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Professor Mattias Jakobsson

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Professor Mattias Jakobsson

Mattias Jakobsson, professor vid institutionen för organismbiologi vid Uppsala universitet
David Naylor
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  • The skull of Peştera Muierii 1, which entire genome is now successfully sequenced. Photo: Mattias Jakobsson

    ​The entire genome from Peştera Muierii 1 sequenced

    Researchers have successfully sequenced the entire genome from the skull of Peştera Muierii 1, a woman who lived 35,000 years ago. Her high genetic diversity shows that the out-of-Africa migration was not the great bottleneck in human development but rather this occurred during and after the most recent Ice Age. This new study, led by Professor Mattias Jakobsson, is published in Current Biology.

  • Maxilla and tooth from the specimen excavated at Cabeço da Amoreira in Portugal, used for biomolecular analyses in this study. Photo: Rita Peyroteo Stjerna

    350 years old remains in a Stone Age site in Portugal

    An African man who lived just 350 years ago was buried in a prehistoric shell midden in Amoreira in Portugal, well known by archaeologists for the cemeteries of the last hunter-gatherers living in the area, 8 000 years-ago. To investigate this burial researchers from Uppsala University and Universidade de Lisboa combined biomolecular archaeology, ancient DNA, and historical records.