Tracing the peopling of the world through genomics

被引:0
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作者
Rasmus Nielsen
Joshua M. Akey
Mattias Jakobsson
Jonathan K. Pritchard
Sarah Tishkoff
Eske Willerslev
机构
[1] University of California,Department of Integrative Biology
[2] Berkeley,Department of Statistics
[3] University of California,Department of Genome Sciences
[4] Berkeley,Department of Organismal Biology
[5] Centre for GeoGenetics,Department of Genetics
[6] Natural History Museum of Denmark,Department of Biology
[7] University of Copenhagen,Department of Genetics
[8] University of Washington,Department of Biology
[9] Uppsala University,Department of Zoology
[10] Stanford University,undefined
[11] Stanford University,undefined
[12] Howard Hughes Medical Institute,undefined
[13] Stanford University,undefined
[14] University of Pennsylvania,undefined
[15] University of Pennsylvania,undefined
[16] University of Cambridge,undefined
[17] Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute,undefined
[18] Wellcome Genome Campus,undefined
[19] Hinxton,undefined
来源
Nature | 2017年 / 541卷
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摘要
Advances in the sequencing and the analysis of the genomes of both modern and ancient peoples have facilitated a number of breakthroughs in our understanding of human evolutionary history. These include the discovery of interbreeding between anatomically modern humans and extinct hominins; the development of an increasingly detailed description of the complex dispersal of modern humans out of Africa and their population expansion worldwide; and the characterization of many of the genetic adaptions of humans to local environmental conditions. Our interpretation of the evolutionary history and adaptation of humans is being transformed by analyses of these new genomic data.
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页码:302 / 310
页数:8
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