Science
Related: About this forumThe genetic legacy of African Americans from Catoctin Furnace
The full paper I will discuss in this post is this one: The genetic legacy of African Americans from Catoctin Furnace 2023 Science 381 6657 eade4995
The list of authors is rather long, but I feel compelled to list all of the authors.
Harney, Éadaoin , Micheletti, Steven , Bruwelheide, Karin S. , Freyman, William A. Bryc, Katarzyna , Akbari, Ali , Jewett, Ethan , Comer, Elizabeth , Gates, Henry Louis , Heywood, Linda , Thornton, John , Curry, Roslyn , Esselmann, Samantha Ancona , Barca, Kathryn G. , Sedig, Jakob , Sirak, Kendra , Olalde, Iñigo , Adamski, Nicole , Bernardos, Rebecca , Broomandkhoshbacht, Nasreen , Ferry, Matthew , Qiu, Lijun , Stewardson, Kristin , Workman, J. Noah , Zalzala, Fatma , Mallick, Shop , Micco, Adam , Mah, Matthew , Zhang, Zhao , 23andMe Research Team , Rohland, Nadin , Mountain, Joanna L. , Owsley, Douglas W. , Reich, David , Aslibekyan, Stella , Auton, Adam , Babalola, Elizabeth , Bell, Robert K. , Bielenberg, Jessica , Bullis, Emily , Coker, Daniella , Cuellar Partida, Gabriel , Dhamija, Devika , Das, Sayantan , Elson, Sarah L. , Filshtein, Teresa , Fletez-Brant, Kipper , Fontanillas, Pierre , Heilbron, Karl , Hicks, Barry , Hinds, David A. , Jiang, Yunxuan , Kukar, Katelyn , Lin, Keng-Han , Lowe, Maya , McCreight, Jey , McIntyre, Matthew H. , Moreno, Meghan E. , Nandakumar, Priyanka , Noblin, Elizabeth S. , OConnell, Jared , Petrakovitz, Aaron A. , Poznik, G. David , Schumacher, Morgan , Shastri, Anjali J. , Shelton, Janie F. , Shi, Jingchunzi , Shringarpure, Suyash , Tran, Vinh , Tung, Joyce Y. , Wang, Xin , Wang, Wei , Weldon, Catherine H. , Wilton, Peter , Hernandez, Alejandro , Wong, Corinna D. , Tchakouté, Christophe Toukam , Fitch, Alison , Reynoso, Alexandra , Granka, Julie M. , Su, Qiaojuan Jane , Kwong, Alan , Eriksson, Nicholas , Nguyen, Dominique T. , Llamas, Bianca A. , Tat, Susana A.
A news item which may be more accessible to non-scientists which may be open sourced, from Nature, , describing the paper is here: Ancient DNA reveals the living descendants of enslaved people through 23andMe
The subtitle of the Nature news item:
A photo from the Nature article is moving:
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The caption:
The structured abstract of the full paper however seems not to be filled with arcane jargon, and probably suffices:
INTRODUCTION
Genetic analysis of historical individuals has the potential to help restore knowledge of people whose stories were omitted from written records. During the late 18th and early 19th centuries, Catoctin Furnace in Maryland relied on a workforce of enslaved individuals to operate the iron furnace and carry out domestic and agricultural tasks. Despite the role that Catoctin Furnace played in early US history (including supplying munitions during the Revolutionary War), relatively little is known about the African Americans who labored there or their descendants compared with the furnaces later, predominantly white workforce.
RATIONALE
We produced genome-wide data for 27 individuals buried in the Catoctin Furnace African American Cemetery and compared them to ~9.3 million consenting research participants genotyped by 23andMe, Inc., to address the following questions: (i) How were the Catoctin individuals related to each other? (ii) What were the sources of their African and European ancestry? (iii) Where in the US do their genetic relatives live today, including their direct descendants? (iv) What can their genomes reveal about their health?
RESULTS
We identified five genetic families, consisting of biological mothers, children, and siblings, among the Catoctin individuals. In most cases, biological family members were buried in close proximity.
All but one of the Catoctin individuals had primarily African ancestry, with variable amounts of European ancestry. To learn more about their ancestry, we developed an approach to detect identical-by-descent segments of the genome shared between the Catoctin individuals and 23andMe research participants. Identical-by-descent segments of DNA are shared by two or more people because they have been inherited from a recent common ancestor. We identified 41,799 close and distant relatives of the Catoctin individuals among 23andMe research participants. Within Africa, we found the highest rates of genetic sharing between Catoctin individuals and research participants who self-identified as belonging to the Wolof or Kongo ethnolinguistic groups. Within Europe, we observed the highest rates of genetic sharing with research participants that have ties to Great Britain and Ireland.
Within the US, participants from the South showed elevated rates of sharing, largely reflecting distant connections to 23andMe research participants with sub-Saharan African ancestry (possibly tracing back to shared common ancestors in Africa). When we considered genetic relatives who share the most identical DNA with the Catoctin individuals, we observed the highest rates of sharing in Maryland, suggesting that at least some descendants stayed in the region after the furnaces transition away from enslaved and paid African American labor.
Finally, we found that some of the Catoctin individuals carried risk factors for sickle cell anemia and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency, genetic diseases that are common in African Americans today.
CONCLUSION
These results demonstrate the power of joint analysis of DNA from historical individuals and the extremely large datasets generated through direct-to-consumer ancestry testing, and they serve as a model for obtaining direct insights into the genome-wide genetic ancestry of enslaved people in the historical US.
The opening text of the full paper also seems accessible:
As early as December 1768, a tract of land was acquired for the purposes of building an iron works at the foot of Catoctin Mountain near present-day Thurmont, Maryland (4). The furnace was in blast by 1776, producing pig iron, tools, household items, and munitions used during the Revolutionary War. At least 271 enslaved and an unknown number of free African Americans worked at Catoctin, within and outside the furnace, as ore miners, colliers, forgemen, fillers, teamsters, and woodcutters, as well as in domestic and agrarian roles in the furnace owners households and plantations (5). In the second quarter of the 19th century, the furnaces labor force switched primarily to wage labor and a predominantly white workforce (6). Gradually, the contributions of African Americans in this early industrial complex were largely forgotten. The Catoctin Furnace African American Cemetery, near an old ore pit, was excavated in 19791980 in advance of highway construction (Fig. 1A) (710). The Maryland State Highway Administration transferred stewardship of the recovered remains of deceased humans to the Smithsonian Institution, where curator J. Lawrence Angel conducted preliminary forensic anthropological investigations (11)...
A graphic of the layout of the graves and relationships between the families:
The caption:
(A) Map showing the location of Catoctin Furnace and burials within the cemetery. Burial locations of the five genetic families are circled. The rectangle in the upper right shows a portion of the cemetery with unexcavated burials identified through ground-penetrating radar. [Map adapted from (12), prepared by Robert Wanner] (B) Individuals, labeled according to burial ID, are grouped into families on the basis of genetic relationships. Genetic sex, mt haplogroups, and Y haplogroups are indicated by marker shape, fill color, and outline color, respectively. The type of genetic relationship is indicated by connector line style. Marker fill pattern indicates individuals with one or more copies of an allele associated with sickle cell anemia or G6PD deficiency. (C) Ancestry proportions assigned to each individual from representative African (YRI), European (GBR), and Indigenous American (Pima) populations drawn from the public dataset according to the qpAdm software. Error bars indicate one standard error. Asterisks (*) indicate cases where damage-restricted data were analyzed. Hash symbols (#) and plus signs (+) indicate models with P < 0.01 or ancestry proportion estimates that fall more than three standard errors outside the range of 0 to 1, respectively.
More text:
More text on the consent of modern African Americans for genetic comparison with the enslaved human beings:
The important ethics statement:
An illustrative graphic:
The caption:
(A) A timeline showing the years in which the African American Cemetery at Catoctin Furnace was active and a histogram of birth years of research participants who share IBD with Catoctin individuals (table S23). (B) Examples of relationships that could be shared between individuals who were born five generations apart, with varying degrees of genetic separation. Median amount of IBD is reported for pairs of present-day and historical individuals (with 2× coverage) (table S7).
The paper does touch on many challenging ethical considerations as I see it, but I support this work, detailing the lives involved in human slavery, a stain on American history that can never be erased.
The full paper has fascinating details.
Have a great weekend.