Paternal Origins of Mongolic-Speaking Populations: A Review of Studies from Recent Decades (1999–2019) and Their Implications for Multidisciplinary Research in the Future
Sharengaowa Ma P.-C. Yang W.-J. Ochirbat A. Zhabagin M. Sun N. Xie Y.-M. Li Y.-L. Wei L.-H.
September 2021Wayne State University Press
Human Biology
2021#93Issue 4269 - 288 pp.
The activities of Mongolic-speaking populations, a large group of people in eastern Eurasia, have important impacts on the history of East Asia and other parts of Eurasia. Most previous genetic research of East Asian populations, including ancient DNA studies, has involved samples from Mongolic-speaking populations or their ancient relatives. This review summarizes frequency data of paternal Y-chromosome haplogroups from all available literature about Mongolic-speaking populations from 1999 to 2019. Fourteen paternal components were identified, and six of them are proposed as major and common components in ancestor groups of Mongolic-speaking populations. The article thoroughly discusses the possible origin, migration patterns, and the roles of these six components in the evolutionary history of Mongolic-speaking populations, as well as implications of present achievements in human genetics for future multidisciplinary research in ethnology, history, archaeology, and linguistics. Copyright
common components , evolutionary history , mongolic-speaking population , multidisciplinary research , paternal gene pool
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Social and Human Evolution Laboratory, School of Ethnology and Anthropology, Inner Mongolia Normal University, Hohhot, China
School of Life Sciences, Jilin University, Changchun, China
Department of Anthropology and Ethnology, School of Foreign Languages and Cultures, Ningxia University, Yinchuan, China
School of Mathematic and Natural Sciences, Mongolian National University of Education, Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia
National Center for Biotechnology, Nur-Sultan, Kazakhstan
College of Foreign Languages, Huaqiao University, Quanzhou, China
College of Life Science and Technology, Inner Mongolia Normal University, Hohhot, China
B&R International Joint Laboratory for Eurasian Anthropology, School of Life Science, Fudan University, Shanghai, China
Social and Human Evolution Laboratory
School of Life Sciences
Department of Anthropology and Ethnology
School of Mathematic and Natural Sciences
National Center for Biotechnology
College of Foreign Languages
College of Life Science and Technology
B&R International Joint Laboratory for Eurasian Anthropology
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