🆕: Archaeologists have recovered >400-year-old DNA from colonial-era burials in Mexico, revealing the diversity of early European settlements in the Americas.
Campeche was an early colonial settlement in Yucatán. It was founded in 1540, less than 20 years after the Spanish conquest of the Aztecs, once conquistadors secured their rule. 2/12
📷: Location of Campeche
The city was served by a parish church until it was replaced by a cathedral in 1680. The church was rediscovered in 2000 during rescue excavations when 129 early colonial burials were found. 3/12
📷: Campeche’s cathedral, on the colonial plaza where the early church stood
Early attempts to extract DNA from these burials failed. Now advances in aDNA research have allowed Professor Vera Tiesler and a team of researchers from @Harvard to gather genetic data from this important site. 4/12
📷: Rescue excavations of the cemetery
“Ancient DNA methods have improved to the point where we can generate robust data from warm, humid environments,” said Dr Jakob Sedig, from the Reich Laboratory at Harvard University and co-lead author. This is encouraging for future ancient DNA analysis in this region. 5/12
aDNA was gathered from 10 people. Most were local Indigenous Americans, but there were also people of European and sub-Saharan African ancestry. Notably, this contradicted some previous attempts to identify sex & ancestry from physical attributes. 6/12
📷: PCA of the aDNA
“Early colonial Campeche had a multi-ethnic population, where previously disparate groups mixed for the first time,” said co-lead author Prof. Tiesler, from @uady_mx, “The Campeche cemetery confirms the prompt forced integration of all populations into this new way of life.” 7/12
Despite these diverse populations living (and being buried) together, there was no evidence people from these different backgrounds had children together. None of the individuals had recent ancestry from any other populations. 8/12
📷: Plan of the cemetery
“We expected to find individuals with mixed genetic ancestry. However, our analysis found no evidence of this,” said Dr Sedig, “This seems to indicate that although they were buried together, different groups maintained some degree of separation in life.” 9/12
Many of these details uncovered from the palaeogenetic data are missing from historical records, as they are mostly focused on the inhabitants of European ancestry. 10/12
📷: Panel from the History of the Indies of New Spain
“These data add a new ‘human’ layer to our understanding of a crucial era and location in the history of New Spain,” said Professor Tiesler, “These results provide insights into the individual lives and social divides of the town’s founder communities.” 11/12
If you want to find out more, the original research is 🆓:
'Life and death in early colonial Campeche: new insights from ancient DNA' - Vera Tiesler, Jakob Sedig, Nathan Nakatsuka, Swapan Mallick, Iosif Lazaridis, Rebecca Bernardos et al. doi.org/10.15184/aqy.2…
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Left) the Nebra Sky Disc, a Bronze Age find that might be the oldest known depiction of the cosmos. It features the sun, moon, and perhaps the Pleiades. By Dbachmann / CC BY-SA 3.0
Right) The first deep field image from the James Webb Space Telescope. Most of the lights you see aren't stars, but entire galaxies. bbc.co.uk/news/science-e…
1,000-year-old garden unearthed in the medieval town of Soba, Sudan. buff.ly/3FyfKD7
Soba was the capital of the medieval Kingdom of Alwa. It was a large city on the banks of the Blue Nile, with churches, monasteries, fine houses, and beautiful gardens.
It was abandoned by the 16th century and fell into ruin.
📷: location of Soba by SimonP / CC BY-SA 2.0
Oral tradition says the fall of Soba was the result of a Queen's scheming plunging the land into chaos and violence.
The archaeologists had found support for the chaos of this legend, finding churches were burnt and tombs robbed shortly before Soba's fall.
🆕: China’s first emperor was famously buried with the terracotta army, but new research reveals this includes over 20 elite horses specially selected to accompany Emperor Qin Shihuang to the afterlife.
Horses played a crucial role in economic, cultural, and military aspects in China through the first millennium BC. Skill in horse husbandry contributed to Qin’s military power, helping them triumph over other states. 2/10
📷: Horses of the terracotta army / Sewel / CC BY-SA 3.0
The horses were found in an accessory pit of the 2,210-year-old mortuary complex, along with a wooden cart, and terracotta figures. It is thought to represent one of the administrative complexes of the Qin Empire. 3/10
At Stonehenge, this special sunrise would have been framed by a pair of stones (although now only one survives).
📷: The surviving stone illuminated by the solstice; by Andrew Dunn / CC BY-SA 2.0
This computer model of the site shows how the Heel Stone and its missing partner would have framed the solstice sunrise, marked by the solid red arrow.
📷: By Jlert Joseph Lertola / CC0
This event likely had spiritual significance, but it could have also had a practical purpose.
Stonehenge may have served as a calendar, helping people count the days, weeks, and months of the year. The solstice shining through on the correct day confirms you counted right.
Congratulations to Mike Parker Pearson et al., winners of the 2022 Ben Cullen prize🎉
Their work identified that some of the megaliths of Stonehenge may have originally been part of a Welsh stone circle.
Check out their officially award-winning work (🆓) buff.ly/3rFcVsf
Stonehenge is made up of large sarsens and smaller bluestones. The team of archaeologists had previously traced the origins of the bluestones to a quarry in west Wales.
📷: One of the quarries for Stonehenge's bluestones.
This raised the question: did the stones have a life before Stonehenge?
Even myths about the monument had the stones being imported from another circle (with the help of giants and Merlin).
📷: Medieval depiction of Stonehenge showing giants importing it.