New research in @ScienceAdvances and recent studies from Crimea and Ukraine have revealed significant findings about the genetic history of early modern humans. Archaeological skull fragments from Ukraine indicate the migration of early modern humans from the East. Additionally, the genome sequences of 36,000- to 37,000-year-old modern humans at Buran-Kaya III in Crimea shed light on the demographic history of North African genomes and the genetic legacy of Neanderthals on modern humans.
Archaeological skull fragments from Ukraine reveal early modern humans came from the East https://t.co/fDOvNsVjpo
Genome sequences of 36,000- to 37,000-year-old modern humans at Buran-Kaya III in Crimea | Nature Ecology & Evolution https://t.co/NPIpuumPXn
Neanderthals Passed On Their Large Noses to Modern Humans https://t.co/FMEqu6zvom
What We Know About Homo Habilis https://t.co/z1S1opcIr4
Modelling the demographic history of human North African genomes points to a recent soft split divergence between populations https://t.co/uqyRa5j1eb
Summary of a recent study from Crimea: "Archaeological skull fragments from Ukraine reveal early modern humans came from the East" https://t.co/5ylXUdnJYJ
Archaeological skull fragments from Ukraine reveal early modern humans came from the East @ConversationEDU @NatureEcoEvo https://t.co/Pxzr4XL0wT https://t.co/ijpYqNUoRU
New research in @ScienceAdvances unveils a longstanding mystery about why some groups of people carry more Neanderthal DNA than others. @KatieHunt20 reports for @CNN: https://t.co/OppP8FlZZg