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Population

  • "Journey" Redraws Humans' Family Tree
    From National Geographic, geneticist Spencer Wells claims that all humans alive today are descended from a single man who lived in Africa around 60,000 years ago.
  • A Y Chromosome Census of the British Isles
    Capelli et al. found that different parts of the British Isles have sharply different paternal histories. An article from Current Biology.
  • BBC: Genetic 'Adam Never Met Eve'
    Genetic studies suggest our most common paternal and maternal ancestors walked the planet more than 80,000 years apart.
  • BBC: Tanzania, Ethiopia Origin for Humans
    Genetic studies have helped scientists identify the region of East Africa from where it is believed modern humans came.
  • Centre for Population Genetics and Human Health
    At University College London. Lecture notes on population genetics (in pdf format) with slides. Profiles of Professor David B. Goldstein and those in his group.
  • English and Welsh are Races Apart
    From the BBC, genetic research suggests the Welsh are the "true" Britons while the English evolved from Anglo-Saxon invaders from modern-day Holland.
  • Europe's Seven Female Founders
    Article and links regarding new genetic research which shows that everyone in Europe is descended from just seven women. From BBC news.
  • Genetic Survey of Wirral and West Lancashire
    Professor Steve Harding of Nottingham University heads a team looking for evidence for Viking descendants in this part of Britain.
  • Human Population Genetics Laboratory
    Located in the Department of Genetics at the Stanford University School of Medicine. Includes personnel profiles, projects, and publications available in pdf format.
  • Oxford Ancestors
    A venture backed by Oxford University to harness the power and precision of modern genetics in the service of genealogy.
  • Science Spectra: Why Y?
    Neil Bradman and Mark Thomas look at the Y chromosome in the study of human evolution, migration and prehistory.
  • The Blood of the Vikings
    For the BBC series 'Blood of the Vikings', University College London undertook a survey to uncover Viking genes in the British Isles. The BBC explain the techniques and show the results on a map.
  • Y Chromosomes Rewrite British History
    This article in Nature comments on the findings of Capelli et al. in their Y-chromosome census of the British Isles.
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