Sled Dog DNA Uncovers New Greenland History

University of Copenhagen

The Inuit arrived in Greenland several hundred years earlier than previously believed. This is revealed by a genetic mapping of sled dogs, conducted by researchers from institutions including the University of Copenhagen.

Sled dogs pulling a sled in Greenland
Dog skeletons and fur decorations on historical anoraks are among the researchers' sources of ancient DNA. Photo: Carsten Egevang

For many of us, dogs are our best friends, but in Greenland, sled dogs have for centuries been more than just loyal companions: they are an indispensable workforce, contributing to hunting and pulling sleds across the country's icy terrain.

Now, the genome of sled dogs is rewriting part of Greenland's history. In a new study, researchers have for the first time found genetic evidence that the ancestors of today's Greenlandic population traveled with their dogs from Canada to the large island several hundred years earlier than previously assumed.

"Until now, we believed the Inuit arrived in Greenland 800 years ago, but the sled dog genome shows that there was already an earlier wave of immigrants 200-300 years before that," says Anders Johannes Hansen, professor at the University of Copenhagen's GLOBE Institute and one of the researchers behind the study.

This is the first time we've had genetic evidence to pinpoint when the Inuit arrived, and that they subsequently split into four groups that settled in isolated regionsCitation text goes here.

Genes Reveal Evolutionary History

Over the roughly 1,000 years that Inuit and sled dogs have lived together in Greenland, their histories have become deeply intertwined. As a result, the dogs' collective genetic material reveals important details about the movements of early Inuit populations.

By examining how closely related the dogs are to each other and to their shared North American ancestors, researchers gain insights into when the break from Canada occurred and when groups of sled dogs, together with humans, settled in different regions of Greenland.

"We're tracing human migration through their sled dogs, which - combined with archaeological findings - provides a better overall understanding of developments over several centuries," says Tatiana Feuerborn of the University of Copenhagen and the U.S. National Institutes of Health, lead author of the study.

"This is the first time we've had genetic evidence to pinpoint when the Inuit arrived, and that they subsequently split into four groups that settled in isolated regions," Feuerborn explains.

The dogs' genome reflects not only geographical changes but also periods when sled dog populations declined due to disease or hunger - patterns that researchers can read in the DNA.


Climate Change and Snowmobiles Threaten Sled Dogs

Although sled dogs and Greenland are deeply connected, their numbers are dwindling year by year. Climate change and the rise of snowmobiles are partly to blame for the decline of these traditional working animals.

About the Study

The researchers mapped sled dog genes across three time periods:

  1. From the Inuit's arrival in Greenland until the Danish-Norwegian colonization
  2. From colonization until 1998
  3. From 1998 to the present

The study was published in Science. Read it here.

"Due to the retreat of sea ice, sleds can only be used during shorter periods of the year and in more limited areas. Combined with the use of snowmobiles, this means fewer people keep sled dogs," says Anders Johannes Hansen.

"If we want to preserve sled dogs in the future, we need data on what a genetically healthy population looks like - and that's what this study provides," he adds.

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