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Showing 1–6 of 6 results
Advanced filters: Author: Heidi Colleran Clear advanced filters
  • Market integration may loosen the dense kinship networks maintaining high fertility among agriculturalists, but data are lacking. Here, Colleran shows that in 22 rural Polish communities, women’s ego networks are less kin-oriented, but not less dense, as market integration increases, potentially enabling low fertility values to spread.

    • Heidi Colleran
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 11, P: 1-9
  • A higher number of damaging variations in certain genes is associated with an increased likelihood that a man will be childless. A geneticist and an anthropologist discuss what can — and can’t — be learnt from this finding.

    • Loic Yengo
    • Heidi Colleran
    News & Views
    Nature
    Volume: 603, P: 799-801
  • Genome-wide data from ancient and modern individuals in Remote Oceania indicate population replacement but language continuity over the past 2,500 years. Papuan migrations led to almost complete genetic replacement of in situ East Asian-derived populations, but not replacement of Austronesian languages.

    • Cosimo Posth
    • Kathrin Nägele
    • Adam Powell
    Research
    Nature Ecology & Evolution
    Volume: 2, P: 731-740
  • Analysis of ancient DNA from 424 individuals in the Avar period, from the sixth to the ninth century AD, reveals population movement from the steppe and the prolonged existence of a steppe nomadic descent system centred around patrilineality and female exogamy in central Europe.

    • Guido Alberto Gnecchi-Ruscone
    • Zsófia Rácz
    • Zuzana Hofmanová
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 629, P: 376-383
  • The burial community at Gurgy ‘les Noisats’ (France) was genetically connected by two main pedigrees, spanning seven generations, that were patrilocal and patrilineal, with evidence for female exogamy and exchange with genetically close neighbouring groups.

    • Maïté Rivollat
    • Adam Benjamin Rohrlach
    • Wolfgang Haak
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 620, P: 600-606