Beyond 10,000 ancient human genomes: ancestral origins at the Balkans

Autor/a

Lalueza-Fox, Carles

Fecha de publicación

2024-06-17



Resumen

With more than 10,000 ancient human genomes published in 2023, thanks to new technological developments on DNA sequencing, we are now able to investigate multiple ancestry layers associated to past migrations that have shaped the genomes of modern populations. These studies have been able to unravel past social structures, as well as selective processes, that left genomic marks. In the Balkans, the recent analysis of some hundreds of ancient genomes from the last three thousand years have uncovered the genetic signals of globalisation during the Roman Empire and also the signals of the Slavic migrations after the 6th century BCE. Getting into historical periods, these population movements have strong cultural and even political implications, showing the complex nature of ancestry, genetics and identity. Genetics can offer objective data on human past and yet, their interpretation in terms of identity is complex. A multidisciplinary approach, involving different disciplines such as archaeology, anthropology, history and even linguistics is recommended.

Tipo de documento

Objeto de conferencia

Versión del documento

Versión publicada

Lengua

Inglés

Materias CDU

575 - Genética general. Citogenética general. Inmunogenética. Evolución. Filogenia

Palabras clave

Evolució humana; Imperi Romà; Balcans; Migració (Població); Genètica humana

Páginas

1 p.

Es versión de

5th Belgrade bioinformatics conference (17-20 de juny del 2024, Belgrad)

Documentos

CLalueza_2024.pdf

16.76Kb

 

Derechos

© 2024 Institute of Molecular Genetics and Genetic Engineering, University of Belgrade

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