Using palaeoenvironmental DNA to reconstruct past environments: progress and prospects
Using palaeoenvironmental DNA to reconstruct past environments: progress and prospects
Palaeoenvironmental DNA (PalEnDNA) is defined as ancient DNA (aDNA) originating from disseminated genetic material within palaeoenvironmental samples. Sources of PalEnDNA include marine and lake sediments, peat, loess, till, ice, permafrost, palaeosols, coprolites, preserved gut contents, dental calculus, tephras, and soils as well as deposits in caves/rockshelters and at archaeological sites. PalEnDNA analysis provides a relatively new tool for Quaternary and archaeological sciences and its applications have included palaeoenvironmental and palaeodietary reconstructions, testing hypotheses regarding megafaunal extinctions, human–environment interactions, taxonomic studies, and studies of DNA damage. Because PalEnDNA samples comprise markedly different materials, and represent wide-ranging depositional and taphonomic contexts, various issues must be addressed to achieve robust, reproducible findings. Such issues include climatic and temporal limitations, the biological origin and state (free versus bound) of PalEnDNA, stratigraphic reliability, sterile sampling, ability to distinguish modern from aDNA signals, DNA damage and PCR amplification, DNA extraction methods, and taxonomic resolution. In this review, we provide a non-specialist introduction to the use of PalEnDNA for Quaternary and archaeological researchers, assess attributes and limitations of this palaeoenvironmental tool, and discuss future prospects of using PalEnDNA to reconstruct past environments.
610-626
Rawlence, Nicolas J.
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Lowe, David J.
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Wood, Jamie R.
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Young, J.
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Churchman, Jock G.
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Huang, Doreen Yu-Tuan
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Cooper, Alan
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1 October 2014
Rawlence, Nicolas J.
508d71b0-bdab-481e-8426-78ed6eee6c9a
Lowe, David J.
339c1c3c-a7e8-4ac0-934b-3adf02e1078f
Wood, Jamie R.
15b9823e-fea5-4502-a9ea-6d6ff49c723b
Young, J.
deae04ef-9e2b-4237-832f-4db036d21059
Churchman, Jock G.
2f24cd72-c1ef-47ce-ac5e-a0daec60f6dd
Huang, Doreen Yu-Tuan
1262e2e9-3f09-4572-a1ff-1700467bac7e
Cooper, Alan
19dc1ef7-30e4-4549-9c58-3eee5aa06ea6
Rawlence, Nicolas J., Lowe, David J., Wood, Jamie R., Young, J., Churchman, Jock G., Huang, Doreen Yu-Tuan and Cooper, Alan
(2014)
Using palaeoenvironmental DNA to reconstruct past environments: progress and prospects.
Journal of Quaternary Science, .
(doi:10.1002/jqs.2740).
Abstract
Palaeoenvironmental DNA (PalEnDNA) is defined as ancient DNA (aDNA) originating from disseminated genetic material within palaeoenvironmental samples. Sources of PalEnDNA include marine and lake sediments, peat, loess, till, ice, permafrost, palaeosols, coprolites, preserved gut contents, dental calculus, tephras, and soils as well as deposits in caves/rockshelters and at archaeological sites. PalEnDNA analysis provides a relatively new tool for Quaternary and archaeological sciences and its applications have included palaeoenvironmental and palaeodietary reconstructions, testing hypotheses regarding megafaunal extinctions, human–environment interactions, taxonomic studies, and studies of DNA damage. Because PalEnDNA samples comprise markedly different materials, and represent wide-ranging depositional and taphonomic contexts, various issues must be addressed to achieve robust, reproducible findings. Such issues include climatic and temporal limitations, the biological origin and state (free versus bound) of PalEnDNA, stratigraphic reliability, sterile sampling, ability to distinguish modern from aDNA signals, DNA damage and PCR amplification, DNA extraction methods, and taxonomic resolution. In this review, we provide a non-specialist introduction to the use of PalEnDNA for Quaternary and archaeological researchers, assess attributes and limitations of this palaeoenvironmental tool, and discuss future prospects of using PalEnDNA to reconstruct past environments.
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Published date: 1 October 2014
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Local EPrints ID: 505894
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505894
ISSN: 0267-8179
PURE UUID: 8814129e-171d-4fdd-bb60-cae2fab3be15
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Date deposited: 22 Oct 2025 16:56
Last modified: 25 Oct 2025 02:17
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Author:
Nicolas J. Rawlence
Author:
David J. Lowe
Author:
Jamie R. Wood
Author:
J. Young
Author:
Jock G. Churchman
Author:
Doreen Yu-Tuan Huang
Author:
Alan Cooper
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