MSU faculty memberās work featured in āScienceā fleshes out archaeological hypotheses, impacts on human civilizations
Contact: Sarah Nicholas
STARKVILLE, Miss.ā51³Ō¹ĻĶų State Associate Professor Anna Osterholtz is part of a team of scholars featured in a current trio of articles in Scienceāthe premier journal for researchers published by the American Association for the Advancement of Scienceāfor their research tying together genetic data and linguistic movement as people migrated across early civilizations.
āUnderstanding these population movements will help to contextualize archaeological and bioarchaeological analysis,ā Osterholtz said. āThe scale and time-depth of this study make it very important for future work in understanding how cultural interactions may be reflected in both changes to language and to the physical body.ā
To read the complete trio of articles, visit .
In collaboration with scholars representing research institutes and universities across the U.S., Europe and Western Asia, and working on their research since 2017, Osterholtz said she is āthrilled to be able to contribute to such a large-scale study that looks at migration of peoples across the landscape.ā
āWe contributed samples from two different sites in Croatia,ā Osterholtz said. āFirst, from the Bronze Age site of Gusilla Gomilla II (1880-1650 BCE), in collaboration with Dr. Helena Thomas of the University of Zagreb. And also, the Roman-era cemeteries in the city of Trogir (1st-6thĀ Centuries AD), in collaboration with Lujana Paraman of the City Museum of Trogir and Dr. Mario Novak at the Institute for Anthropological Research in Zagreb.ā
The trio of articles in Science delve into some of the earliest civilizations in the āSouthern Arc,ā a geographic region that stretches from the Caucasus and the Levant, across Anatolia and the Aegean into the Balkans, forming a bridge between Europe and Asia, where various ancient human cultures formed and spread.
Osterholtzās research suggests these cultures, whether lost to history or surviving down to the present day, are not only the heritage of the people of the region, but made a profound impact on human civilization as a whole.
āAt present, our knowledge about the people of many of these cultures, their movements, mating patterns and languages, is patchy,ā according to the journal articles. āPaleogenetic research can cast new light on the lifeways of the people of past societies and the spread and diversification of their languages.ā
The researchers report genome-wide data from 727 distinct ancient individualsāmore than doubling the amount of ancient DNA data from this region and filling in major gaps in the paleogenetic recordāand present a systematic picture of the interlinked histories of peoples across this region from the origins of agriculture to late medieval times.
The research team is led by Ron Pinhasi at the Department of Evolutionary Anthropology and Human Evolution and Archaeological Sciences at the University of Vienna; SonguĢl Alpaslan-Roodenberg at the University of Vienna and Harvard University; and Iosif Lazaridis and David Reich at Harvard University.
SonguĢl Alpaslan-Roodenberg said the findings are examples of āhow archaeogenetic results can provide a missing layer of information that cannot be obtained from other sources.ā
Osterholtz credits MSUās Cobb Institute of Archaeology, Department of Anthropology and Middle Eastern Cultures, and College of Arts and Sciences for funding support.
An AMEC faculty member since 2016, Osterholtz specializes in bioarchaeology. She has developed research programs in Cyprus and Croatia. Her current research in Cyprus examines the interplay between populations in the Mediterranean during the Bronze Age and the creation of Cypriot identity.
Part of MSUās College of Arts and Sciences, complete details about the AMEC department are available at .
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