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과학자가 밝혀낸 가장 오래된 문어 화석의 진실

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이번 주 블로그 글은 가장 오래된 문어 화석으로 알려졌던 화석의 분류학적 수정 소식과 더불어, 5세기 한국 삼국시대 고분에서 발구된 유골의 고대 DNA를 통해 밝혀낸 순장 풍습과 근친혼에 대한 연구 결과를 다룹니다. 또한 은하계 밖으로 방출된 폭주 별에 대한 새로운 발견을 소프트웨어 공학 및 데이터 분석 실무 관점에서 살펴볼 수 있는 흥미로운 과학 뉴스입니다.

번역된 본문

The Abstract에 다시 오신 것을 환영합니다! 이번 주에는 의식적으로 희생되어 은하계에서 추방되고, 분류학적으로 재검토되며, 많은 역할을 수행한 연구들을 살펴보겠습니다. 첫째, 과학자들은 5세기 한국에 거주했던 사람들의 뼈에서 추출한 고대 DNA를 이용하여 인신공양과 근친상간에 대해 조명했습니다. 그다음으로는 별의 방출, 문어 사기꾼, 그리고 대머리의 모욕에 대해 다룹니다. 평소처럼 제 작업을 더 보려면 제 저서 'First Contact: The Story of Our Obsession with Aliens'를 확인하시거나 개인 뉴스레터인 the BeX Files를 구독해 주세요.

가족 이야기 (이번에는 인신공양 포함) Moon, Hyoungmin, Kim, Daewook 외. “Ancient genomes reveal an extensive kinship network and endogamy in a Three-Kingdoms period society in Korea.” Science Advances.

준비되든 아니든, 희생된 가족들의 뼈가 가득 담긴 고대 매장지를 방문할 시간입니다. 한국의 임당-조영 유적에 오신 것을 환영합니다. 이곳은 격동의 삼국시대부터 1,500년 된 무덤 군집이 있는 곳입니다. 이름에서 알 수 있듯이 이 시대는 고구려, 백제, 신라라는 세 개의 전투적인 왕조 파벌이 지배했습니다. 역사적, 고고학적 증거에 따르면 신라 왕국은 독특한 관습을 따랐는데, 여기에는 엘리트 무덤 주인과 희생된 사람들을 함께 매장하는 '순장' 관습과 가까운 혈족 간의 결혼인 근친혼이 포함되었습니다.

이제 연구원들은 확인된 계통을 통해 이러한 발견을 뒷받침하기 위해 78명의 사망자 유골에서 추출한 고대 DNA 염기서열을 분석했습니다. 그 결과 근친혼이 실제로 흔했으며, 성인 여성이 자신의 친척과 함께 묻히는 경우가 많았다는 사실이 밝혀졌습니다. 이는 전 세계의 고대 무덤에서는 드문 현상입니다. 서울대학교의 문형민 교수와 영남대학교의 김대욱 교수가 공동으로 이끈 연구팀은 "신라는 고구려와 같은 이웃 국가들과 다른 결혼 풍습을 가진 것으로 알려져 있다"고 말했습니다. "가장 주목할 만한 것은 신라 왕실 엘리트들이 근친혼을 행한 것으로 기록되어 있다는 점이며, 이는 고구려와 백제 기록에서는 거의 관찰되지 않습니다. 근친혼에 대한 역사적 기록은 신라 왕실과 지방 엘리트 내에서의 계급 및 사회적 지위 공고화와 관련이 있는 것으로 생각됩니다."

팀은 추가로 "하지만 한국에서 고대 게놈 연구가 제한적이었기 때문에, 삼국시대 한국인들의 결혼 풍속에 대한 게놈 증거는 지금까지 보고된 바가 없다"고 덧붙였습니다. "우리의 연구는 고대 한국 삼국시대의 밀접하게 관련된 개인들의 전체 게놈 구성을 분석한 최초의 연구입니다." 이 유적지의 많은 무덤에는 엘리트 무덤 주인을 위한 방과 희생된 사람들을 위한 방이 따로 있으며, 희생된 사람들은 종종 의식적으로 희생되어 그들의 주인과 함께 묻힌 전체 가족을 포함합니다. 엘리트와 희생자 모두 종종 사촌 간의 결합에서 태어났으며, 이는 근친혼이 계급을 막론하고 흔했다는 것을 시사합니다.

팀은 "우리는 부모와 그들의 자녀가 같은 무덤에서 함께 희생된 세 가지 가족 사례에 대한 결정적인 증거를 발견했다"고 말했습니다. "우리의 유전학적 발견은 한 가구 전체의 순장 행위를 확인한 최초의 사례이며, 이러한 관행이 삼국시대의 순장 매장에 일반적일 수 있음을 시사합니다." 또한 일부 성인 여성은 부모 및 조부모와 함께 묻혔는데, 이는 여성이 남편 및 시댁 식구들과 함께 묻히는 경향이 있는 대부분의 다른 고대 매장지에서는 드문 패턴입니다. 이 연구는 특이한 관습을 가진 사회를 엿볼 수 있는 희귀한 기회를 제공하며, 이는 새로운 HBO 프리미엄 시리즈의 배경으로 즉각 활용될 수 있을 만큼 매력적입니다.

다른 소식으로는... ♩ 하늘을 가로지르는 별똥별 ♩ Bhat, Aakash et al. “Discovery of a runaway star likely ejected by a Type Iax supernova.” Astronomy & Astrophysics.

일부 우주 폭발은 너무 강력해서 별을 은하계 밖으로 곧장 차낼 수 있습니다. 과학자들은 우연히 발견한...

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Welcome back to the Abstract! Here are the studies this week that were ritually sacrificed, kicked out of the galaxy, taxonomically revised, and wore many hats. First, scientists shed light on human sacrifice and cousin sex using ancient DNA from the bones of people who lived in fifth-century Korea. Then: the yeeting of a star, an octopus imposter, and the indignities of a bare head. As always, for more of my work, check out my book First Contact: The Story of Our Obsession with Aliens or subscribe to my personal newsletter the BeX Files . All in the Family (this time with human sacrifice) Moon, Hyoungmin, and Kim, Daewook et al. “Ancient genomes reveal an extensive kinship network and endogamy in a Three-Kingdoms period society in Korea.” Science Advances. Ready or not, it’s time to visit an ancient burial ground packed with the bones of sacrificed families. Welcome to the Imdang-Joyeong site in Korea, which contains a cluster of 1,500-year-old tombs from the tumultuous Three Kingdoms period. As the name suggests, this era was dominated by a trio of warring dynastic factions called the Goguryeo, Baekjae, and Silla. Historical and archaeological evidence suggests that the Silla kingdom followed unique customs, including the practice of “Sunjang,” a coburial of sacrificed people with an elite grave owner, as well as consanguineous marriages—marriages between close blood relatives. Now, researchers have now sequenced ancient DNA from 78 deceased individuals to corroborate the findings with confirmed lineages. The results revealed that consanguineous marriages were indeed common, and that adult women were often buried together with their own kin, which is a rarity in ancient graveyards around the world. “Silla is thought to have practiced different marital customs from that of its neighbors, such as Goguryeo,” said researchers co-led by Hyoungmin Moon of Seoul National University and Daewook Kim of Yeungnam University. “Most notably, Silla royal elites are documented to have practiced consanguineous marriage, which is rarely observed in Goguryeo and Baekjae records. Historical accounts of consanguineous marriage are thought to be related to the consolidation of the rank and social status within Silla royals and local elites.” “However, because of limited ancient genome studies in Korea, no corroborating genomic evidence so far has been reported regarding the marriage customs of the Three-Kingdoms period Koreans,” the team added. “Our research is the first to analyze the genome-wide composition of closely related individuals from an ancient Three-Kingdoms period of Korea.” Many tombs at this site include separate chambers for elite grave owners, and for sacrificed people, which often included entire families that may have been ritually sacrificed and buried alongside their masters. Both elites and sacrificed individuals were often born from unions between first or second cousins, suggesting that consanguineous marriages were common across class lines. “We found decisive evidence of three cases of families in which parents and their offspring were sacrificed together in the same grave,” the team said. “Our genetic findings are the first to confirm the acts of Sunjang of an entire household and suggest that these practices might be common for sacrificial burials of the Three-Kingdoms period.” In addition, some adult women were buried alongside their parents and grandparents, a pattern that is rare in most other ancient burial grounds in which women tend to be buried alongside their husbands and in-laws. The study offers a rare glimpse of a society with idiosyncratic customs that is ready-made to be the setting of a new HBO prestige series. In other news… ♩ It’s a shooting star leaping through the sky ♩ Bhat, Aakash et al. “Discovery of a runaway star likely ejected by a Type Iax supernova.” Astronomy & Astrophysics. Some space explosions go so hard that they can kick a star right out of a galaxy. Scientists report the serendipitous discovery of one of these so-called “runaway stars” that was likely ejected from the galaxy approximately 2.8 million years ago “with an ejection velocity exceeding 600 kilometers per second”—or about 1.3 million miles per hour—according to a new study. This cosmic sprinter is a white dwarf, the collapsed remains of a star, that was accelerated to ludicrous speed by a “Type Iax” supernovae, a type of stellar kablooey that occurs in some binary star systems. This runaway star “is notably hotter than previously studied members of this class,” said researchers led by Aakash Bhat of the University of Potsdam. “Kinematic analysis indicates that the star has a high probability of being unbound from the Galaxy.” So long, runaway star, and safe travels through intergalactic space. A 300-million-year-old case of mistaken identity Clements, Thomas et al. “Synchrotron data reveal nautiloid characters in Pohlsepia mazonensis, refuting a Palaeozoic origin for octobrachians.” Proceedings of the Royal Society B. Prepare to be ink-pilled, because it turns out that the oldest known octopus fossil ever found—a 300-million-year old species called Pohlsepia mazonensis —is not an octopus at all. It is a member of the nautilus family that just ended up looking sort of like an octopus in part because its shell fell off during the decomposition process. “We present the first comprehensive reassessment of this enigmatic fossil, alongside multiple new specimens, using a suite of advanced analytical techniques,” said researchers led by Thomas Clements of the University of Reading. During this process, the team discovered a special “radula”—a feeding organ lined with rows of teeth—that matched the nautilus family. As a result, P. mazonensis “represents the oldest known fossil soft tissue nautiloid (albeit without its shell),” the team concluded. The finding is a boon to octopus scientists (a.k.a. Doc Ocks) who have been perplexed for years by this specimen, given that the fossil record otherwise suggests that octopuses emerged much later in time, during the age of dinosaurs. It just proves the old adage: Don’t believe everything you hear about the evolutionary origins of octopuses. We’re all mad hatters here Capp, Bernard. “The Cultural, Social, and Ideological Role of the Hat in Early Modern England.” The Historical Journal. We’ll cap off with a hat tip to a study that chronicles hat etiquette across early modern England, roughly spanning the 1400s to 1700s. Authored by the aptly-named Bernard Capp of the University of Warwick, the work is packed with madcap anecdotes about hats as signifiers of identity, instruments of shame, tools for salutations, and even makeshift toilets in the most ribald tales. “The ‘Pleasant History’ of Hodge tells of a simpleton humiliated by a maidservant who claps on his head the hat in which she had just defecated,” Capp noted in the study. “Such behaviour, moreover, was not confined to fiction; in 1747 a Wiltshire man admitted snatching a rival’s hat, pissing in it, and clapping it back on the victim’s head.” Other highlights include the Cap Act of 1571, which allowed offenders “to be prosecuted for wearing hats to church;” jokes about fine ladies wearing towering ribboned hats that spooked local livestock; and a man named Thomas Ellwood who was rendered unable to leave his house for months in 1659 because his father confiscated all his hats, because who would dare, in his words, to “run about the Country bare-headed, like a Mad-Man”? Hats off to this heady historical work, and beware the bareheaded Mad-Men. Thanks for reading! See you next week.