πŸ†• Advanced Report, now with Y-DNA, mtDNA & ROH analysis Discover your paternal & maternal haplogroups, shown only when AI prediction confidence is high enough to be reliable. Plus ROH endogamy insights, ancient sample matches, all interpreted by Claude AI. Raw DNA file required for these new analyses (not available with G25 coordinates).
Discover Now
🍽️ DNA-Based Nutrition Report: Discover Which Foods Fuel Your Body Upload your 23andMe, AncestryDNA or MyHeritage file and discover exactly which foods fuel your body, based on your personal genetic blueprint.
Try our Free Test

Study Information

2024
Amazigh

Abstract

The strategic location of North Africa has led to cultural and demographic shifts, shaping its genetic structure. Historical migrations brought different genetic components that are evident in present-day North African genomes, along with autochthonous components. The Imazighen (plural of Amazigh) are believed to be the descendants of autochthonous North Africans and speak various Amazigh languages, which belong to the Afro-Asiatic language family. However, the arrival of different human groups, especially during the Arab conquest, caused cultural and linguistic changes in local populations, increasing their heterogeneity. We aim to characterize the genetic structure of the region, using the largest Amazigh dataset to date and other reference samples. Our findings indicate microgeographical genetic heterogeneity among Amazigh populations, modeled by various admixture waves and different effective population sizes. A first admixture wave is detected group-wide around the twelfth century, whereas a second wave appears in some Amazigh groups around the nineteenth century. These events involved populations with higher genetic ancestry from south of the Sahara compared to the current North Africans. A plausible explanation would be the historical trans-Saharan slave trade, which lasted from the Roman times to the nineteenth century. Furthermore, our investigation shows that assortative mating in North Africa has been rare.

We use cookies to enhance your experience. By continuing to visit this site you agree to our use of cookies. Learn more