@article{e80f96fe211a4143a38b5c618d14e7d1,
title = "Enamel–dentine junction morphology reveals population replacement and mobility in the late prehistoric Middle Nile Valley",
abstract = "Transitions from foraging to food-production represent a worldwide turning point in recent human history. In the Middle Nile Valley this cultural shift occurred between the sixth and beginning of the fifth millennium BCE. Significant craniodental morphological differences remain inadequately tested by biometric analyses of ancestry and may reflect population origins or diet change between the last hunter-fisher-gatherers (Mesolithic) and first food-producers (Neolithic). Moreover, with no ancient DNA data for this region and very few morphological studies including large samples of Mesolithic individuals, the late prehistoric population history of the Nile Valley remains unclear. Here, we present enamel–dentine junction (EDJ) morphological analyses (based on X-ray microtomography) and biological affinities for 88 individuals spanning 14,000 y from Sudan and southern Egypt. Significant EDJ morphological differences between the last foragers and first food-producers suggest major biological discontinuity at the Neolithic transition. Nevertheless, the persistence of the earlier forager population in the Sudanese Eastern Sahara indicates settlement and population replacement mainly along the Nile. We also present biological evidence of interaction and mobility between these contemporaneous populations during the middle Holocene in the region. It supports the phylogenetic value of EDJ morphology for investigating population affinities at a microevolutionary scale. These results yield insights into the deep population history of the Nile Valley. They provide firm evidence for population replacement and migration toward the region at the onset of the Neolithic transition, attesting that these key changes were not solely triggered by cultural diffusion and diet change.",
keywords = "dental morphology, enamel–dentine junction, Neolithic transition, Nile Valley, population history",
author = "Nicolas Martin and Adrien Thibeault and Lenka Varadzinov{\'a} and Donatella Usai and Ambrose, {Stanley H.} and Daniel Antoine and Havelkov{\'a}, {Petra Brukner} and Matthieu Honegger and Irish, {Joel D.} and Friederike Jesse and Laura Mar{\'e}chal and Marta Osypi{\'n}ska and Piotr Osypi{\'n}ski and Fr{\'e}d{\'e}ric Santos and Nicolas Vanderesse and Ladislav Varadzin and Whiting, {Rebecca J.} and Cl{\'e}ment Zanolli and Petr Velem{\'i}nsk{\'y} and Isabelle Crevecoeur",
note = "We thank the NCAM of Sudan for their long-term support, and especially Ghalia Gar El-Nabi and Abdelrahman Ali Mohamed (respectively current and former General Director of the NCAM), Abd El-Hai Abd El-Sawy and El Hassan Ahmed (respectively current and former Director of Fieldwork), and Mohammed Saad (Head of the M. Bolheim Bioarcheology Laboratory). We thank the curators, researchers, and institutions who allowed us to examine the comparative original collections in their care at the time of the study: M. Maillot, S. Marchi, and J. Reinold (SFDAS), M. Besse, and J. Desideri (Universit\u00E9 de Gen\u00E8ve), the Duckworth Laboratory (University of Cambridge). We thank R. Lebrun (Institut des Sciences de l\u2019Evolution, Universit\u00E9 Montpellier 2) for the microCT acquisitions of the El-Barga dental material; B. Clark (Imaging and Analysis Centre, Natural History Museum, London) for the microCT acquisitions of the Jebel Sahaba and Tushka remains; K. Smithson (Cambridge Biotomography Centre, University of Cambridge) for the microCT acquisitions of the Wadi Shaw and Abu Tabari remains; the PLACAMAT platform (UAR 3626, University of Bordeaux) for the microCT acquisitions of the rest of the remains. We thank also A.S. Benoiston and Y. Merigeaud for participating in the data acquisition in the framework of their Master theses. This study received financial support from the International Research Project (IRP) ABASC funded by the CNRS-INEE; the French government in the framework of the University of Bordeaux\u2019s IdEx \u201CInvestments for the Future\u201D program/GPR \u201CHuman Past\u201D (project NeoNile); the French National Research Agency (ANR-14-CE31, project BIG DRY); The Czech Science Foundation (Project No. GA\u010CR 23-06488S); the Cooperatio Program provided by Charles University, research area Archaeology, implemented at the Faculty of Arts of Charles University; the Ministry of Culture of the Czech Republic (DKRVO 2024-2028/7.I.a, 7.I.b, National Museum, 00023272); the National Science Centre\u2014Poland (Grant UMO-2020/37/B/HS3/00519).",
year = "2025",
month = apr,
day = "15",
doi = "10.1073/pnas.2419122122",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "122",
journal = "Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America",
issn = "0027-8424",
publisher = "National Academy of Sciences",
number = "15",
}