Abstract
Four biallelic and six multiallelic Y-chromosome polymorphisms were investigated in 59 Gran Canarian, 60 North African Berber and 46 Spanish subjects. These new data were merged with equivalent literature information to obtain the parental Y-chrosomomal contribution in Gran Canarians, Colombians, and Venezuelans. The results were then compared, for Gran Canarians and Colombians, to those derived from autosomal and mtDNA. In both groups, the Spanish Y-chromosome contribution was much more marked than that estimated using mtDNA. This analysis showed a usual trend in the Spanish Colonial history, characterized by a demographic collapse of the aboriginal population, but with considerable introgression of genes through native women. In accordance to D. Ribeiro's typology for peoples subjected to Colonialism, the Y-chromosomes of these admixed populations are classified as transplanted, their mtDNA as witness, and their autosome sets as new. Copyright by the Brazilian Society of Genetics.
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Bortolini, M. C., Thomas, M. G., Chikhi, L., Aguilar, J. A., Castro-De-Guerra, D., Salzano, F. M., & Ruiz-Linares, A. (2004). Ribeiro’s typology, genomes, and Spanish colonialism, as viewed from Gran Canaria and Colombia. Genetics and Molecular Biology, 27(1), 1–8. https://doi.org/10.1590/s1415-47572004000100001
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