A 2023 study of ancient Korean DNA revealed evidence of a third ancestral population that contributed to modern Korean genetics but left no physical archaeological trace, demonstrating that ancient DNA analysis can uncover 'ghost populations'—groups of people who lived, interbred, and then vanished from history so completely that only their genetic legacy survives in modern populations.
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Uncovering a Ghost Population The Mysterious Third Ancestry in Korean DNA!Ajouté :
And this is the unsettling one. A 2023 study of ancient genomes from the Korean Peninsula found something no one expected. Evidence of a third ancestral population contributing to modern Korean DNA. Not the Jolman, not the incoming farmers. Something else. A lineage that doesn't map cleanly onto any known ancient group. A signal that suggests there may be a whole chapter of human movement through this region that has left almost no physical trace in the archaeological record. a ghost population. Genetic evidence of people we've never found. People who may have arrived, interbred, and then vanished from history so completely that only their genes survived. We don't know who they were. We don't know where they came from. We don't even know what to call them yet. But they were real. They lived here. And somewhere in the DNA of modern Koreans, they are still here. Go back to that cave on Reban Island. The skeleton in the soil. The mer sent to the lab.
That person, whoever they were, lived at the very end of the Jon world. The farmers had already arrived in central Japan. The old way of life was beginning its long retreat. Whether this person knew that, felt it, feared it, we can never know. But they are not gone, not entirely. In the communities of Hokkaido, in the genetic heritage carried in millions of modern bodies across Japan and Korea, fragments of them survive. molecular echoes of a people who hunted this coastline for 10,000 years before the first rice patty was ever planted. What ancient DNA keeps teaching us in East Asia, in Europe, in the Americas, is that the story of where we come from is never simple. The map we carry in ourselves as a palumst layer upon layer of journeys and encounters and absorptions written over each other across deep time. We are not descended from one people. We are descended from the collision of many. The Jon thought they were alone at the edge of the world. The Yayoi farmers thought they were building something new. Neither knew they were together building something that would one day call itself Japanese. Every civilization believes it knows where it came from. Ancient DNA is showing us that almost none of us do.
And perhaps that's not a loss. Perhaps that's an invitation to hold our identities a little more lightly and our curiosity about each other a little more fiercely. The bones in the cave don't care what we call ourselves.
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