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Mitochondrial DNA diversity in 17th–18th century remains from Tenerife (Canary Islands)

✍ Scribed by Nicole Maca-Meyer; Vicente M. Cabrera; Matilde Arnay; Carlos Flores; Rosa Fregel; Ana M. González; José M. Larruga


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2005
Tongue
English
Weight
135 KB
Volume
127
Category
Article
ISSN
0002-9483

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✦ Synopsis


Mitochondrial DNA sequences and restriction fragment length polymorphisms were retrieved (with >80% efficiency) from a 17th-18th century sample of 213 teeth from Tenerife. The genetic composition of this population reveals an important ethnic heterogeneity. Although the majority of detected haplotypes are of European origin, the high frequency of sub-Saharan African haplotypes (15.63%), compared to that of the present-day population (6.6%), confirms the importance of the Canary Islands in the black slave trade of that epoch. The aboriginal substrate, inferred from the U6b1 haplotypes (8.59%), has also decreased due to European input. Finally, the presence of Amerindian lineages (1.5%) reveals that the Canary Islands have also received genetic flow from America.