Palaeogenomics reveals 1,500 years of population history of the peoples of the Chonos Archipelago, Chile
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The Chonos archipelago, located in northwestern Chilean Patagonia, was historically inhabited by an Indigenous sea-faring population known to the European colonists as the "Chono". Previous research has contextualized the human occupation of this region with radiocarbon dates and ancient mitochondrial genomes, offering a partial perspective on the history of its inhabitants. Here we present a paleogenomic analysis of 20 ancient human individuals from 6 archaeological sites, dated between 1,600-50 years before present (BP). We successfully captured over 100,000 SNPs from 15 of 20 individuals and recovered 12 full mitogenomes. All individuals presented unadmixed Indigenous South American ancestry and formed a separated genetic cluster relative to other ancient and modern South American genomes, indicating a unique Chonos ancestry. This Chonos ancestry falls within a broader cluster of late-Holocene Patagonian ancestry, most similar to the Kawésqar peoples who neighbour to the south. Within the Chonos, we distinguish a northern and southern ancestry cluster. The northern Chonos cluster exhibits some genetic connections to the present-time inhabitants of the neighbouring island of Chiloé, who are connected to Huilliche Indigenous history. Our findings reveal a point of contact between southern Chonos/Patagonian ancestry to the south and Mapuche ancestry to the north, and confirm that sea-faring subsistence was a knowledge transferred between Patagonian peoples.