Microevolution in lower Central America: Genetic characterization of the Chibcha-speaking groups of Costa Rica and Panama, and a consensus taxonomy based on genetic and linguistic affinity
Fecha
1990
Autores
Barrantes Mesén, Ramiro
Smouse, Peter E.
Mohrenweiser, Harvey W.
Gershowitz, Henry
Azofeifa Navas, Jorge
Arias, Tomas D.
Neel, James V.
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Resumen
There is evidence that Amerindians have continuously occupied the lower Central American Isthmus for as
long as 10,000 years. There remains some doubt about the relationships of these original colonizers to the
resident peoples of this zone at the time of European contact (approximately A.D. 1500). We present new
genetic data for up to 48 genetic loci for 570 members of six Chibcha-speaking tribes of lower Central
America—the Boruca, Bribri, Cabecar, and Guatuso of Costa Rica and the Kuna and Teribe of Panama—
and delineate the genetic affinities among the various groups (these six tribes and the Guaymi and Bokota)
of lower Central America. We convert standard genetic distance metrics into a form that is linear with the
effective time since divergence, and we compare the genetic distances with linguistic distances for the same
groups (r = .74, P < .001). Geographic affinity accounts for some of the genetic divergence among groups
(r = .49, P < .084) and for some of the linguistic divergence (r = .53, P < .037), but the correspondence
between geographic position and taxonomic affinity is not high. We combine all of the genetic and linguistic
data to construct a synthetic overview taxonomy of the lower Central American Chibcha. Both the
genetic and linguistic data exhibit hierarchical organization of tribal groups, showing a general east-to-west
pattern of grouping, with greater affinities between close neighbors. The presence of private genetic variants
of some antiquity within the region and their absence outside the zone, coupled with the essential absence
of the DIVA polymorphism of mongoloid origin that is widespread outside the zone, argue for a relatively
isolated development of the Central American Chibcha. Our results do not support the old view of
lower Central America as a frontier between more advanced cultures to the north and south. Any such explanation
would require recent waves of migration from outside the region, migration that is not compatible
with either the genetic or linguistic data or with the archaeological history of the region
Descripción
artículo -- Universidad de Costa Rica, Instituto de Investigaciones en Salud, 1990
Palabras clave
Amerindios, Costa Rica, variaciones geneticas, Genética humana, Cultura
Citación
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1683538/#