Ancient DNA and Biomolecular Archaeology
Ancient DNA analysis recovers genetic material from archaeological and fossil remains, transforming the study of human migration, kinship, domestication, and disease in the past.
Definition
The study of genetic and other biomolecular material surviving in archaeological remains, used to reconstruct the ancestry, relationships, and biology of past humans, animals, plants, and pathogens.
Scope
This topic covers the recovery, authentication, and sequencing of degraded DNA from bones, teeth, sediments, and other remains, together with related biomolecular evidence such as ancient proteins. It addresses the methods of palaeogenomics, the rigorous controls needed to exclude contamination, and applications to population history, the peopling of continents, animal and plant domestication, and ancient pathogens.
Core questions
- How is degraded ancient DNA recovered and authenticated?
- What does archaeogenetics reveal about past migrations and ancestry?
- How is ancient DNA used to study domestication and disease?
- How are contamination and damage distinguished from genuine ancient sequences?
Key theories
- Palaeogenomics of population history
- The use of genome-wide ancient DNA to detect past population movements, admixture, and replacements, reshaping models of prehistoric migration such as the peopling of Europe.
- Authentication of ancient DNA
- The recognition that genuine ancient DNA is short, chemically damaged, and easily swamped by modern contamination, requiring strict laboratory controls and damage-pattern criteria to validate results.
History
Ancient DNA research began in the 1980s with the first sequences from museum specimens, but early claims of very old DNA proved unreliable due to contamination. The field was rebuilt on strict authentication and then transformed by high-throughput sequencing, enabling the Neanderthal genome and large-scale palaeogenomic studies, work recognized by Svante Pääbo's 2022 Nobel Prize.
Debates
- Migration narratives and ethical concerns
- Scholars debate how far genetic data should drive narratives of past 'peoples' and migrations, and raise ethical issues around sampling human remains and engaging descendant and Indigenous communities.
Key figures
- Svante Pääbo
- David Reich
- Terence A. Brown
Related topics
Seminal works
- paabo2014
- reich2018
- brownbrown2011
Frequently asked questions
- How old can ancient DNA be?
- Under favorable preservation, authenticated DNA has been recovered from remains hundreds of thousands of years old, though most archaeological aDNA studies work with material from the last tens of thousands of years.
- Why is contamination such a concern?
- Ancient DNA survives only in tiny, damaged amounts, so even trace modern DNA from handlers or the environment can overwhelm it, which is why strict clean-room controls and damage checks are essential.