• undefined 19 hours ago
    [deleted]
    • jppope 4 days ago

      thats a really cool project. I would love to see how different dimensionality in that data (time, geographic, plus genetics) was related to big historical events maybe even events we didn't know about

      • dendrite9 21 hours ago

        Yeah I was thinking about how one could explore this information to look at spcefic events but they might not have enough data to show them. For example I would expect the enclaves of Occitan speakers in far southern Italy would show up.

      • brabel 21 hours ago

        Do I get this right: genes were flowing from Scandinavia down to mainland Europe in the first half of the first century (i.e. before the Vikings, are they talking about the ancestors of the Goths and Vandals, for example?) and it reversed direction during the Viking period?? Isn't that quite the opposite of what was expected?

        Iron age British ancestry being found in Ukraine with Viking graves also sounds really fascinating.

        • asdff 20 hours ago

          No that is indeed what is expected. You see gene flow towards scandinavia and other viking held areas because they would capture and take women back with them when raiding.

          • brabel 3 hours ago

            So they didn't settle in most regions then? I had imagined they did not only settle in England and Iceland, but also in the other regions that they went towards the East, but that was just not as obvious today because those regions already had larger populations.

        • partomniscient 13 hours ago

          Low-resolution images used in article on High-resolution genomic history of early medieval Europe.

          • larodi 21 hours ago

            love it how most Balkan countries are not even Europe in (this particular author's) medieval times...

            • alephnerd 19 hours ago

              You're limited by dataset and sample size. Even in much of Western Europe, the sampling is limited.

              That said, this is a point of contention that even the authors of the paper allude to:

              "The most principled approach is thus to build ancestry models in which source and ‘outgroup/reference’ populations are older than, or at least contemporary with, the target genome or group that we are trying to model. However, this has been challenging, due to the limited statistical power offered by the thousands-fold lower sample sizes and reduced sequence quality of ancient genomes"