Âé¶¹ÒùÔº


This article has been reviewed according to Science X's and . have highlighted the following attributes while ensuring the content's credibility:

fact-checked

peer-reviewed publication

proofread

Ukraine was a migration hub until around 500 years ago, study finds

Ukraine was a crossroads of human mobility until around 500 years ago
Scythian burial at the Skorobir necropolis in the fortified settlement of Bilski. Credit: Iryna Shramko

The North Pontic region, which encompasses present-day Ukraine, was for centuries a crossroads of migration from multiple directions, connecting the vast Eurasian Steppe with Central Europe.

A study recently in Science Advances uses ancient human remains to reveal the remarkably high genetic heterogeneity in the region during the last 3,500 years up to around 500 years ago.

The analyses shows that at the end of the Bronze Age, broad-scale ancestry proportions are similar to contemporary populations in the rest of Europe—a mixture of European hunter-gatherer, Anatolian early farmer and Steppe pastoralist ancestries—and these ancestry components have been present in the Ukraine region since then until today.

However, from the Early Iron Age until the Middle Ages, the appearance of eastern nomads in the Pontic region became a regular occurrence. Their varied from Steppe-like superimposed on the locals to high degrees of East Asian ancestry with minimal local admixture.

At the same time, individuals from the rest of the Ukrainian region had mostly from different regions in Europe. The palimpsest created by migration and population mixing in the Ukraine region will have contributed to the high genetic heterogeneity in geographically, culturally and socially homogeneous groups, with different genetic profiles present at the same site, at the same time and among individuals with the same archaeological association.

The study is led by Lehti Saag, a researcher at the University of Tartu Institute of Genomics (UT IG) and a former Marie Skłodowska-Curie postdoctoral fellow at University College London (UCL), alongside professor Mark Thomas from UCL and Pontus Skoglund from the Francis Crick Institute. The study was made possible by the resilience of Ukrainian researchers—second author Olga Utevska who is currently a MSCA4Ukraine fellow at UT IG, and numerous archaeologists still actively conducting excavations in Ukraine despite the war.

More information: Lehti Saag et al, North Pontic crossroads: Mobility in Ukraine from the Bronze Age to the early modern period, Science Advances (2025).

Journal information: Science Advances

Provided by Estonian Research Council

Citation: Ukraine was a migration hub until around 500 years ago, study finds (2025, January 13) retrieved 29 April 2025 from /news/2025-01-ukraine-migration-hub-years.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

Ancient genomes provide final word in Indo-European linguistic origins

127 shares

Feedback to editors