There's a lot of action in europe, a post the inter ling of modern humans and neanderthalls. Roughly between four and ten thousand years ago, there were different populations in europe. The reason we have so much data from europe is for several reasons. We are locked in two dimensions to day in terms of our understanding of human a variation. But we now have a third, and inEurope, it goes back deep in time,. And that's an incredibly powerful resource.
Human beings like to divide themselves into groups, and then cooperate, socialize, and reproduce with members of their own group. But they’re not very absolutist about it; groups tend to gradually (or suddenly) intermingle, as people explore, intermarry, or conquer each other. David Reich has pioneered the use of genetic data in uncovering the history of ancient humanity: what groups existed where and when, and how they interacted. The result is a picture of churning populations in constant flux, including “ghost populations” that no longer exist today.
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David Reich received his Ph.D. in zoology from the University of Oxford. He is currently a professor of genetics at Harvard Medical School. Among his awards are the Dan David Prize, the National Academy of Sciences Award in Molecular Biology, the Wiley Prize, the Darwin-Wallace Medal, and the Massry Prize. He is the author of Who We Are and How We Got Here: Ancient DNA and the New Science of the Human Past.
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