Ancient DNA shows the Sámi and Finns share identical Siberian genes
27.11.2018 12:00:00 EET | Helsingin yliopisto | Press release
The first study on the DNA of the ancient inhabitants of Finland has been published, with results indicating that an abundance of genes reached Finland all the way from Siberia.
Genetic material from Siberia has been found in the inhabitants of the Kola Peninsula from as far back as approximately 4,000 years ago, later spreading also to Finland. The study also corroborates the assumption that people genetically similar to the Sámi lived much further south in Finland than today even during the Iron Age.
The genetic samples compared in the study were collected from human bones found in a 3,500-year-old burial place in the Kola Peninsula and the 1,500-year-old lake burial site at Levänluhta in South Ostrobothnia, Finland. All of the samples contained identical Siberian genes.
Siberian origin remains perceptible
The ancient DNA has also been compared to modern populations. Siberian origins are still visible in the Sámi, Finns and other populations of the Finno-Ugric language family.
“However, it has been mixed up with the European genome. Of all European populations, modern Sámi are the most evident representatives of the Siberian genome. As for the title of the modern people with the largest Siberian genetic component, that privilege goes to the Nganasan people living in northern Siberia,” says Päivi Onkamo, head of the SUGRIGE project at the Universities of Helsinki and Turku.
The results make it possible to hypothesise that the living habits, languages and culture of ancient Siberians and the communities that inhabited Finland in the Bronze and Iron Ages may have been in active contact with each other, regardless of the long distance between them. Part of the population may have travelled extensively, trading and moving from one settlement to another according to seasonal changes.
The deceased in the Levänluhta site most closely resemble the Sámi
The project succeeded in mapping out the entire genome from the bones of eleven individuals. From the Kola Peninsula, the bones of six individuals were collected from a 3,500-year-old burial place, while those of two individuals were found from another location dating back to the 18th and 19th century. In the case of the bones found in the Levänluhta site in South Ostrobothnia, the entire genome was mapped for three individuals.
Levänluhta is one of the oldest burial sites in Finland with preserved human bones. The deceased were buried in a lake located at the spot, which explains why the bones have been so well preserved.
The study indicates that the local people were more closely related to today’s Sámi than to Finns.
________________
Thiseas C. Lamnidis, Kerttu Majander, Choongwon Jeong, Elina Salmela, Anna Wessman, Vyacheslav Moiseyev, Valery Khartanovich, Oleg Balanovsky, Matthias Ongyerth, Antje Weihmann, Antti Sajantila, Janet Kelso, Svante Pääbo, Päivi Onkamo, Wolfgang Haak, Johannes Krause, Stephan Schiffels. Ancient Fennoscandian genomes reveal origin and spread of Siberian ancestry in Europe. Nature Communications Online 2018, DOI:10.1038/s41467-018-07483-5
“A population genetically similar to the Sámi has at one time inhabited Finland further south than could be concluded from the settlements of the modern Sámi populations,” says Kerttu Majander, a researcher at the University of Helsinki and the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History in Germany.
“According to another recently published study, the influence of the Sámi has been observed in the names of the Levänluhta region,” adds Dr. Anna Wessman, project manager of the Levänluhta project at the University of Helsinki.
The results have been published in the Nature Communications online journal. The research was carried out in cooperation between the SUGRIGE project on ancient genes of the Universities of Helsinki and Turku, the Levänluhta project and the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History in Germany, focused on studying human prehistory.
_______________________
Thiseas C. Lamnidis, Kerttu Majander, Choongwon Jeong, Elina Salmela, Anna Wessman, Vyacheslav Moiseyev, Valery Khartanovich, Oleg Balanovsky, Matthias Ongyerth, Antje Weihmann, Antti Sajantila, Janet Kelso, Svante Pääbo, Päivi Onkamo, Wolfgang Haak, Johannes Krause, Stephan Schiffels. Ancient Fennoscandian genomes reveal origin and spread of Siberian ancestry in Europe. Nature Communications Online 2018, DOI:10.1038/s41467-018-07483-5
Further information by topic:
Ancient DNA, population genetics, ancient Finno-Ugrian DNA, SUGRIGE project:
Researcher Kerttu Majander, University of Helsinki and Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, tel. 27–30 November +358 41 3678636 and from 1 December +49 176 9852 3868, majander@shh.mpg.de
Professor Päivi Onkamo, group leader for the SUGRIGE project, University of Turku and University of Helsinki, tel. +358 2941 59111, paivi.onkamo@utu.fi
Levänluhta:
Archaeological context: Dr. Anna Wessman, project manager for the Levänluhta project, University of Helsinki, tel. +358 50 329 8436, anna.wessman@helsinki.fi
Professor Antti Sajantila, DNA research under the Levänluhta project, University of Helsinki, tel. +358 400 605 205, antti.sajantila@helsinki.fi
Keywords
Contacts
Photo enquiries: Reetta Harmaja, reetta.harmaja@helsinki.fi
About Helsingin yliopisto
Helsingin yliopistoPL 3
00014 Helsingin yliopisto
02941 22622 (mediapalvelu) 02941 911 (vaihde) (vaihde)https://www.helsinki.fi/fi/yliopisto
Science Communicator Elina Raukko, elina.raukko@helsinki.fi, tel +358 50 318 5302
Subscribe to releases from Helsingin yliopisto
Subscribe to all the latest releases from Helsingin yliopisto by registering your e-mail address below. You can unsubscribe at any time.
Latest releases from Helsingin yliopisto
Suomalaistutkijat neuvomaan Tanskan metsitystä19.3.2026 08:46:09 EET | Tiedote
Tanska aikoo metsittää 250 000 hehtaaria peltoa vuoteen 2045 mennessä. Helsingin yliopiston ja Itä-Suomen yliopiston tutkijat selvittävät tanskalaisten kanssa, miten peltojen metsityksestä saadaan ilmastolle mahdollisimman suuri hyöty.
Tutkimus valottaa urheilun varjopuolta: Henkinen väkivalta yleistä, oikeusturvan puutteet korjattava18.3.2026 16:05:10 EET | Tiedote
Henkinen väkivalta on laajalle levinnyt ilmiö suomalaisessa urheilussa, osoittaa Helsingin yliopiston tutkimus, joka tavoitti yli 3 600 urheilijaa 80 eri lajista.
Paikallisten kalastajien tieto täsmensi ennusteita kuhan kutualueista16.3.2026 14:17:07 EET | Tiedote
Matemaattinen mallinnus tarkentaa ympäristöpoliittista suunnittelua. Helsingin yliopiston väitöstutkimuksessa kehitettiin uusia välineitä saaristomeren vedenlaadun parannuskeinojen vertailuun ja rannikkokalojen kutualueiden seurantaan.
Puun pintakäsittely saattaa hillitä haitallisten bakteerien kasvua12.3.2026 11:00:00 EET | Tiedote
Tuoreen tutkimuksen mukaan bakteerit menestyvät paremmin käsittelemättömillä kuin käsitellyillä puupinnoilla. Tällä on merkitystä kodin ja julkisten tilojen hygienian kannalta.
Automaatio tehostaa lääkkeiden potilaskohtaista jakoa ja parantaa potilasturvallisuutta11.3.2026 12:44:06 EET | Tiedote
Sairaaloiden lääkkeiden jakoprosessien automatisointi voi merkittävästi parantaa potilasturvallisuutta ja tehostaa työnkulkuja. Uudet teknologiat vaativat kuitenkin harkittua käyttöönottoa.
In our pressroom you can read all our latest releases, find our press contacts, images, documents and other relevant information about us.
Visit our pressroom