Argentina
| info:eu-repo/semantics/article
The Southernmost Pre-Columbian Dogs in the Americas: Phenotype, Chronology, Diet and Genetics
Fecha
2021-05Registro en:
Loponte, Daniel Marcelo; Acosta, Alejandro Alberto; Gascue, Andrés; Pfrengle, Saskia; Schuenemann, Verena J.; et al.; The Southernmost Pre-Columbian Dogs in the Americas: Phenotype, Chronology, Diet and Genetics; Taylor & Francis Ltd; Environmental Archaeology; 5-2021; 1-33
1461-4103
1749-6314
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Loponte, Daniel Marcelo
Acosta, Alejandro Alberto
Gascue, Andrés
Pfrengle, Saskia
Schuenemann, Verena J.
Bortolotto, Noelia
Carbonera, Mirian
García Esponda, César
Voglino, Damián
Milheira, Rafael
Ferrari, Alejandro
Borges, Caroline
Resumen
The archaeological record shows the presence of medium-sized dogs with mesocephalic skulls in Southeast South America, from at least the end of the third millennium BP to historical times, along 700 km from southern Brazil to the wetlands of the Paraná River in Argentina. These dogs, associated with complex hunter-gatherers, do not appear to have been the product of exchange with Andean societies as previous theories suggested, but rather of a local breeding process, probably reflecting the offspring of a founder population introduced in the area before at least the third millennium BP. Isotopic values show a C3 omnivorous pattern, resulting from a broad and opportunistic niche, not overlapping with that of humans. The relationships between humans and their dogs were very complex; some of the dogs were buried in mortuary areas, in double human-dog burials, meanwhile others were used as a source of raw material. Shortly after the introduction of European dogs, they were quickly assimilated by these introduced dogs, which is supported by the pairwise distance analysis. Phylogenetic analysis illustrates the maternal lineage of these pre-Columbian and modern dogs, both belonging to the haplogroup A, supporting a common ancestry.