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Indigenous peoples in Argentina

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Native Argentines
Argentinos Nativos (Spanish)
Proportion of Native Argentines in each department as of the 2022 Argentine census
Total population
Amerindian ancestry predominates
Increase 1,306,730 (2022 census)[1]
Increase 2.83% of the Argentine population
Regions with significant populations
Predominantly in the Argentine Northwest and in the Patagonia near border areas
Buenos Aires Province Buenos Aires371,830[1]
Salta Province Salta142,870[1]
Jujuy Province Jujuy81,538[1]
Buenos Aires Buenos Aires City74,724[1]
Córdoba Province, Argentina Córdoba69,218[1]
Languages
Spanish • Indigenous languages (including Guaraní, Qom, Wichí, Quechua, Mapuche)
Religion
Majority: Catholicism
Minority: Native American religions
Related ethnic groups

Native Argentines (Spanish: Argentinos Nativos), also known as Indigenous Argentines (Spanish: Argentinos Indígenas), are Argentines who have predominant or total ancestry from one of the 39 groups of indigenous peoples officially recognized by the national government.[2] As of the 2022 census [INDEC], some 1,306,730 Argentines (2.83% of the country's population) self-identify as indigenous or first-generation descendants of indigenous peoples.[3]

The most populous indigenous groups were the Aonikenk, Kolla, Qom, Wichí, Diaguita, Mocoví, Huarpe peoples, Mapuche and Guarani.[2] Many Argentines also identify as having at least one indigenous ancestor; a genetic study conducted by the University of Buenos Aires in 2011 showed that more than 56% of the 320 Argentines sampled were shown to have at least one indigenous ancestor in one parental lineage and around 11% had indigenous ancestors in both parental lineages.[4]

Jujuy Province, in the Argentine Northwest, is home to the highest percentage of households (15%) with at least one indigenous resident or a direct descendant of an indigenous person; Chubut and Neuquén Provinces, in Patagonia, have upwards of 12%.[5]

History

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Artifacts at the Pío Pablo Díaz Museum in Cachi, Salta Province. One of several in Argentina devoted to the ethnology of indigenous peoples

Pre-Columbian history

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The earliest known evidence of indigenous peoples in Argentina is dated 11,000 BC[6] and was discovered in what is now known as the Piedra Museo archaeological site in Santa Cruz Province. The Cueva de las Manos, also in Santa Cruz, is over 10,000 years old.[7] Both are among the oldest evidence of indigenous culture in the Americas, and have, with a number of similarly ancient sites on other parts of the southern hemisphere, challenged the "Clovis First" hypothesis on the settlement of the Americas (the assumption, based on lacking evidence to the contrary, that the Clovis culture was the first in the Western Hemisphere).[8]

Indigenous peoples after European invasion

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By the year 1500, many different indigenous communities lived in what is now modern Argentina. They were not a unified group but many independent ones, with distinct languages, societies, and relations with each other. As a result, they did not face the arrival of the Spanish colonization as a single block and had varied reactions toward the Europeans. The Spanish people looked down on the indigenous population, considering them inferior to themselves.[9] For this reason, they kept very little historical information about them.[10]

Tehuelche Cacique Casimiro Biguá, c. 1864

In the 19th century major population movements altered the original Patagonian demography. Between 1820 and 1850 the original Aonikenk people were conquered and expelled from their territories by invading Mapuche (that called them Tehuelches) armies. By 1870 most of northern Patagonia and the south east Pampas were Araucanized.[11] During the Generation of 1880, European immigration was strongly encouraged as a way of occupying an empty territory, configuring the national population and, through their colonizing effort, gradually incorporating the nation into the world market. These changes were perhaps best summarized by the anthropological metaphor which states that “Argentines descend from ships.”[12] The strength of the immigration and its contribution to the Argentine ethnography is evident by observing that Argentina became the country in the world that received the second highest number of immigrants, with 6.6 million, second only to the United States with 27 million, and ahead of countries such as Canada, Brazil, Australia, etc.[13][14]

The expansion of European immigrant communities and the railways westward into the Pampas and south into Patagonia was met with Malón raids by displaced tribes. This led to the Conquest of the Desert in the 1870s, which resulted in over 1,300 indigenous dead.[15][16] Indigenous cultures in Argentina were consequently affected by a process of invisibilization, promoted by the government during the second half of the 19th century and the early 20th.[17]

The extensive explorations, research and writing by Juan Bautista Ambrosetti and other ethnographers during the 20th century, which followed earlier pioneer studies by anthropologists such as Robert Lehmann-Nitsche,[18] encouraged wider interest in indigenous people in Argentina, and their contributions to the nation's culture were further underscored during the administration of President Juan Perón in the 1940s and 1950s as part of the rustic criollo culture and values exalted by Perón during that era.[19] Discriminatory policies toward these people and other minorities officially ended, moreover, with the August 3, 1988, enactment of the Antidiscrimination Law (Law 23.592) by President Raúl Alfonsín,[20] and were countered further with the establishment of a government bureau, the National Institute Against Discrimination, Xenophobia, and Racism (INADI), in 1995.[21] Corrientes Province, in 2004, became the first in the nation to award an indigenous language (Guaraní) with co-official status,[22] and all 35 native peoples were recognized by both the 2004 Indigenous Peoples Census and by their inclusion as self-descriptive categories in the 2010 census; indigenous communities and Afro-Argentines thus became the only groups accorded any recognition as ethnic categories by the 2010 census.[23]

Demographics

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Indigenous communities today

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Native Argentines 1778-2022
Year Population % of
Argentina
1778 41,517 Steady 22.33%
2001 600,329 Decrease 1.66%
2010 955,032 Increase 2.38%
2022 1,306,730 Increase 2.83%
Source: Argentina census INDEC.[24][25][1]
Population pyramid of Indigenous Argentines in 2022.
Population of indigenous people in Greater Buenos Aires according to the 2022 census.

As of the 2010 census [INDEC], some 955,032 Argentines (2.38% of the country's population) self-identify as indigenous or first-generation descendants of indigenous peoples.[3]

The first government-led effort to produce accurate statistical data on the country's indigenous peoples was the 2001 national census, which included a question on self-identification with indigenous nations.[26] A more in-depth statistical survey came in 2004, with the Complimentary Survey on Indigenous Populations carried out by the National Institute for Indigenous Affairs (INAI). The 2004 survey which accounted for 600,329 people who see themselves as descending from or belonging to indigenous people.[27] Indigenous organisations have questioned the factual accuracy of the 2004 survey: First, the methodology used in the survey was considered inadequate, as a large number of indigenous people live in urban areas where the survey was not fully conducted. Second, many indigenous people in the country hide their identity for fear of discrimination. Moreover, when the survey was designed in 2001, it was based on the existence of 18 known peoples in the country, opposed to the more than 31 groups recognized by the INAI today. This increase reflects a growing awareness amongst indigenous people in terms of their ethnic belonging.[27]

Indigenous family in Cachi, Salta Province.
Guaraní girl in Yrapú, Misiones Province.

As many Argentines either believe that the majority of the indigenous have died out or are on the verge of doing so, or 'their descendants' assimilated into Western civilisation many years ago, they wrongly hold the idea that there are no indigenous people in their country. The use of pejorative terms likening the indigenous to lazy, idle, dirty, ignorant and savage are part of the everyday language in Argentina. Due to these incorrect stereotypes many indigenous have over the years been forced to hide their identity in order to avoid being subjected to racial discrimination.[27]

As of 2011 many natives were still being denied land and human rights. Many of the Qom native community had been struggling to protect the land they claim as ancestral territory and even the lives of its members. Qom community leader Félix Díaz claimed that his people were being denied medical assistance, did not have access to drinking water, and were subject to arbitrary rises on food prices by non-indigenous businesses. He also claimed the local justice system refused to hear the local community's complaints.[28]

The INAI, which reports to the Argentine Ministry of Justice and Human Rights, is tasked with overseeing the government's indigenous policy and maintaining track of Argentina's indigenous communities and their rights to their ancestral lands.[29] As of 2018, the INAI kept register of 1,653 communities, of which 1,456 held legal ownership over various territories.[30]

Genetic contribution in Argentine society

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Genetic ancestry of the average Argentinian gene pool according to Caputo et al. (2021) using X-DIPs (matrilineal).[31]

In addition to the indigenous population in Argentina, most Argentines are descendants of indigenous peoples or have some indigenous ancestry.[4] Many genetic studies have shown that Argentina's genetic footprint is primarily, but not overwhelmingly, European. In a genetic study involving 441 Argentines from across the North East, North West, Southern, and Central provinces (especially the urban conglomeration of Buenos Aires) of the country, it was observed that 65% of the Argentine population was of European descent, followed by 31% of indigenous descent, and 4% of African descent.[32]

The same study also found there were great differences in the ancestry amongst Argentines as one traveled across the country. For example, the population in the North West provinces of Argentina (including the province of Salta) were on average of 66% indigenous, 33% European, and 1% of African ancestry.[32] The European immigration to this North West part of the country was limited and the original indigenous population largely thrived after their initial decline owing to the introduction of European diseases and colonization. Similarly, the study also showed that the population in the North Eastern provinces of Argentina (for example, Misiones, Chaco, Corrientes, and Formosa) were on average 43% of indigenous, 54% European, and 3% of African ancestry.[32] The population of the Southern provinces of Argentina, such as Río Negro and Neuquén, were on average 40% of indigenous, 54% European, and 6% of African ancestry.[32] Finally, only in areas of massive historical European immigration in Argentina, namely the Central provinces (Buenos Aires and the surrounding urban areas), Argentines were of overwhelmingly European ancestry, with the average person having 17% indigenous, 76% European, and 7% of African ancestry.[32]

In another study, that was titled the Regional pattern of genetic admixture in South America, the researchers included results from the genetic study of several hundreds of Argentines from all across the country. The study indicated that Argentines were as a whole made up of 38% indogenous, 58.9% of European, and 3.1% of African ancestry. Again, there were huge difference in the genetic ancestry from across the various regions of the country.[33] For example, Argentines who hailed from Patagonia were 45% indigenous and 55% of European ancestry.[33] The population in the North West part of the country were made up of 69% of indigenous, 23% of European, and 8% of African ancestry.[33] The population in the Gran Chaco part of the country were 38% of indigenous, 53% of European, and 9% of African ancestry.[33] The population in the Mesopotamian part of the country were 31% of indigenous, 63% of European, and 6.4% of African ancestry.[33] Finally, the population in the Pampa region of the country were 22% of indigenous, 68% of European, and 10% of African ancestry.[33]

Finally, in another study published in 2005 involving the North Western provinces of the country, the genetic structure of 1293 individuals from Jujuy, Salta, Tucumán, Santiago del Estero, Catamarca and La Rioja was analysed.[34] This study showed that the Spanish contribution (50%) predominated in Argentina's North West, followed by the Amerindian (40%) and African (10%) contributions.[34] According to this study, Argentines from Jujuy were 53% indigenous, 47% European, and 0.1% African ancestry.[34] Argentines from Salta were 41% of indigenous, 56% of European, and 3.1% of African ancestry.[34] Those from Catamarca were 37% of indigenous, 53% of European, and 10% of African ancestry.[34] Those from La Rioja were on average 31% indigenous, 50% European, and 19% African ancestry.[34] The inhabitants of Santiago del Estero were on average 30% indigenous, 46% European, and 24% African ancestry.[34] The inhabitants of Tucumán were on average 24% indigenous, 67% European, and 9% African ancestry.[34]

Indigenous groups by population

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According to the 2010 census there are the following indigenous groups:[3]

Indigenous group Total population Males Females
Mapuche 205,009 103,253 101,756
Toba 126,967 63,772 63,195
Guaraní 105,907 53,788 52,119
Diaguita 67,410 34,295 33,115
Kolla 65,066 32,553 32,513
Quechua 55,493 27,849 27,644
Wichí 50,419 25,513 24,906
Comechingón 34,546 17,077 17,469
Huarpe 34,279 17,098 17,181
Tehuelche 27,813 13,948 13,865
Mocoví 22,439 11,498 10,941
Pampa 22,020 10,596 11,424
Aymara 20,822 10,540 10,282
Avá Guaraní 17,899 9,438 8,461
Rankulche 14,860 7,411 7,449
Charrúa 14,649 7,192 7,457
Atacama 13,936 7,095 6,841
Mbya-Guaraní 7,379 3,872 3,507
Omaguaca 6,873 3,551 3,322
Pilagá 5,137 2,623 2,514
Tonocote 4,853 2,437 2,416
Lulé 3,721 1,918 1,803
Tupí Guaraní 3,715 1,872 1,843
Querandí 3,658 1,776 1,882
Chané 3,034 1,559 1,475
Sanavirón 2,871 1,399 1,472
Ona 2,761 1,383 1,378
Chorote 2,270 1,177 1,093
Maimará 1,899 876 1,023
Chulupi 1,100 537 563
Vilela 519 279 240
Tapiete 407 217 189
Others 5,301 2,681 2,620
Total 955,032 481,074 473,958

According to the 2022 census there are the following indigenous groups:[1]

Indigenous group Total population
Mapuche 145,783
Guaraní (Ava) 135,232
Diaguita (Calchaquí) 86,022
Toba 80,124
Kolla 69,121
Wichí 69,080
Quechua 52,154
Comechingón 27,509
Huarpe 25,615
Tehuelche (Araucanized) 23,416
Aymara (originally from Bolivia and Peru) 19,247
Mocoví 18,231
Tehuelche 17,420
Rankulche 14,133
Guaraní (Mbyá) 11,014
Toconoté 10,608
Humahuaca 10,605
Charrúa 9,065
Atacama 6,818
Pilagá 6,169
Diaguita (Cacano) 4,772
Chané 3,296
Chorote 3,238
Sanavirón 3,088
Lule 2,851
Lule vilela 2,303
Puelche 2,260
Ocloya 1,818
Chaná 1,590
Tastil 1,391
Selk'nam 1,206
Chicha 1,024
Guaycuru 1,006
Querandí 964
Aoniken/Tehuelche 919
Nivaclé 878
Vilela 863
Abipón 817
Tapiete 654
Kolla atacameño 522
Tilian 446
Corundí 387
Toara 299
Fiscara 255
Yahgan 189
Weenhayek/Wichí 179
Guarayo (originally from Bolivia) 155
Minuane 69
Iogys 49
Churumata 47
Jujuí 41
Michilingüe 28
Chonos (originally from Chile) 16
Mak'a (originally from Paraguay) 13
Isoceño/Chané 10
Kawésqar (originally from Chile) 10
Haush 6
Ansilta 2
Total 1,306,730

Indigenous groups by region

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% of indigenous people by province (2022 census)
Province Percentage
Jujuy Province Jujuy Increase 10.1%
Salta Province Salta Increase 10.0%
Río Negro Province Río Negro Increase 7.9%
Formosa Province Formosa Increase 7.8%
Neuquén Province Neuquén Decrease 7.7%
Chubut Province Chubut Decrease 6.4%
Chaco Province Chaco Increase 4.8%
Catamarca Province Catamarca Increase 4.6%
La Pampa Province La Pampa Decrease 4.4%
Santa Cruz Province, Argentina Santa Cruz Decrease 3.4%
Tierra del Fuego Province, Argentina Tierra del Fuego Increase 3.2%
Flag of La Rioja La Rioja Increase 2.8%
Santiago del Estero Province Santiago del Estero Increase 2.6%
Buenos Aires A.C. of Buenos Aires Increase 2.4%
Mendoza Province Mendoza Decrease 2.2%
Tucumán Province Tucumán Increase 2.2%
Buenos Aires Province Buenos Aires Increase 2.1%
Misiones Province Misiones Increase 2.0%
Córdoba Province, Argentina Córdoba Increase 1.8%
San Juan Province, Argentina San Juan Increase 1.8%
Santa Fe Province Santa Fe Increase 1.6%
San Luis Province San Luis Decrease 1.5%
Entre Ríos Province Entre Ríos Increase 1.3%
Corrientes Province Corrientes Increase 1.3%
Source: Argentina census INDEC.[1]

Northeast

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This region includes the provinces of Chaco, Corrientes, Entre Ríos, Formosa, Misiones, Santa Fe, and parts of Santiago del Estero Province.

Northwest

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This region includes the provinces of Catamarca, Jujuy, La Rioja, Salta, San Juan, parts of Santiago del Estero Province, and Tucumán.

Central

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This region includes the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires and the provinces of Buenos Aires, Córdoba, La Pampa, Mendoza, and San Luis.

South

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This region includes the provinces of Chubut, Neuquén, Río Negro, Santa Cruz, and Tierra del Fuego.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Censo 2022". INDEC. Retrieved 8 March 2024.
  2. ^ a b "Encuesta Complementaria de Pueblos Indígenas". Archived from the original on 2008-06-11. Retrieved 2008-06-18.
  3. ^ a b c "Censo Nacional de Población, Hogares y Viviendas 2010: Pueblos Originarios: Región Noroeste Argentino: Serie D No 1" (PDF) (in Spanish). INDEC. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 April 2016. Retrieved 5 December 2015.
  4. ^ a b "Estructura genética de la Argentina, Impacto de contribuciones genéticas". Ministerio de Educación de Ciencia y Tecnología de la Nación (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 20 August 2011.
  5. ^ Indec. Porcentaje de hogares por provincia que se reconoce descendiente de un pueblo indígena Archived 2020-04-08 at the Wayback Machine (in Spanish)
  6. ^ Welcome Argentina: Expediciones Arqueológicas en Los Toldos y en Piedra Museo Archived 2012-03-10 at the Wayback Machine (in Spanish)
  7. ^ "Cueva de las Manos. UNESCO WHC website". Archived from the original on 2020-04-08. Retrieved 2019-12-26.
  8. ^ "Smithsonian: Paleoamerican Origins". Archived from the original on 2020-04-08. Retrieved 2011-04-29.
  9. ^ Bello, Alvaro; Rangel, Marta (April 2002). "La equidad y la exclusión de los pueblos indígenas y afrodescendientes en América Latina y el Caribe" (PDF). Revista de la CEPAL (in Spanish). 76: 41. ISSN 0252-0257. Retrieved 16 January 2023.
  10. ^ Galasso 111-112
  11. ^ Neuquén: Los pueblos originarios y los posteriores part I Archived 2015-05-01 at the Wayback Machine, part II Archived 2020-04-08 at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ Trinchero, Héctor Hugo (2006). "The genocide of indigenous peoples in the formation of the Argentine Nation-State". Journal of Genocide Research. 8 (2): 121–35. doi:10.1080/14623520600703008. S2CID 71409403.
  13. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). www.cels.org.ar. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 June 2007. Retrieved 15 January 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  14. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). docentes.fe.unl.pt. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 August 2011. Retrieved 15 January 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  15. ^ "Argentina Desert War 1879–1880". Onwar.com. 2003. Archived from the original on 2011-01-12. Retrieved 2011-04-29.
  16. ^ Jens Andermann. "Argentine Literature and the 'Conquest of the Desert', 1872–1896". Birkbeck, University of London. Archived from the original on 2006-10-28. Retrieved 2009-09-02.
  17. ^ Bartolomé, Miguel Alberto (2003). "Los pobladores del 'desierto' Genocidio, etnocidio y etnogénesis en la Argentina" [The inhabitants of the 'desert' genocide, ethnocide and ethnogenesis in Argentina]. Cuadernos de Antropología Social (in Spanish). 17 (1): 162–89. Archived from the original on 2020-04-01. Retrieved 2013-06-09.
  18. ^ Ballestero, Diego (2013). Los espacios de la antropología en la obra de Robert Lehmann-Nitsche, 1894-1938 (PhD). Universidad Nacional de La Plata.
  19. ^ Karush, Matthew; Chamosa, Oscar (2010). The New Cultural History of Peronism: Power and Identity in Mid-Twentieth Century. Duke University Press. ISBN 978-0822392866. Archived from the original on 2022-04-07. Retrieved 2020-11-01.
  20. ^ Ley 23.592 Antidiscriminatoria Archived 2014-08-14 at the Wayback Machine (in Spanish)
  21. ^ Sitio oficial del instituto Nacional contra la Discriminación (INADI) Archived 2011-03-14 at the Wayback Machine (in Spanish)
  22. ^ Ley Provincial Nº 5.598, Corrientes Archived 2012-02-29 at the Wayback Machine (in Spanish)
  23. ^ INDEC. Censo 2010. Archived 2011-06-15 at the Wayback Machine (in Spanish)
  24. ^ "Censo 1778" (PDF). Retrieved 18 April 2024.
  25. ^ "Censo 2001–2010" [Table P1. Total population and intercensus absolute and relative variation by province or jurisdiction, 2001–2010]. INDEC (in Spanish). Archived from the original (XLS) on 2 September 2011.
  26. ^ "La identificación étnica en los registros de salud: experiencias y percepciones en el pueblo Mapuche de Chile y Argentina" (in Spanish). Pan American Health Organization. p. 21. Retrieved 16 January 2023.
  27. ^ a b c d e f g "Indigenous Peoples in Argentina". International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs. Archived from the original on April 27, 2015. Retrieved June 9, 2013.
  28. ^ "Félix Diaz volvió a acampar para que lo reconozcan como representante de los pueblos originarios ante el Estado". Télam (in Spanish). 15 March 2016. Retrieved 16 January 2023.
  29. ^ "Programas del Instituto Nacional de Asuntos Indígenas". CEPAL (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 2 January 2023. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  30. ^ "Los Pueblos Originarios en Argentina, hoy". Secretaría de Cultura (in Spanish). 11 October 2018. Archived from the original on 2 January 2023. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  31. ^ Caputo, M.; Amador, M. A.; Sala, A.; Riveiro Dos Santos, A.; Santos, S.; Corach, D. (2021). "Ancestral genetic legacy of the extant population of Argentina as predicted by autosomal and X-chromosomal DIPs". Molecular Genetics and Genomics. 296 (3): 581–590. doi:10.1007/s00438-020-01755-w. PMID 33580820. S2CID 231911367. Retrieved 13 February 2021.
  32. ^ a b c d e Avena, Sergio; Via, Marc; Ziv, Elad; Pérez-Stable, Eliseo J.; Gignoux, Christopher R.; Dejean, Cristina; Huntsman, Scott; Torres-Mejía, Gabriela; et al. (2012). Kivisild, Toomas (ed.). "Heterogeneity in Genetic Admixture across Different Regions of Argentina". PLOS ONE. 7 (4): e34695. Bibcode:2012PLoSO...734695A. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0034695. PMC 3323559. PMID 22506044.
  33. ^ a b c d e f Godinho, N.M.O.; Gontijo, C.C.; Diniz, M.E.C.G.; Falcão-Alencar, G.; Dalton, G.C.; Amorim, C.E.G.; Barcelos, R.S.S.; Klautau-Guimarães, M.N.; Oliveira, S.F. (2008). "Regional patterns of genetic admixture in South America". Forensic Science International: Genetics Supplement Series. 1 (1): 329–30. doi:10.1016/j.fsigss.2007.10.069.
  34. ^ a b c d e f g h Alfaro, E. L.; Dipierri, J. E.; Gutiérrez, N. I.; Vullo, C. M. (2005). "Genetic structure and admixture in urban populations of the Argentine North-West". Annals of Human Biology. 32 (6): 724–37. doi:10.1080/03014460500287861. PMID 16418046. S2CID 22121799.

References

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