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DTSTART:20160327T030000
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DTSTART:20151025T020000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260430T094234Z
UID:55488772a341a873524729@ist.ac.at
DTSTART:20160125T124500
DTEND:20160125T134500
DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Eske Willersev\nAbstract: Ancient DNA research on huma
 n remains have recently moved from the sequencing of short fragments of mi
 tochondrial DNA mired with contamination to that of full genomes. This tra
 nsition means that contamination levels can be probably quantified and tha
 t it has become possible testing complex scenarios of human population his
 tories not revivable from uni-parentally inherited markers alone. Recent d
 iscoveries includes that Native Americans thought to be of east Asian orig
 in also shares recent ancestry with western Eurasians through a Upper Pala
 eolithic population in central Asia\, that populations of early anatomical
 ly modern humans in Europe were structured\, contained longer tracks of ne
 anderthal DNA and diversified from east Asians more than 37 thousand years
  ago. Ancient human genomics have also revealed that Aboriginal Australian
  ancestors diversified some 20-30 thousand years earlier from the African 
 stuck than did eurasians. Ancient human genomics have also showed that the
  New World Arctic was populated twice and that significant cultural change
 s not always is associated with population movement\, but can happen simpl
 y from the spread of ideas within a population and that peoples of the Clo
 vis culture in North America are the direct ancestors of many contemporary
  Native Americans and are not closer related to Europeans or Asians. As su
 ch past genomics is transforming our view of human history and is likely t
 o do so for the years to come.
LOCATION:Raiffeisen Lecture Hall\, Central Building\, ISTA
ORGANIZER:aeller@ist.ac.at
SUMMARY:Eske Willersev: The Institute Colloquium: What we can learn from pa
 st genomics?
URL:https://talks-calendar.ista.ac.at/events/557
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