The Mystery Of The Origin Of The Controversial Tarim Basin Mummies Has Been Solved With DNA
The Mystery Of The Origin Of The Controversial Tarim Basin Mummies Has Been Solved With DNA
Located in northwestern China’s Xinjiang region, the Tarim Basin is a rich confluence of geology, history, and culture. In fact, it is speculated that this region may be one of the last to be inhabited in Asia. The region acquired international renown in the 1990s when hundreds of naturally mummified remains were discovered. Dating back to between 2,000 BC and 200 AD, these Tarim Basin mummies had a seemingly “Western” appearance. In order to solve this mystery and understand the origins of these first settlers in the basin, experts used genome sequencing. In 2021, their results were published in the journal Nature.
Aerial view of Xiaohe cemetery where some of the Tarim Basin mummies were found. Source: Wenying Li / Xinjiang Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology
What is particularly striking about these Tarim Basin mummies is the level of preservation of both their bodies and clothing – with some specimens being up to 4,000 years old! What has worked in their favor is the dry desert air, which has acted as a natural preserver, protecting both the facial features and the original color of their hair.
The results suggest an entirely different origin for these Tarim Basin mummies. The team argues that rather than being newcomers to the area, they were actually a local group that descended from an ancient Ice Age Asian population. “The mummies have long fascinated scientists and the public alike since their original discovery,” explained Christina Warinner, an associate professor of anthropology at Harvard University, the group leader of microbiome sciences at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology and an author of the study.
“Beyond being extraordinarily preserved, they were found in a highly unusual context, and they exhibit diverse and far-flung cultural elements,” explained Warriner in CNN. “We found strong evidence that they actually represent a highly genetically isolated local population,” she concluded.
Typical Xiaohe boat burial coffin with oar covered with cattle hide. (Wenying Li / Xinjiang Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology )
Unanswered Questions About the Tarim Basin Mummies
However, there were several unanswered questions which came up during the study. Firstly, the sampling size of 18 mummies in total is too small to make a deterministic claim. Secondly, the mystery of boat burials (which is how these mummies were found) is far from been resolved.
Culturally, no other tradition or people has been seen to bury their dead in this manner, and it is unclear what this kind of a burial means in the first place. The closest comparison to this has been the Vikings, who are remembered as a seafaring people. Even the distribution of the sites under analysis, specifically the Xiaohe cemetery and the Gumugou cemetery in the Tarim Basin, and from the neighboring Dzungarian Basin, is not a wide enough spread for conducting data sampling.
“Reconstructing the origins of the Tarim Basin mummies has had a transformative effect on our understanding of the region, and we will continue the study of ancient human genomes in other eras to gain a deeper understanding of the human migration history in the Eurasian steppes ,” concluded Yinquiu Cui, a senior author of the study and professor in the School of Life Sciences at Jilin University.
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