An accurate DNA clock can strengthen cross-disciplinary inputs in the study of genealogies and ancient migrations. New Y-chromosome sequence data gathered from a Lotli Pai Kaundinya (LPK) Brahmin cohort whose staged migration from the Pontic Steppe to the West Coast of India was previously reported, are used here to generate a more precise DNA clock. The formula distinguishes Y-mutation rates for transitions and transversions and corrects for dropped mutations in sequence reads. The formula is validated against a baptismal tree covering over four centuries (0–704 YBP interval), a published STR-based chronology for this same cohort (704–5200 YBP) and a comparison to Y-Full formation times for mutations older than 3000 YBP. Using this more precise clock, we support a proposed “founder effect” expansion in Khorasan during 4300–3800 YBP using a novel phylogenetic branching metric; and use archeological, numismatic, toponymic, climate reconstruction and ancient textual data to explore religious and professional dimensions of cultural kinship with other communities believed to have interacted with the LPK during their long migration. The availability of more precise dating facilitates the integration of such secondary data types, resulting in an enriched and more plausible migration narrative.
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Desmond Mascarenhas
Mayflower Communications (United States)
Balaji Rajagapolan
University of Colorado Boulder
John W. Fox
American University of Sharjah
Genealogy
University of Colorado Boulder
University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus
American University of Sharjah
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Mascarenhas et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6969d4c3940543b9777099df — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy10010014