PRECOLUMBIAN INTRODUCTION OF CHICKENS
TO
THE AMERICAS FROM POLYNESIA
© The
Vancouver Sun, Tuesday, June 05, 2007 The DNA in the bone
carries a rare mutation that links it to chickens in Tonga and Samoa, and
radiocarbon dating shows it is around 600 years old -- meaning it predates
the arrival of Spanish conquerors in South America. "These chickens
are related to hens from Polynesia,'' said Alice Storey, a doctoral student
at the University of Auckland in New Zealand, who worked on the study. Her team's finding, published in the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, suggests that best-selling
author and adventurer Thor Heyerdahl was only partly right when he sailed on
the raft Kon-Tiki from South America to Polynesia to prove prehistoric
contact across the Pacific. "He had it
backwards," Storey said in a telephone interview. "Heyerdahl had
proposed that people were coming out of South America and into
Polynesia," she added. "We know the
Polynesians were actually going to South America and probably trading
chickens for [sweet potatoes] and bottle gourds." Chickens originally
come from Southeast Asia, and many researchers had assumed that Spanish
conquistadors carried them there in the 16th century. Other experts were not
sure, and when a team stumbled on some old chicken bones at an archeological
site in Chile, they decided to carbon-date them and look at the DNA. Luckily for the
researchers, the chicken DNA carries a rare mutation. It is identical to
bones from two prehistoric archeological sites in the Pacific: Mele Havea in
Tonga, dating to 2,000 years ago, and one from American Samoa, about the same
age as the Chilean site. "Argument about
the origins and date of introduction of the domestic fowl or chicken [Gallus
gallus] to the Americas has raged for over 30 years," Storey's team
wrote. "Here, we provide
the first unequivocal evidence for a pre-European introduction of chickens to
South America and indicate, through ancient DNA evidence, that the likely
source of that introduction was Polynesia," they added. |