Anne-Maria Fehn
Max Planck Society
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Featured researches published by Anne-Maria Fehn.
American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 2016
Joana C. Pinto; Sandra Oliveira; Sérgio Teixeira; Dayana Martins; Anne-Maria Fehn; Teresa Aço; Magdalena Gayà-Vidal; Jorge Rocha
OBJECTIVES We investigated the frequency distribution and haplotype diversity of human African trypanosomiasis (HAT) resistance and lactase persistence (LP) variants in populations from the Angolan Namib to trace the spread of these genetic adaptations into southwestern Africa. MATERIALS AND METHODS We resequenced two fragments of the LCT enhancer and the APOL1 gene and genotyped flanking short tandem repeat loci in six groups with different subsistence traditions living in the Angolan Namib, and in a comparative dataset including other populations from Africa and Europe. LP in the Angolan Namib is represented by the -14010*C allele, which is associated with a predominant haplotype that is shared with other southern and eastern African populations. While LP was found to be more frequent in foragers than in pastoralists, the frequencies of the two APOL1 variants associated with HAT-resistance (G1 and G2) did not differ between the two groups. The G1 allele is mostly associated with a single widespread haplotype. The G2 allele is linked to several haplotypes that are molecularly related to haplotypes found in other African Bantu-speaking populations. The putatively archaic G3 variant displayed more intra-allelic diversity in Africa than in Europe. DISCUSSION The LP adaptation was carried to southern Africa by non-Bantu speaking pastoralists from eastern Africa, but an obvious link between its presence in southern Angola and groups speaking languages of the Khoe-Kwadi family, as previously found in other areas, could not be confirmed. The presence of APOL1 variants G1 and G2 is linked to the Bantu expansions. Our results suggest that the G3 variant was retained in modern humans by incomplete lineage sorting.
bioRxiv | 2018
Sandra Oliveira; Alexander Hübner; Anne-Maria Fehn; Teresa Aço; Fernanda Lages; Brigitte Pakendorf; Mark Stoneking; Jorge Rocha
Southwestern Angola is a region characterized by contact between indigenous foragers and incoming food-producers, involving genetic and cultural exchanges between peoples speaking Kx’a, Khoe-Kwadi and Bantu languages. Although present-day Bantu-speakers share a patrilocal residence pattern and matrilineal principle of clan and group membership, a highly stratified social setting divides dominant pastoralists from marginalized groups that subsist on alternative strategies and have previously been though to have pre-Bantu origins. Here, we compare new high-resolution sequence data from 2.3 Mb of the non-recombining Y chromosome (NRY) from 170 individuals with previously reported mitochondrial genomes (mtDNA), to investigate the population history of seven representative southwestern Angolan groups (Himba, Kuvale, Kwisi, Kwepe, Twa, Tjimba, !Xun) and to study the causes and consequences of sex-biased processes in their genetic variation. We found no clear link between the formerly Kwadi-speaking Kwepe and pre-Bantu eastern African migrants, and no pre-Bantu NRY lineages among Bantu-speaking groups, except for small amounts of “Khoisan” introgression. We therefore propose that irrespective of their subsistence strategies, all Bantu-speaking groups of the area share a male Bantu origin. Additionally, we show that in Bantu-speaking groups, the levels of among-group and between-group variation are higher for mtDNA than for NRY. These results, together with our previous demonstration that the matriclanic systems of southwestern Angolan Bantu groups are genealogically consistent, suggest that matrilineality strongly enhances both female population sizes and interpopulation mtDNA variation.
Archive | 2017
Tom Güldemann; Anne-Maria Fehn
Güldemann (1998 and following publications) not only challenged the “Khoisan” family hypothesis established by Greenberg (1950, 1963) and popular among non-specialists ever since, but also proposed the areal concept “Kalahari Basin” comprising the indigenous nonBantu languages of southern Africa. If the linguistic isoglosses shared by these languages are compatible with a historical assessment in terms of multiple and partly long-standing contact, the areal approach is a viable explanation for the emergence of the modern linguistic panorama, as opposed to the genealogical hypothesis. Since the areal approach was proposed more than a decade ago research on linguistic isoglosses and contact-induced convergence across the Kalahari Basin has increased considerably. This article summarizes the earlier results, supplements them with new findings, thus giving more substance to the “Kalahari Basin” concept, and embeds it in the general discussion about linguistic areas.
Archive | 2014
Tom Güldemann; Anne-Maria Fehn
American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 2018
Sandra Oliveira; Anne-Maria Fehn; Teresa Aço; Fernanda Lages; Magdalena Gayà-Vidal; Brigitte Pakendorf; Mark Stoneking; Jorge Rocha
Archive | 2018
Anne-Maria Fehn
Archive | 2017
Anne-Maria Fehn
Archive | 2017
Anne-Maria Fehn
Archive | 2017
Bernd Heine; Anne-Maria Fehn
eLS | 2016
Jorge Rocha; Anne-Maria Fehn