1. Ancient human genomes suggest three ancestral populations for present-day Europeans.
- Author
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Lazaridis, Iosif, Mallick, Swapan, Nordenfelt, Susanne, Li, Heng, Rohland, Nadin, Economou, Christos, Fu, Qiaomei, Haak, Wolfgang, Cooper, Alan, Hallgren, Fredrik, Fornander, Elin, Delsate, Dominique, Francken, Michael, Guinet, Jean-Michel, Wahl, Joachim, Ayodo, George, Babiker, Hamza A., Patterson, Nick, Bailliet, Graciela, and Bravi, Claudio M.
- Subjects
GENETIC genealogy ,ANCESTORS ,GENOMICS ,GENEALOGY - Abstract
We sequenced the genomes of a ∼7,000-year-old farmer from Germany and eight ∼8,000-year-old hunter-gatherers from Luxembourg and Sweden. We analysed these and other ancient genomes with 2,345 contemporary humans to show that most present-day Europeans derive from at least three highly differentiated populations: west European hunter-gatherers, who contributed ancestry to all Europeans but not to Near Easterners; ancient north Eurasians related to Upper Palaeolithic Siberians, who contributed to both Europeans and Near Easterners; and early European farmers, who were mainly of Near Eastern origin but also harboured west European hunter-gatherer related ancestry. We model these populations' deep relationships and show that early European farmers had ∼44% ancestry from a 'basal Eurasian' population that split before the diversification of other non-African lineages. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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