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Genetics, Linguistics, and Prehistoric Migrations [DNA Analysis] (32 pages)

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Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology . Vel. 26, No. 1 (2006) . pp. 31-62
Genetics, Linguistics, and Prehistoric
Migrations: An Analysis of California
Indian Mitochondrial DNA Lineages
JOHN R. JOHNSON
Department of Anthropology, Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History
2559 Puesta del Sol, Santa Barbara, CA 93105
JOSEPH G. LORENZ
Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Coriell Institute for Medical Research
403 Haddon Avenue, Camden, NJ 08103
The advent of mitochondrial DNA analysis makes possible the study of past migrations among California Indians
through the study of genetic similarities and differences. Four scenarios of language change correlate with observable
genetic patterns: (1) initial colonization followed by gradual changes due to isolation; (2) population replacement;
(3) elite dominance; and (4) intermarriage between adjacent groups. A total of 126 mtDNA samples were provided by
contemporary California Indian descendants whose maternal lineages were traced back to original eighteenth and
nineteenth century sociolinguistic groups using mission records and other ethnohistoric sources. In particular, those
groups belonging to three language families (Chumashan, Uto-Aztecan, and Yokutsan) encompassed enough samples
to make meaningful comparisons. The four predominant mtDNA haplogroups found among American Indians
(A, B, C, and D) were distributed differently among populations belonging to these language families in California.
Examination of the distribution of particular haplotypes within each haplogroup further elucidated the separate
population histories of these three language families. The expansions of Yokutsan and Uto-Aztecan groups into their
respective homelands are evident in the structure of genetic relationships within haplogroup diagrams. The ancient
presence of Chumashan peoples in the Santa Barbara Channel region can be inferred from the presence of a number
of haplotypes arrayed along a chain-like branch derived from the founding haplotype within Haplogroup A.
A distinctive Haplogroup D sequence, represented by four Chumash lineages, belongs to a rare subgroup, occurring
primarily among groups scattered along the Pacific coast of North and South America. This distribution is consistent
with the hypothesis that an early coastal expansion occurred during the initial peopling of the Americas.
Te HIGH DEGREE OF LINGUISTIC DIVERSITY in speaking various Uto-Aztecan languages are wedged
native California reflects significant migrationevents . between Yuman societies in the San Diego-Colorado
in prehistory. Many of the larger, more widely-spread —_River-Baja California area and Chumash and Yokuts
language families of North America are represented _ peoples in the Santa Barbara Channel and southern San
by small groups distributed along the Pacific Coast, as Joaquin Valley regions. It has been presumed by nearly all
well as by a relatively high number of compact language _researchers that this “Shoshonean Wedge” was the result
families descended from more ancient migrations (Golla_ _ of a prehistoric expansion of Uto-Aztecan peoples from
2000a, 2000b, in press). Linguist Johanna Nichols (1992) —_ an inland region to the coast and then to the southern
has described the Pacific coastal region as a “residual § Channel Islands (Bright and Bright 1976; Kroeber 1953),
zone,” because the high ecological diversity of the region although there is considerable disagreement when this
allowed for microdifferentiation and preservation of . migratory event may have occurred. The most often
stable linguistic communities adapted to relatively cited date is about 2,000 years ago (Moratto 1984:559);
circumscribed territories. In southern California, groups . however,some researchers have suggested a much earlier
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