Population structure in the Connecticut Valley: II. A comparison of multidimensional scaling solutions of migration matrices and isonymy
- 1 December 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in American Journal of Physical Anthropology
- Vol. 68 (4) , 539-547
- https://doi.org/10.1002/ajpa.1330680410
Abstract
In a previous paper (Swedlund et al., 1984) we have described the population structure of the historical Connecticut River Valley of Massa chusetts in terms of matrimonial migration matrices. Using procedures described by Morton (1973), Harpending and Jenkins (1974), Jorde (1980), and others the exchanges between subdivisions which make up the matrices are made column stochastic and analyzed to predict genetic kinship. Subsequently the kinship estimates within and between subdivisions can be interpreted as genetic covariance and compared to the actual geographic distances between the respective subdivisions using a principal components analysis. In the present paper we extend these results by applying nonmetric multidimensional scaling to the migration matrices, and to isonymy matrices based on the same communities. We demonstrate that the multidimensional scaling configurations of marital migration represent the actual geographic relationships between the communities quite effectively for this particular case study from historical Massachusetts. Moreover, we argue that while these migration data may provide good estimates of social and genetic exchange between the subdivisions, surname analysis may also be informative of processes not revealed in the migration matrices alone.Keywords
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