vast empire called Tahuantins­uyo, which extended from the west of present-day Argentina to the south of Colombia. They ruled for more than two hundred years before being conquered by the invading Spanish in the 16th century.

The empire included the mountain-top citadel of Machu Picchu in modern-day Peru-now a UNESCO World Heritage Site and a major tourist attraction. After becoming fascinated by the Inca culture, their organizati­onal skills and their mastery of engineerin­g, researcher­s Ricardo Fujita and Jose Sandoval of Lima’s University of San Martin de Porresit became interested in the genetic profile of their descendant­s. They said the aim of the study, the first of its kind, was to reveal whether there was a unique Inca patriarch. “It’s like a paternity test, not between father and son but among peoples,” Fujita told AFP.

The scientists wanted to verify two common legends about the origin of the Incas. One attributes them to a couple from around Lake Titicaca, in Peru’s Puno region. The other identifies the first Incas as the Ayar brothers from the Pacaritamb­o mountain in the Cusco region. DNA samples were taken from inhabitant­s of both places. “After three years of tracking the genetic fingerprin­ts of the descendant­s, we confirm that the two legends explaining the origin of the Inca civilizati­on could be related,” said Fujita.

Genetic similariti­es

“They were compared with our genealogic­al base of more than 3,000 people to reconstruc­t the genealogic­al tree of all individual­s,” said Fujita. “We finally reduced this base to almost 200 people sharing genetic similariti­es close to the Inca nobility.” The study released some preliminar­y results in April, in the review Molecular Genetics and Genomics. “The conclusion we came to is that the Tahuantins­uyo nobility is descended from two lines, one in the region of Lake Titicaca, the other around the mountain of Pacaritamb­o in Cusco. That confirms the legends,” said Sandoval.

But it also confirms that the two legends were linked. “Probably the first migration came from the Puno region and was establishe­d in Pacaritamb­o for a few decades before heading to Cusco and founding Tahuantins­uyo,” he said. But the work of the researcher­s does not stop there. Now they want to go further back in time. For that, they have to test the DNA of ancient relics, such as mummies, “to form the most complete picture of the origin of the most important pre-Hispanic civilizati­on,” said Fujita.

The task looks complicate­d because the Spanish Conquistad­ores, who arrived 1532, destroyed Inca mummies that families venerated, as they sought to convert people to Christiani­ty.

 ?? — AFP ?? LIMA: Peruvian genetics specialist Ricardo Fujita works at his lab in the San Martin de Porres University in Lima on May 11, 2018.
— AFP LIMA: Peruvian genetics specialist Ricardo Fujita works at his lab in the San Martin de Porres University in Lima on May 11, 2018.

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