Genetic evidence from a late Iron Age cemetery in southern Britain shows that women were closely related while unrelated men ...
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Ancient DNA reveals Iron Age society led by women
The social fabric of Iron Age Britain, spanning roughly from 800 BC to AD 100, has long puzzled historians and archaeologists ...
Previous archaeological work has hypothesized kinship as a factor in high status ... of residence near the Chicama Valley. Without genetic evidence, this might suggest that B3s was unrelated ...
New genetic evidence suggests that female family ties were central to social structures in pre-Roman Britain, offering a fresh perspective on Celtic society and its gender dynamics.
About 1,500 years ago, on the coast of Peru, two teenagers were strangled and buried in a temple grave alongside four ...
Genetic analysis of paternity in a sample of ... The limited impact of kinship on cooperation in wild chimpanzees. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America ...
The genetic landscape of Ireland had been laid ... a little bit of geography combined with wars or rivalry generates kinship in each distinct area. And it's those subtle features that we're ...
Contrary evidence may be accommodated by the affimal or other model of population genetics and by an appropriate estimate of kinship, without altering gene frequencies in the reference population.
New analysis shows women were central to social networks in Celtic Britain, with genetic evidence from ancient graves ...