AI Article Synopsis

  • Pigs were first domesticated in Eastern Anatolia around the ninth millennium BC and were spread to Europe by Neolithic farmers starting in the seventh millennium, with evidence of mixing domestic pigs and European wild boar during this time.
  • A study combining tooth analysis of 449 ancient Romanian pig teeth and ancient DNA indicated that early domestic pigs in Romania shared maternal genetic signatures with Neolithic pigs from Anatolia.
  • Findings showed a significant presence of large molar teeth with domestic shapes from the beginning of the Romanian Neolithic, indicating ongoing hybridization between domesticated pigs and local wild boar, along with shifts in pig mitochondrial lineages possibly linked to human migrations in later prehistory.

Article Abstract

Current evidence suggests that pigs were first domesticated in Eastern Anatolia during the ninth millennium cal BC before dispersing into Europe with Early Neolithic farmers from the beginning of the seventh millennium. Recent ancient DNA (aDNA) research also indicates the incorporation of European wild boar into domestic stock during the Neolithization process. In order to establish the timing of the arrival of domestic pigs into Europe, and to test hypotheses regarding the role European wild boar played in the domestication process, we combined a geometric morphometric analysis (allowing us to combine tooth size and shape) of 449 Romanian ancient teeth with aDNA analysis. Our results firstly substantiate claims that the first domestic pigs in Romania possessed the same mtDNA signatures found in Neolithic pigs in west and central Anatolia. Second, we identified a significant proportion of individuals with large molars whose tooth shape matched that of archaeological (likely) domestic pigs. These large 'domestic shape' specimens were present from the outset of the Romanian Neolithic (6100-5500 cal BC) through to later prehistory, suggesting a long history of admixture between introduced domestic pigs and local wild boar. Finally, we confirmed a turnover in mitochondrial lineages found in domestic pigs, possibly coincident with human migration into Anatolia and the Levant that occurred in later prehistory.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4275896PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2013.0616DOI Listing

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