Human Peoples - On the Genetic Traces of Human Evolution, Migration and Adaptation
Verlag | Penguin Books UK |
Auflage | 2024 |
Seiten | 288 |
Format | 16,0 x 24,0 x 2,6 cm |
Gewicht | 495 g |
Artikeltyp | Englisches Buch |
EAN | 9780241609156 |
Bestell-Nr | 24160915EA |
'Masterful and ambitious. If you want to understand the power of population genetics in revealing the complex and diverse story of humanity, read this book' Tom Higham
The international bestseller and new Bible of population genetics: the science transforming our understanding of the past
We are living through a revolution in knowledge. Over the past twenty years, genetics has shed light on the history of humanity in unprecedented ways. It enables us to study an individual's genome, compare it with populations worldwide, and understand its place in human history.
Here Lluís Quintana-Murci, one of the scientists at the forefront of this research reveals how population genetics is transforming our understanding of who we are. Thanks to numerous discoveries, we now know how Homo sapiens spread around the world: from their exit from Africa approximately 60,000 years ago to the recent settlement of the remote lands of Polynesia within the last millennia. Pop ulation genetics has also shown that humans mixed with now-extinct species, including Neanderthals, enabling them to adapt to new environments and survive diseases. These cutting-edge genetic findings will shape our future too, offering the key to medicine tailored to individuals.
But the greatest revelation of population genetics is that we are all mixed and the product of our ancestors' long odyssey of migrations and adaptations across the globe. As Quintana-Murci explains, without diversity, without difference, there is no evolution.
Filled with fascinating insights from the front line of research, Human Peoples is a pioneering guide to the ground-breaking science of our shared past.
Rezension:
What are we? Where do we come from? Human Peoples takes us on a fascinating tour through what our genetics reveals about our deep-time history as a species. Astonishing and eye-opening Professor Lewis Dartnell, author of 'BEING HUMAN: How our Biology Shaped World History'