Luzio, who lived in São Paulo 10,000 years ago, was Amerindian like Indigenous people now, new DNA analysis has revealed

An investigation covering four different parts of Brazil carried out analysis of genomic data from 34 fossils, including larger skeletons and the famous mounds of shells and fishbones built on the coast, and revealed differences between communities.

The research reveals that Luzio, the oldest human skeleton found in São Paulo state (Brazil), was a descendant of the ancestral population that settled the Americas at least 16,000 years ago and gave rise to all present-day Indigenous peoples, such as the Tupi.

Based on the largest set of Brazilian archaeological genomic data, the study also offers an explanation for the disappearance of the oldest coastal communities, who built the icons of Brazilian archaeology known as sambaquis, huge mounds of shells and fishbones used as dwellings, cemeteries and territorial boundaries.

Archaeologists often refer to these monuments as shell mounds or kitchen middens.

André Menezes Strauss, an archaeologist at the University of São Paulo’s Museum of Archeology and Ethnology (MAE-USP) and principal investigator for the study, said: “After the Andean civilisations, the Atlantic coast sambaqui builders were the human phenomenon with the highest demographic density in pre-colonial South America.

“They were the ‘kings of the coast’ for thousands and thousands of years. They vanished suddenly about 2,000 years ago.”

The first author of the article is Tiago Ferraz. The study was supported by FAPESP (projects 17/16451-2 and 20/06527-4) and conducted in partnership with researchers at the University of Tübingen’s Senckenberg Center for Human Evolution and Paleoenvironment (Germany).

 

 

Luzio and Luzia

 

The authors analysed the genomes of 34 samples from four different areas of Brazil’s coast. The fossils were at least 10,000 years old.

They came from sambaquis and other parts of eight sites (Cabeçuda, Capelinha, Cubatão, Limão, Jabuticabeira II, Palmeiras Xingu, Pedra do Alexandre and Vau Una).

This material included Luzio, São Paulo’s oldest skeleton, found in the Capelinha river midden in the Ribeira de Iguape valley by a group led by Levy Figuti, a professor at MAE-USP.

The morphology of its skull is similar to that of Luzia, the oldest human fossil found to date in South America, dating from about 13,000 years ago.

The researchers thought it might have belonged to a biologically different population from present-day Amerindians, who settled in what is now Brazil some 14,000 years ago, but it turns out they were mistaken.

Strauss said: “Genetic analysis showed Luzio to be an Amerindian, like the Tupi, Quechua or Cherokee.

“That doesn’t mean they’re all the same, but from a global perspective, they all derive from a single migratory wave that arrived in the Americas not more than 16,000 years ago.

“If there was another population here 30,000 years ago, it didn’t leave descendants among these groups.”

Luzio’s DNA also answered another question. River middens are different from coastal ones, so the find cannot be considered a direct ancestor of the huge classical sambaquis that appeared later.

This discovery suggests there were two distinct migrations – into the hinterland and along the coast.

 

What happened to the sambaqui builders?

 

Analysis of the genetic material revealed heterogeneous communities with cultural similarities but significant biological differences, especially between coastal communities in the southeast and south.

Strauss said: “Studies of cranial morphology conducted in the 2000s had already pointed to a subtle difference between these communities, and our genetic analysis confirmed it.

“We discovered that one of the reasons was that these coastal populations weren’t isolated but ‘swapped genes’ with inland communities.

“Over thousands of years, this process must have contributed to the regional differences between sambaquis.”

Regarding the mysterious disappearance of this coastal civilisation, comprising the first hunter-gatherers of the Holocene, analysis of the DNA samples clearly showed that, in contrast with the European Neolithic substitution of entire populations, what happened in this part of the world was a change of practices, with a decline in construction of shell middens and the introduction of pottery by sambaqui builders.

For example, the genetic material found at Galheta IV (Santa Catarina state), the most emblematic site for the period, has remains not of shells, but of ceramics and is similar to the classic sambaquis in this respect.

Strauss concluded: “This information is compatible with a 2014 study that analysed pottery shards from sambaquis and found that the pots in question were used to cook not domesticated vegetables, but fish.

“They appropriated technology from the hinterland to process food that was already traditional there.”

The research is published in Nature Ecology & Evolution.

Image: The investigation that covered four different parts of Brazil carried out analysis of genomic data from 34 fossils, including larger skeletons and the famous mounds of shells and fishbones built on the coast. Credit: André Strauss.

Research Aether / Humanity Uncovered