Figurine from Ulucak Höyük in West Anatolia. Credit: Ulucak Höyük Excavation Archive
The transition to agriculture and a sedentary lifestyle is one of the great turning points in human history. Yet how this Neolithic way of life spread from the Fertile Crescent across Anatolia and into the Aegean has been hotly debated. A Turkish-Swiss team offers important new insights, by combining archaeology and genetics in an innovative way.
The work is in the journal Science.
How open are people to experimenting with new ways of life? Did farming spread from its origins in Anatolia to neighboring regions by farmers migrating? Or was it rather local hunter-gatherers adopting their neighbors' ways of life? The new study now reconciles these opposing views. The authors find that this massive cultural change occurred through both phenomena—depending on the region and the period.
Burial site at Pendik Höyük, Istanbul, Turkey. Credit: Mehmet Özdoğan
The research, led by geneticists and archaeologists at Middle East Technical University (METU) and Hacettepe University in Ankara (Turkey), and the University of Lausanne (UNIL, Switzerland), sheds light on a major turning point in human history. The team's work shows that cultural changes took place not only due to the movement of people, but also through the spread of ideas.
"In some regions of West Anatolia, we see the first transitions to village life nearly 10,000 years ago. However, we also observe thousands of years of genetic continuity, which means that populations did not migrate or mix massively, even though cultural transition was definitely happening," explains Dilek Koptekin, the study's first author.
Aerial view of the Early Neolithic and the Early Bronze Age settlements at Bademağacı, Antalya, Turkey. Credit: Bademağacı Excavations Archive
A missing chapter in the Neolithic story
Previous research had already shown how agriculture gradually replaced hunting and gathering in Europe after 6,000 BCE, through the movement of farmers out of Anatolia (modern-day Turkey). But what happened before this tipping point, especially in Anatolia, had remained unclear.
"Our study allows us to go back in time—to events that were mainly a matter of speculation up to now," says Koptekin.
Scientists inspecting specimens at Girmeler and Tlos excavation, MuÄŸla, Turkey. Credit: Tlos Excavation Archive
This advancement was possible by sequencing the genome of a 9,000-year-old individual from West Anatolia, the oldest yet in the region. Combining this genome with 29 new paleogenomes as well as published data, the researchers found surprising genetic continuity in West Anatolia across seven millennia.
"Genetically speaking, these people were mainly locals, meaning that their ancestors had not recently arrived from elsewhere. Yet their material culture evolved rapidly: they moved from caves to houses, and adopted new tools and rituals from afar. This suggests that these communities adopted Neolithic practices by cultural exchange rather than population replacement," says computational biologist Anna-Sapfo Malaspinas from UNIL.
Researchers performing excavation at Bahçelievler, Bilecik, Turkey. Credit: Erkan Fidan
Ideas move further than people
Seeking deeper insights into this mobility, the team used an innovative approach, combining ancient DNA with archaeological material data. The researchers scoured hundreds of articles and quantified archaeological features such as pottery types, tools, and architectural remains. This allowed them to systematically compare materials with the genetic profiles of individuals buried at the same sites.
"By giving quantitative values to the archaeological data, we were able to directly compare large amounts of data across different sites for the first time," specifies archaeologist Çiğdem Atakuman from METU. The team thereby traced not only who moved where, but also how ideas and practices circulated.
The scientists' findings challenge previous assumptions that new tools or objects necessarily indicate the arrival of a new population.
"Archaeologists have this proverb, 'Pots don't equal people.' Our study confirms this notion," comments Koptekin.
Excavations at Çatalhöyük, Neolithic site in Central Anatolia. Credit: Christopher J. Knüsel
An evolving mosaic
But this is not the whole story. In some areas of Anatolia, genetic data revealed both mobility and admixture of populations around 7,000 BCE. Here, new groups moved in, bringing both different genes and different practices. In the Aegean region, too, a later wave of population movement introduced further cultural elements that would eventually spread into Europe.
"These types of migration events, which leave genetically visible shifts, probably comprised a small fraction of movement happening compared to background mobility," says Füsun Özer from Hacettepe University. "The Neolithic, in this view, was not a single process, but a patchwork of transformations, combining cultural adoption, mobility, and at times, migration."
Koptekin adds, "Humans have always been adaptive and inclined to change their way of living. We don't need crises or big migration events to bring about change."
Excavations performed at Girmeler, Turkey. Credit: Tlos Excavation Archive
Conceptualized and led primarily by researchers based in Turkey, the study underscores the importance of supporting research in regions directly connected to the questions under investigation.
For Malaspinas, it is a valuable example of how extending large-scale funding opportunities beyond established scientific hubs strengthens underrepresented research communities.
"Our collaboration shows how we, as a scientific community, should move forward to create a more inclusive and globally balanced research landscape," concludes the biologist.
The methodological leap achieved in this study, integrating genomic and archaeological data on a large scale for the first time, marks a turning point for prehistoric research. It allows future research to move beyond simple models and embrace more complex realities of human history.
More information: Dilek Koptekin et al, Out-of-Anatolia: cultural and genetic interactions during the Neolithic expansion in the Aegean, Science (2025). .
Journal information: Science
Provided by University of Lausanne