Research Database
Ancestry Publications
Explore scientific publications on population genetics, ancient DNA, and ancestry research.
1119
Publications
14709
Authors
186
Journals
23
Years
Ancestry
2025-10-03
Ancestry
2025-10-03
Ancient Genomes Reveal Population Interaction at China’s North–South Boundary
Ancestry
2025-10-02
The Indian Ocean slave trade and colonial expansion resulted in strong sex-biased admixture in South Africa.
Ancestry
2025-10-01
Introducing the Y-chromosomal Ancestral-like Reference Sequence—Improving the Capture of Human Evolutionary Information
Ancestry
2025-10-01
Millennia of Mitochondrial Change: Tracing Haplogroup Variation in Lithuania
Ancestry
2025-09-30
Ancient DNA reveals the population interactions and a Neolithic patrilineal community in Northern Yangtze Region
Ancestry
2025-09-28
Genetic admixture between East and West European Gravettian-associated populations in Western Europe before the Last Glacial Maximum
Ancestry
2025-09-27
Pre-Slavic and Slavic Interaction at Eastern Periphery of Slavic Expansion in Northeastern Europe (Y-Gene Pools of Volga-Oka Region)
Ancestry
2025-09-25
Mitochondrial DNA Diversity in Siberian Tatars from the Late Medieval Burial Ground Abramovo-10 (Baraba Forest-Steppe).
Ancestry
2025-09-25
Slab Grave expansion disrupted long co-existence of distinct Bronze Age herders in central Mongolia.
Ancestry
2025-09-24
Fine-scale structure of a whole regional population through genetics and genealogies
Ancestry
2025-09-23
The Indian Ocean slave trade and colonial expansion resulted in strong sex-biased admixture in South Africa
Title
Journal
Region
Date
Actions
iScience
Tibet
2025-10-03
Annals of Archaeology
China
2025-10-03
American journal of human genetics
—
2025-10-02
Molecular Biology and Evolution
World
2025-10-01
Preprints
Lithuania
2025-10-01
Nature Communications
China
2025-09-30
bioRxiv
Europe
2025-09-28
Genes
Russia
2025-09-27
Vestnik NSU. Series: History and Philology
Baraba forest-steppe (Central Baraba), West Siberia, Russia
2025-09-25
Slab Grave expansion disrupted long co-existence of distinct Bronze Age herders in central Mongolia.
Nature communications
Mongolia
2025-09-25
bioRxiv
Quebec
2025-09-24
The American Journal of Human Genetics
South Africa
2025-09-23