DNA legacy of ancient seafarers

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/7700356.stm
By Paul Rincon
Science reporter, BBC News
[]

Phoenician written text on a stone (AFP/Getty)

The Phoenicians took their alphabet with them on their travels

Scientists have used DNA to re-trace the migrations of a sea-faring 
civilisation which dominated the Mediterranean thousands of years ago.

The Phoenicians were an enterprising maritime people from the 
territory of modern-day Lebanon.

They established a trading empire throughout the Mediterranean Sea in 
the first millennium BC.

A new study by an international team has now revealed the genetic 
legacy they imparted to modern populations.

The researchers estimate that as many as one in 17 men from the 
Mediterranean may have Phoenician ancestry.

[]

[]
  When we started, we knew nothing about the genetics of the Phoenicians
[]

Chris Tyler-Smith
Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute
They employed a new analytical technique to detect the subtle genetic 
imprint of historical migrations in present-day people. The study 
included DNA data from more than 6,000 men from around the Mediterranean.

 From their base in present-day Lebanon, the Phoenicians spread out 
across the sea, founding colonies and trading posts as far afield as 
Spain and North Africa, where their most powerful city - Carthage - 
was located.

Carthage spawned the audacious military commander Hannibal, who 
marched an army over the Alps to challenge the Roman Empire on its 
own territory.

The Phoenicians have been described as the world's first "global 
capitalists". They controlled trade throughout the Mediterranean 
basin for nearly 1,000 years until finally being conquered by the Romans.

Over subsequent centuries, much of what was known about these 
enigmatic people was lost or destroyed.

Digging deep

"People have not really looked at this heritage, and I think we ought 
to be looking more," Dr Pierre Zalloua, from the Lebanese American 
University in Beirut, Lebanon, told BBC News.

Chris Tyler-Smith, co-author of the paper from the Wellcome Trust 
Sanger Institute in Cambridge, UK, commented: "When we started, we 
knew nothing about the genetics of the Phoenicians. All we had to 
guide us was history.

Archaeologists excavating Phoenician settlement in Beirut, Leba

The researchers used historical information to focus their study
"We knew where they had and hadn't settled. But this simple 
information turned out to be enough, with the help of modern 
genetics, to trace a vanished people."

The new findings have emerged from the Genographic Project, a 
multi-million-dollar effort to trace human migrations using genetics. 
Details appear in the prestigious American Journal of Human Genetics.

The study focused on the Y, or male, chromosome, a package of genetic 
material carried only by men that is passed down from father to son 
more or less unchanged, just like a surname.

But over many generations, the chromosome accumulates small changes, 
or copying errors, in its DNA sequence.

These can be used to classify male chromosomes into different groups 
(called haplogroups) which, to some extent, reflect a person's 
geographical ancestry.

They looked at the genetic signatures carried on the Y chromosomes of 
men from former Phoenician colonies across the Mediterranean. The 
sites included coastal Lebanon, Cyprus, Crete, Malta, eastern Sicily, 
southern Sardinia, Ibiza, southern Spain, coastal Tunisia and the 
city of Tingris in Morocco.

They then compared the Y chromosomes of these men with those of males 
from nearby places where the Phoenicians had never lived.

This focussed approach uncovered a small number of recurring genetic 
signatures in men from the Phoenician sites. These genetic lineages 
also led back to the Levant region - the Phoenician homeland.

Genetic 'jacuzzi'

But several human migrations - both historic and prehistoric - have 
started in the Eastern Mediterranean and spread out to Europe and 
North Africa.

These include the migrations of early farmers from the Near East 
after 10,000BC, the expansion of the ancient Greeks who - like the 
Phoenicians - established outposts around the Mediterranean, and the 
Jewish diaspora.

Because of their geographical proximity, the people involved in these 
expansions may have carried similar genetic signatures to the Phoenicians.

[]

[]
  Teasing apart something that's specifically Levantine, or 
Phoenician, from the background of the general Neolithic expansion, 
or Greek colonisation, is actually quite tough
[]

Spencer Wells
Genographic Project director

However, the team devised special analytical methods which they say 
can distinguish the Phoenician input from other possibilities.

"The issue here is that the Mediterranean is a genetic jacuzzi, if 
you will, it's had people moving around all over the place for 
millennia," said Spencer Wells, director of the Genographic Project.

"Teasing apart something that's specifically Levantine, or 
Phoenician, from the background of the general Neolithic expansion, 
or Greek colonisation, is actually quite tough.

"That's why we needed this formalised approach and obviously the 
(large) sample sizes to detect this signal."

This strategy revealed six candidate "Phoenician" lineages. Overall, 
these made up 6% of genetic lineages found in modern populations from 
former Phoenician colonies around the Mediterranean.

That means one in 17 men from these sites could trace their male 
ancestry to a Phoenician, the researchers said.

Co-author Daniel Platt, from IBM's Computational Biology Center at 
the TJ Watson Research Center, said the study "proves that these 
settlements, some of which lasted hundreds of years, left a genetic 
legacy that persists to modern times".

Dr Wells explained that the technique used in this study could be 
applied to track other migrations which had subtle genetic impacts.

He cited the expansion of Celtic-speaking people from their homeland 
in the Harz mountains of Germany into Western and Eastern Europe 
during the first millennium BC.

The Genographic Project was launched in 2005, and involves National 
Geographic, IBM, the Waitt Family Foundation and Applied Biosystems.

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<*}}}>< <http://www.fathercorapi.com/election.aspx>An Important 
Message from Fr. Corapi <*}}}><
<*}}}><<http://www.halfthekingdom.org/>Half the Kingdom!<*}}}><

Prayer for Unborn Life:
O GOD OF LIFE AND LOVE, You have given us the gift to participate 
with You to bring new life into the world.  But, all too often, the 
mother's womb, which should be a nursery of life, becomes instead a 
place of it's destruction.

Help us to remove this evil and ensure respect for all life made in 
Your image and likeness, called to fulfill its promise on this earth,
and destined to find a home with you for all eternity.

We ask this through Jesus Christ, Our Lord, Our God, Our Savior, and Our ALL.
Amen.

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