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Long-distance genetic relatedness in megalithic central Europe.

da Silva Nicolas Antonio, NA Nebel, Almut A et al.

42166585 PubMed ID
24 Authors
2026-05-21 Published
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

DS
da Silva Nicolas Antonio
NN
NA Nebel
AA
Almut A
KD
Kolbe Daniel
DM
D Myburgh
DA
Daniel Anton DA
KF
Klimscha Florian
FG
F Görner
II
Irina I
FK
Fuchs Katharina
KM
K Meyer
CC
Christian C
SK
Schierhold Kerstin
KR
K Rind
MM
Michael M
HR
Hoffmann Robert
RF
R Franke
AA
Andre A
MJ
Meadows John
JR
J Rinne
CC
Christoph C
MJ
Müller Johannes
JK
J Krause-Kyora
BB
Ben B
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Megalithic monuments in Late Neolithic Europe are often viewed as symbols of shared ancestry. In this study, we analyzed genome-wide data of 203 individuals buried in six megalithic grave complexes associated with the Western Funnel Beaker and Wartberg groups. Despite being considered archaeologically distinct, our results show that the studied individuals from both groups form a genetically homogeneous population. Moreover, we identified first- and second-degree relationships spanning up to 225 km, revealing unexpectedly long-distance ties and sustained intersite and intergroup mobility. The six grave complexes functioned as communal burial grounds and were not exclusively used for close genetic relatives, indicating that social kinship played an important role. Limited evidence for genetic connections to distant European megalithic populations indicates that monumentality spread culturally rather than through biological networks.

Chapter III

Analysis

Comprehensive review of ancestry and genetic findings

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