A man buried in USA in the Pre-Columbian North America era

I1126
Portrait reconstruction
Specimen Details
Sample ID:
I1126
Date:
730 CE - 1240 CE
Biological Sex:
Male
mtDNA:
D2a1a
Y-DNA:
Q-Z36017
Cultural Period:
Paleo-Aleut Culture, Alaska, USA
Location
Country:
USA
Locality:
Alaska. Aleutian Islands. Umnak Island. Chaluka Midden
Map Location
Historical Timeline
Description

The Paleo-Aleut culture, an ancient societal group that inhabited the Aleutian Islands of Alaska, is considered one of the earliest cultures in the Arctic region of North America. Emerging around 4,000 to 3,500 years ago, these people were the ancestors of the Unangax̂ (Aleut) people. Their development and way of life provide significant insights into the early adaptation strategies humans employed in arctic and subarctic environments.

Geographic Context:

The Aleutian Islands form a chain that stretches across the Northern Pacific Ocean, connecting Alaska to Russia's Kamchatka Peninsula. This region, characterized by a maritime climate with cool temperatures, abundant precipitation, and frequent fog, presents challenges for human settlement. The islands are also located in a seismically active area, featuring numerous active volcanoes and subject to frequent earthquakes.

Subsistence and Economy:

The Paleo-Aleut people developed a subsistence economy primarily centered on the rich marine resources of the region. They were highly skilled hunters and fishers, exploiting a variety of sea life including seals, sea lions, whales, fish, and sea birds. The maritime environment provided a reliable and abundant food source, enabling them to establish permanent settlements. They also gathered plant materials, though their diet remained predominantly protein-based.

Technology and Tools:

Archaeological findings indicate that the Paleo-Aleut culture had advanced tool-making techniques suited to their environment. They crafted tools and weapons from stone, bone, and ivory. Harpoons, fishing gear, and sea mammal hunting implements suggest a sophisticated understanding of marine hunting necessary for survival in a challenging environment. Their stone tools, particularly microliths, exemplify precision crafting that facilitated a variety of tasks from hunting to preparation of food and materials.

Housing and Settlements:

Settlement patterns of the Paleo-Aleut typically involved semi-subterranean houses excavated into the ground, often lined with stones, driftwood, or whale bones for insulation against the harsh climate. These dwellings, sometimes referred to as barabaras, were primarily located along coastal areas where marine resources were readily accessible. The design reflects their adaptation to the climate and utilization of available materials to create a stable living environment.

Social Organization and Culture:

While specific details of the social structure of the Paleo-Aleut culture are somewhat speculative, evidence of shared resources and communal hunting suggests a collective society. Artifacts such as ornamental objects and burial sites indicate some form of social stratification or the presence of ritual practices. Burials often included grave goods, reflective of beliefs regarding the afterlife and the social status of individuals within the community.

Art and Symbolism:

Artistic expression in the Paleo-Aleut culture is evident through various artifacts incorporating aesthetic and symbolic designs. Incised patterns on tools, decorative items, and remnants of adornments highlight a cultural emphasis on both functionality and artistic expression. While these artifacts provide limited understanding, they hint at a rich oral tradition and cultural belief system.

Archaeological Significance:

The study of the Paleo-Aleut culture primarily comes from archaeological investigations on several Aleutian Islands, including Anangula and the Alaska Peninsula. Through these studies, researchers have reconstructed an image of how the Paleo-Aleut adapted to and thrived in this isolated and volatile region prior to extensive contact with other Indigenous cultures and European settlers.

Evolution and Legacy:

Over time, the Paleo-Aleut culture evolved, transitioning into what is known as the Neo-Aleut culture, marked by changes in technology, settlement patterns, and cultural practices likely influenced by climatic shifts and interactions with neighboring cultures. Understanding the Paleo-Aleut is crucial because it lays the foundation for the more complex societal structures that followed and remains pivotal in understanding the broader narrative of human habitation and adaptation in the Arctic.

Today, the descendants of these early peoples, the Unangax̂, continue to inhabit the region, preserving many aspects of their ancestral way of life amidst modern changes, maintaining cultural traditions, language, and connections to the land and sea that have endured thousands of years.

Related Samples
Sample ID Culture/Period Date Location Action
I1128 Neo-Aleut Culture, Alaska, USA 1390 CE Alaska. Aleutian Islands. Kagamil Island Warm Cave, USA View
I1129 Neo-Aleut Culture, Alaska, USA 1390 CE Alaska. Aleutian Islands. Kagamil Island Warm Cave, USA View
I1125 Neo-Aleut Culture, Alaska, USA 1240 CE Alaska. Aleutian Islands. Ship Rock Island, USA View
I1127 Neo-Aleut Culture, Alaska, USA 1350 CE Alaska. Aleutian Islands. Kagamil Island Warm Cave, USA View
I1118 Neo-Aleut Culture, Alaska, USA 1450 CE Alaska. Aleutian Islands. Kagamil Island Warm Cave, USA View
I0712 Paleo-Aleut Culture, Alaska, USA 690 CE Alaska. Aleutian Islands. Umnak Island. Chaluka Midden, USA View
I0719 Paleo-Aleut Culture, Alaska, USA 1250 CE Alaska. Aleutian Islands. Umnak Island. Chaluka Midden, USA View
I5320 Ancient Athabaskan, Alaska, USA 1,100 Years Ago 1000 CE Alaska. western interior. Tochak McGrath. Upper Kuskokwim River, USA View
I5321 Ancient Athabaskan, Alaska, USA 1,100 Years Ago 1000 CE Alaska. western interior. Tochak McGrath. Upper Kuskokwim River, USA View
I1525 Old Bering Sea Culture Uelen, Russia 60 CE Uelen Chukotka. Bering Strait, Russia View
I1526 Ust-Belaya Angara Culture, Russia 2897 BCE Baikal Region. Angara river basin. Mouth of the Belaya River, Russia View
I7333 Old Bering Sea Culture Ekven, Russia 510 CE Chukotka. Bering Strait. Ekven, Russia View
I7347 Old Bering Sea Culture Ekven, Russia 1050 CE Chukotka. Bering Strait. Ekven, Russia View
I7349 Old Bering Sea Culture Ekven, Russia 640 CE Chukotka. Bering Strait. Ekven, Russia View
I7621 Old Bering Sea Culture Ekven, Russia 480 CE Chukotka. Bering Strait. Ekven, Russia View
I7759 Ust-Belaya Angara Culture, Russia 5210 BCE Baikal Region. Angara river basin. Mouth of the Belaya River, Russia View
I7779 Ust-Belaya Angara Culture, Russia 2900 BCE Baikal Region. Angara river basin. Mouth of the Belaya River, Russia View
I7781 Ust-Belaya Angara Culture, Russia 1280 CE Baikal Region. Angara river basin. Mouth of the Belaya River, Russia View
I7348 Old Bering Sea Culture Ekven, Russia 630 CE Chukotka. Bering Strait. Ekven, Russia View
I7331 Old Bering Sea Culture Ekven, Russia 720 CE Chukotka. Bering Strait. Ekven, Russia View
I7339 Old Bering Sea Culture Ekven, Russia 690 CE Chukotka. Bering Strait. Ekven, Russia View
I7335 Ust-Belaya Angara Culture, Russia 2570 BCE Baikal Region. Angara river basin. Mouth of the Belaya River, Russia View
I7340 Old Bering Sea Culture Ekven, Russia 810 CE Chukotka. Bering Strait. Ekven, Russia View
I7338 Old Bering Sea Culture Ekven, Russia 1210 CE Chukotka. Bering Strait. Ekven, Russia View
I7343 Old Bering Sea Culture Ekven, Russia 970 CE Chukotka. Bering Strait. Ekven, Russia View
I7344 Old Bering Sea Culture Ekven, Russia 730 CE Chukotka. Bering Strait. Ekven, Russia View
I7337 Old Bering Sea Culture Ekven, Russia 620 CE Chukotka. Bering Strait. Ekven, Russia View
I7760 Ust-Belaya Angara Culture, Russia 3950 BCE Baikal Region. Angara river basin. Mouth of the Belaya River, Russia View
I5319 Ancient Athabaskan, Alaska, USA 1,100 Years Ago 1050 CE Alaska. western interior. Tochak McGrath. Upper Kuskokwim River, USA View
I1524 Old Bering Sea Culture Uelen, Russia 830 CE Uelen Chukotka. Bering Strait, Russia View
Tuebingen02 Modern Russia 2000 CE Dudinka, Russia View
Tuebingen06 Modern Russia 2000 CE Ust'-Avam, Russia View
Tuebingen07 Modern Russia 2000 CE Ust'-Avam, Russia View
Tuebingen12 Modern Russia 2000 CE Ust'-Avam, Russia View
Tuebingen14 Modern Russia 2000 CE Ust'-Avam, Russia View
Tuebingen17 Modern Russia 2000 CE Dudinka, Russia View
Tuebingen19 Modern Russia 2000 CE Dudinka, Russia View
Tuebingen21 Modern Russia 2000 CE Volochanka, Russia View
Tuebingen23 Modern Russia 2000 CE Volochanka, Russia View
Tuebingen25 Modern Russia 2000 CE Ust'-Avam, Russia View
Tuebingen27 Modern Russia 2000 CE Ust'-Avam, Russia View
Tuebingen28 Modern Russia 2000 CE Dudinka, Russia View
Tuebingen35 Modern Russia 2000 CE Potapovo, Russia View
Tuebingen44 Modern Russia 2000 CE Potapovo, Russia View
Tuebingen50 Modern Russia 2000 CE Farkovo, Russia View
Tuebingen51 Modern Russia 2000 CE Farkovo, Russia View
Tuebingen52 Modern Russia 2000 CE Farkovo, Russia View
Tuebingen53 Modern Russia 2000 CE Farkovo, Russia View
Tuebingen54 Modern Russia 2000 CE Farkovo, Russia View
Tuebingen58 Modern Russia 2000 CE Farkovo, Russia View
Tuebingen59 Modern Russia 2000 CE Farkovo, Russia View
Tuebingen60 Modern Russia 2000 CE Farkovo, Russia View
Tuebingen62 Modern Russia 2000 CE Turukhansk, Russia View
Tuebingen64 Modern Russia 2000 CE Turukhansk, Russia View
Tuebingen72 Modern Russia 2000 CE Turukhansk, Russia View
Tuebingen74 Modern Russia 2000 CE Turukhansk, Russia View
Tuebingen76 Modern Russia 2000 CE Turukhansk, Russia View
Tuebingen77 Modern Russia 2000 CE Turukhansk, Russia View
Tuebingen79 Modern Russia 2000 CE Turukhansk, Russia View
Tuebingen80 Modern Russia 2000 CE Kellog, Russia View
Tuebingen81 Modern Russia 2000 CE Kellog, Russia View
Tuebingen83 Modern Russia 2000 CE Sumarokovo, Russia View
Tuebingen82 Modern Russia 2000 CE Kellog, Russia View
Tuebingen87 Modern Russia 2000 CE Sulomai, Russia View
Tuebingen90 Modern Russia 2000 CE Bor, Russia View
Tuebingen94 Modern Russia 2000 CE Sulomai, Russia View
Tuebingen95 Modern Russia 2000 CE Sulomai, Russia View
Tuebingen97 Modern Russia 2000 CE Sulomai, Russia View
Tuebingen101 Modern Russia 2000 CE Sulomai, Russia View
Tuebingen103 Modern Russia 2000 CE Sulomai, Russia View
Tuebingen104 Modern Russia 2000 CE Sulomai, Russia View
Tuebingen106 Modern Russia 2000 CE Volochanka, Russia View
Tuebingen111 Modern Russia 2000 CE Volochanka, Russia View
Tuebingen112 Modern Russia 2000 CE Volochanka, Russia View
Tuebingen114 Modern Russia 2000 CE Volochanka, Russia View
Tuebingen116 Modern Russia 2000 CE Volochanka, Russia View
Tuebingen119 Modern Russia 2000 CE Volochanka, Russia View
Tuebingen121 Modern Russia 2000 CE Volochanka, Russia View
Tuebingen123 Modern Russia 2000 CE Volochanka, Russia View
Tuebingen124 Modern Russia 2000 CE Volochanka, Russia View
Tuebingen126 Modern Russia 2000 CE Volochanka, Russia View
Tuebingen127 Modern Russia 2000 CE Volochanka, Russia View
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TuebingenK15 Modern Russia 2000 CE Kellog, Russia View
TuebingenK16 Modern Russia 2000 CE Surgutikha, Russia View
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I1124 Neo-Aleut Culture, Alaska, USA 1480 CE Alaska. Aleutian Islands. Kagamil Island Warm Cave, USA View
I1123 Neo-Aleut Culture, Alaska, USA 1450 CE Alaska. Aleutian Islands. Kagamil Island Warm Cave, USA View
I1126 Paleo-Aleut Culture, Alaska, USA 730 CE Alaska. Aleutian Islands. Umnak Island. Chaluka Midden, USA View
I0721 Paleo-Aleut Culture, Alaska, USA 350 BCE Alaska. Aleutian Islands. Umnak Island. Chaluka Midden, USA View
I8296 Ust-Belaya Angara Culture, Russia 2860 BCE Baikal Region. Angara river basin. Mouth of the Belaya River, Russia View
I8294 Old Bering Sea Culture Uelen, Russia 990 CE Uelen Chukotka. Bering Strait, Russia View
I8295 Ust-Belaya Angara Culture, Russia 2620 BCE Baikal Region. Angara river basin. Mouth of the Belaya River, Russia View
I8298 Ust-Belaya Angara Culture, Russia 3790 BCE Baikal Region. Angara river basin. Mouth of the Belaya River, Russia View
I10427 Middle Dorset Culture, Canada 50 CE Victoria Island, Canada View
I7342 348 BCE Chukotka. Bering Strait. Ekven, Russia View
I0719 1250 CE Alaska. Aleutian Islands. Umnak Island. Chaluka Midden, USA View
I1123 1450 CE Alaska. Aleutian Islands. Kagamil Island Warm Cave, USA View
I1124 1480 CE Alaska. Aleutian Islands. Kagamil Island Warm Cave, USA View
I0721 350 BCE Alaska. Aleutian Islands. Umnak Island. Chaluka Midden, USA View
I1126 730 CE Alaska. Aleutian Islands. Umnak Island. Chaluka Midden, USA View
I5319 1050 CE Alaska. western interior. Tochak McGrath. Upper Kuskokwim River, USA View
I7782 2860 BCE Baikal Region. Angara river basin. Mouth of the Belaya River, Russia View
I5319 1050 CE Alaska. western interior. Tochak McGrath. Upper Kuskokwim River, USA View
I10427 50 CE Victoria Island, Canada View
I8294 990 CE Uelen Chukotka. Bering Strait, Russia View
I8295 2620 BCE Baikal Region. Angara river basin. Mouth of the Belaya River, Russia View
I8296 2860 BCE Baikal Region. Angara river basin. Mouth of the Belaya River, Russia View
I8298 3790 BCE Baikal Region. Angara river basin. Mouth of the Belaya River, Russia View
Sample ID Culture/Period Date Location Action
I0712 Paleo-Aleut Culture, Alaska, USA 690 CE Alaska. Aleutian Islands. Umnak Island. Chaluka Midden, USA View
I0719 Paleo-Aleut Culture, Alaska, USA 1250 CE Alaska. Aleutian Islands. Umnak Island. Chaluka Midden, USA View
I1126 Paleo-Aleut Culture, Alaska, USA 730 CE Alaska. Aleutian Islands. Umnak Island. Chaluka Midden, USA View
I0721 Paleo-Aleut Culture, Alaska, USA 350 BCE Alaska. Aleutian Islands. Umnak Island. Chaluka Midden, USA View
Ancient Genetic Admixture

Ancient genetic admixture analysis compares the DNA profile of this individual (I1126) with present-day reference populations. These results show what percentage of the individual's genetic makeup resembles ancient populations from different geographic regions.

Ancient Asians 61%
Ancient Native Americans 32%
Western Steppe Pastoralists 8%
Modern Genetic Admixture

Modern genetic admixture analysis compares the DNA profile of this individual (I1126) with present-day reference populations. These results show what percentage of the individual's genetic makeup resembles modern populations from different geographic regions.

These results complement the ancient ancestry components shown in the previous section, offering a different perspective on the individual's genetic profile by comparing it with modern reference populations rather than prehistoric ancestral groups.

Asia 54%
Northern Asian 47%
Siberian 39.3%
Mongolian 8.0%
Chinese & Southeast Asian 4%
Chinese 3.7%
Japanese & Korean 2%
Japanese 1.7%
Central Asian, Northern Indian & Pakistani 1%
Pakistan 1.3%
Northern West Asian 0%
America 46%
America 46%
Native American 45.7%
G25 Coordinates

The G25 coordinates for the sample I1126 are as follows. You can analyze its admixture using G25 Studio.

I1126,0.06024334,-0.29668516,0.11063042,0.06174534,-0.09867538,-0.0231165,-0.13884036,-0.1593546,0.00023852,-0.0156762,0.02190044,-0.00793542,0.00839352,-0.01812758,-0.02472434,-0.0114279,0.00112454,0.0127439,0.0236985,0.01057402,0.01236524,-0.02166324,0.01079836,0.01464692,0.02000409
Analyze it in G25 Studio
Scientific Papers References
Palaeo-Eskimo genetic ancestry and the peopling of Chukotka and North America
Authors:
Flegontov P, Altınışık NE, Changmai P
Abstract:

Much of the American Arctic was first settled 5,000 years ago, by groups of people known as Palaeo-Eskimos. They were subsequently joined and largely displaced around 1,000 years ago by ancestors of the present-day Inuit and Yup'ik1-3. The genetic relationship between Palaeo-Eskimos and Native American, Inuit, Yup'ik and Aleut populations remains uncertain4-6. Here we present genomic data for 48 ancient individuals from Chukotka, East Siberia, the Aleutian Islands, Alaska, and the Canadian Arctic. We co-analyse these data with data from present-day Alaskan Iñupiat and West Siberian populations and published genomes. Using methods based on rare-allele and haplotype sharing, as well as established techniques4,7-9, we show that Palaeo-Eskimo-related ancestry is ubiquitous among people who speak Na-Dene and Eskimo-Aleut languages. We develop a comprehensive model for the Holocene peopling events of Chukotka and North America, and show that Na-Dene-speaking peoples, people of the Aleutian Islands, and Yup'ik and Inuit across the Arctic region all share ancestry from a single Palaeo-Eskimo-related Siberian source.

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