Dr Cat Jarman FSA💀 Profile picture
Editor: British Archaeology Magazine | 🎙️ Host: #RabbitHoleDetectives | 📕 The Bone Chests & River Kings | Vikings, bioarchaeology, Rapa Nui 🇳🇴

Sep 16, 2020, 12 tweets

Latest* #Viking DNA news! New research out in Nature today - here's what's exciting and what I have a problem with.👇

Does it change our view of the Vikings? No.
Are there some very cool data? Yes
Are there some *big* problems? Also Yes.
/1

(see nature.com/nature/podcast)

*new as in the full, peer-reviewed version of the pre-print article released last year

🧬New evidence of 'substantial' geneflow INTO Scandinavia, incl. from southern (!) Europe & also Britain. We suspected this, but great to see more conclusive evidence AND from regions we previously didn't know about

(...links nicely to my #RiverKings, more on that soon😉) /2

🧬Proof of intermarriage between Sami & Scandinavian populations --> Really exciting. Artefacts & literary sources suggest this. Also shows identities are complex & difficult to interpret....
🧬Proof of intermarriage between Picts & Scandinavians on Orkney! /3

🧬Genetic flow within Scandinavia relates to geography & not present-day boundaries
🧬LOTS of diversity on islands like Gotland - also not surprising but exciting because the role of the Baltic in trade, silver, slaves, & even the start of the Viking Age is super important /4

🧬Families😍! The spectacular Salme ship grave contained 4 brothers buried side by side... an extraordinary story, read more about the burial here:

archaeology.org/issues/95-1307…

/5

🧬One of the men from the St John's college massacre is a close relative to someone buried at Galgedil in Denmark!! (This info is hidden deep in the article's supplement so you'll need to do some excavation work to find it....) /6

BUT now for the problems: although based on a relatively large sample set (c 390 from Viking Age) they are from across n. Europe and ~300 years. Only ~30% are women. Chronology is not really considered. Samples are NOT representative of the full picture! Most problematic... /7

is England: They conclude the influx is largely Danish BUT their samples are very skewed. Their 32 samples are ALL from two mass graves dating to the late 10th / early 11th century. These are very unlikely to represent the Scandinavian settlers in England! They may even... /8

...all have recently arrived as raiders like other evidence suggests & fit into a time when the Danes' political interest in England was huge. I.e. we absolutely can't see this as representing the full Scandinavian settlement of England. This is a bigger problem... /9

....with this and similar studies, using limited samples to make broad sweeping statements. We need to do better and integrate ALL the evidence! But there is a LOT to unpack and more cool results here when we link the genetics to the archaeology, isotopes, & other evidence. /10

...see, for example, my forthcoming book River Kings, out next year, where I try to do exactly that!

amazon.co.uk/River-Kings-Ca…

/end of simplified commentary 🙃

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