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Ancient genomes revisit the ancestry of domestic and Przewalski's horses.

Charleen GaunitzAntoine FagesKristian HanghøjAnders AlbrechtsenNaveed KhanMikkel SchubertAndaine Seguin-OrlandoIvy J OwensSabine FelkelOlivier Bignon-LauPeter de Barros DamgaardAlissa MittnikAzadeh Fatemeh MohasebHossein DavoudiSaleh AlquraishiAhmed H AlfarhanKhaled A S Al-RasheidRozenn ColleterNorbert BeneckeSandra OlsenDorcas BrownDavid AnthonyKen MassyVladimir PitulkoAleksei KasparovGottfried BremMichael HofreiterGulmira MukhtarovaNurbol BaimukhanovLembi LõugasVedat OnarPhilipp W StockhammerJohannes KrauseBazartseren BoldgivSainbileg UndrakhboldDiimaajav ErdenebaatarSébastien LepetzMarjan MashkourArne LudwigBarbara WallnerVictor MerzIlja MerzViktor ZaibertEske WillerslevPablo LibradoAlan K OutramLudovic Orlando
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2018)
The Eneolithic Botai culture of the Central Asian steppes provides the earliest archaeological evidence for horse husbandry, ~5500 years ago, but the exact nature of early horse domestication remains controversial. We generated 42 ancient-horse genomes, including 20 from Botai. Compared to 46 published ancient- and modern-horse genomes, our data indicate that Przewalski's horses are the feral descendants of horses herded at Botai and not truly wild horses. All domestic horses dated from ~4000 years ago to present only show ~2.7% of Botai-related ancestry. This indicates that a massive genomic turnover underpins the expansion of the horse stock that gave rise to modern domesticates, which coincides with large-scale human population expansions during the Early Bronze Age.
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