A genetic study of nearly 100 corpses in a French cemetery reconstructs seven generations of a Neolithic clan in which the men stayed in their places of origin for their entire lives while the women went to other groups
Berlin, Mar 3: Scientists have reported on genomic data from a 23,000-year-old individual who lived in what was probably the warmest place of Europe at the peak of the last Ice Age. The study reported on the oldest genome to date from Cueva del Malalmuerzo in southern Spain, as well as the 7,000 to 5,000-year-old genomes of early farmers from other well-known sites, such as Cueva de Ardales, Spain. The international team of researchers has analysed ancient human DNA from […]
Analysis of the largest genetic prehistoric record of Europe has found Western hunter-gatherers survived the Ice Age while their Eastern counterparts didn’t.