Meirav Meiri
Tel Aviv University
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Featured researches published by Meirav Meiri.
Molecular Ecology | 2013
Meirav Meiri; Adrian M. Lister; Thomas Higham; John R. Stewart; Lawrence Guy Straus; Henriette Obermaier; Manuel Ramón González Morales; Ana B. Marín-Arroyo; Ian Barnes
The Pleistocene was an epoch of extreme climatic and environmental changes. How individual species responded to the repeated cycles of warm and cold stages is a major topic of debate. For the European fauna and flora, an expansion–contraction model has been suggested, whereby temperate species were restricted to southern refugia during glacial times and expanded northwards during interglacials, including the present interglacial (Holocene). Here, we test this model on the red deer (Cervus elaphus) a large and highly mobile herbivore, using both modern and ancient mitochondrial DNA from the entire European range of the species over the last c. 40 000 years. Our results indicate that this species was sensitive to the effects of climate change. Prior to the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) haplogroups restricted today to South‐East Europe and Western Asia reached as far west as the UK. During the LGM, red deer was mainly restricted to southern refugia, in Iberia, the Balkans and possibly in Italy and South‐Western Asia. At the end of the LGM, red deer expanded from the Iberian refugium, to Central and Northern Europe, including the UK, Belgium, Scandinavia, Germany, Poland and Belarus. Ancient DNA data cannot rule out refugial survival of red deer in North‐West Europe through the LGM. Had such deer survived, though, they were replaced by deer migrating from Iberia at the end of the glacial. The Balkans served as a separate LGM refugium and were probably connected to Western Asia with genetic exchange between the two areas.
Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2013
Meirav Meiri; Adrian M. Lister; Matthew J. Collins; Noreen Tuross; Ted Goebel; Simon Blockley; Grant D. Zazula; Nienke L. van Doorn; R. Dale Guthrie; G. G. Boeskorov; Gennady F. Baryshnikov; Andrei Sher; Ian Barnes
Human colonization of the New World is generally believed to have entailed migrations from Siberia across the Bering isthmus. However, the limited archaeological record of these migrations means that details of the timing, cause and rate remain cryptic. Here, we have used a combination of ancient DNA, 14C dating, hydrogen and oxygen isotopes, and collagen sequencing to explore the colonization history of one of the few other large mammals to have successfully migrated into the Americas at this time: the North American elk (Cervus elaphus canadensis), also known as wapiti. We identify a long-term occupation of northeast Siberia, far beyond the species’s current Old World distribution. Migration into North America occurred at the end of the last glaciation, while the northeast Siberian source population became extinct only within the last 500 years. This finding is congruent with a similar proposed delay in human colonization, inferred from modern human mitochondrial DNA, and suggestions that the Bering isthmus was not traversable during parts of the Late Pleistocene. Our data imply a fundamental constraint in crossing Beringia, placing limits on the age and mode of human settlement in the Americas, and further establish the utility of ancient DNA in palaeontological investigations of species histories.
Scientific Reports | 2013
Meirav Meiri; Dorothée Huchon; Guy Bar-Oz; Elisabetta Boaretto; Liora Kolska Horwitz; Aren M. Maeir; Lidar Sapir-Hen; Greger Larson; Steve Weiner; Israel Finkelstein
Near Eastern wild boars possess a characteristic DNA signature. Unexpectedly, wild boars from Israel have the DNA sequences of European wild boars and domestic pigs. To understand how this anomaly evolved, we sequenced DNA from ancient and modern pigs from Israel. Pigs from Late Bronze Age (until ca. 1150 BCE) in Israel shared haplotypes of modern and ancient Near Eastern pigs. European haplotypes became dominant only during the Iron Age (ca. 900 BCE). This raises the possibility that European pigs were brought to the region by the Sea Peoples who migrated to the Levant at that time. Then, a complete genetic turnover took place, most likely because of repeated admixture between local and introduced European domestic pigs that went feral. Severe population bottlenecks likely accelerated this process. Introductions by humans have strongly affected the phylogeography of wild animals, and interpretations of phylogeography based on modern DNA alone should be taken with caution.
Hebrew Bible and Ancient Israel | 2012
Israel Finkelstein; Shirly Ben Dor Evian; Elisabetta Boaretto; Dan Cabanes; Maria-Teresa Cabanes; Adi Eliyahu-Behar; Shira Faigenbaum; Yuval Gadot; Dafna Langgut; Mario A.S. Martin; Meirav Meiri; Dvora Namdar; Lidar Sapir-Hen; Ruth Shahack-Gross; Barak Sober; Michael B. Toffolo; Naama Yahalom-Mack; Lina Zapassky; Steve Weiner
The study of ancient Israel’s texts and history has been a keystone of European scholarship since the Enlightenment. From the beginning of the 19th century, biblical exegesis contributed impressively to our understanding of these topics. Biblical archaeology joined in about a century later and provided critical evidence for the material culture of ancient Israel, shedding new light on its history. Yet, until recent years (and in certain circles up until today) biblical archaeology was dominated by a conservative interpretation of the texts and was not given a true independent role in recon-
Scientific Reports | 2017
Meirav Meiri; Philipp W. Stockhammer; Nimrod Marom; Guy Bar-Oz; Lidar Sapir-Hen; Peggy Morgenstern; Stella Macheridis; Baruch Rosen; Dorothée Huchon; Joseph Maran; Israel Finkelstein
The Late Bronze of the Eastern Mediterranean (1550–1150 BCE) was a period of strong commercial relations and great prosperity, which ended in collapse and migration of groups to the Levant. Here we aim at studying the translocation of cattle and pigs during this period. We sequenced the first ancient mitochondrial and Y chromosome DNA of cattle from Greece and Israel and compared the results with morphometric analysis of the metacarpal in cattle. We also increased previous ancient pig DNA datasets from Israel and extracted the first mitochondrial DNA for samples from Greece. We found that pigs underwent a complex translocation history, with links between Anatolia with southeastern Europe in the Bronze Age, and movement from southeastern Europe to the Levant in the Iron I (ca. 1150–950 BCE). Our genetic data did not indicate movement of cattle between the Aegean region and the southern Levant. We detected the earliest evidence for crossbreeding between taurine and zebu cattle in the Iron IIA (ca. 900 BCE). In light of archaeological and historical evidence on Egyptian imperial domination in the region in the Late Bronze Age, we suggest that Egypt attempted to expand dry farming in the region in a period of severe droughts.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016
Nimrod Marom; Meirav Meiri; Guy Bar-Oz
Almathen et al. (1) find a high level of genetic diversity across the whole dromedary distribution range. The results are inconsistent with the hypothesis of negative correlation between high polymorphism and distance from the center of domestication (2). The lack of phylogeographic pattern demonstrates the mobility of the camel and its important role in ancient trade. Only places where camel populations were used more for subsistence than for trade, such as East Africa and remote parts of Arabia, show a less diverse genetic signature.
Journal of Archaeological Science | 2014
Isabella C.C. von Holstein; Steven P. Ashby; Nienke L. van Doorn; Stacie M. Sachs; Michael Buckley; Meirav Meiri; Ian Barnes; Anne Brundle; Matthew J. Collins
Journal of Biogeography | 2018
Meirav Meiri; Pavel A. Kosintsev; Keziah Conroy; Shai Meiri; Ian Barnes; Adrian M. Lister
Radiocarbon | 2015
Lidar Sapir-Hen; Meirav Meiri; Israel Finkelstein
Ägypten und Levante: Internationale Zeitschrift für ägyptische archäologie und deren nachbargebeite | 2017
Israel Finkelstein; Dafna Langgut; Meirav Meiri; Lidar Sapir-Hen