Книга Кто мы и как сюда попали. Древняя ДНК и новая наука о человеческом прошлом, страница 88. Автор книги Дэвид Райх

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6 D. Richter et al. “The Age of the Hominin Fossils from Jebel Irhoud, Morocco, and the Origins of the Middle Stone Age”, Nature 546 (2017): 293–296; J. G. Fleagle, Z. Assefa, F. H. Brown, J. J. Shea. “Paleoanthropology of the Kibish Formation, Southern Ethiopia: Introduction”, Journal of Human Evolution 55 (2008): 360–365.

7 H. Li and R. Durbin. “Inference of Human Population Histo ry from Individual Whole-Genome Sequences”, Nature 475 (2011): 493–496.

8 Li, Durbin. “Inference of Human Population History”; K. Prüfer et al. “The Complete Genome Sequence of a Neanderthal from the Altai Mountains”, Nature (2013): doi: 10.1038/nature12886.

9 P. H. Dirks et al. “The Age of Homo Naledi and Associated Sediments in the Rising Star Cave, South Africa”, eLife 6 (2017): e24231.

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11 P. Skoglund et al. “Reconstructing Prehistoric African Population Structure”, Cell 171 (2017): 5694.

12 S. Mallick et al. “The Simons Genome Diversity Project: 300 Genomes from 142 Diverse Populations”, Nature 538 (2016): 201–206; Gronau et al. “Bayesian Inference”.

13 S. A. Tishkoff et al. “The Genetic Structure and History of Africans and African Americans”, Science 324 (2009): 1035–1044.

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16 D. Killick. “Cairo to Cape: The Spread of Metallurgy Through Eastern and Southern Africa”, Journal of World Prehistory 22 (2009): 399–414.

17 De Maret. “Archaeologies of the Bantu Expansion”.

18 Holden. “Bantu Language Trees”.

19 Bostoen et al. “Middle to Late Holocene”; Manning et al. “4,500-Year-Old”.

20 D. J. Lawson, G. Hellenthal, S. Myers, D. Falush. “Inference of Population Structure Using Dense Haplotype Data”, PLoS Genetics 8 (2012): e1002453; G. Hellenthal et al. “A Genetic Atlas of Human Admixture History”, Science 343 (2014): 747–751; C. de Filippo, K. Bostoen, M. Stoneking, B. Pakendorf. “Bringing Together Linguistic and Genetic Evidence to Test the Bantu Expansion”, Proceedings of the Royal Society B – Biological Sciences 279 (2012): 3256–3263; E. Patin et al. “Dispersals and Genetic Adaptation of Bantu-Speaking Populations in Africa and North America”, Science 356 (2017): 543–546; G. B. Busby et al. “Admixture Into and Within Sub-Saharan Africa”, eLife 5(2016): e15266.

21 Tishkoff et al. “Genetic Structure and History”; G. Ayodo et al. “Combining Evidence of Natural Selection with Association Analysis Increases Power to Detect Malaria-Resistance Variants”, American Journal of Human Genetics 81 (2007): 234–242.

22 C. Ehret. “Reconstructing Ancient Kinship in Africa”, in Ear ly Human Kinship: From Sex to Social Reproduction, ed. Nicholas J. Allen, Hilary Callan, Robin Dunbar, Wendy James (Malden, MA: Blackwell, 2008), 200–231; C. Ehret, S. O. Y. Keita, P. Newman. “The Origins of Afroasiatic”, Science 306 (2004): 1680–1681.

23 J. Diamond, P. Bellwood. “Farmers and Their Languages: The First Expansions”, Science 300 (2003): 597–603; P. Bellwood. “Response to Ehret et al. ‘The Origins of Afroasiatic,’ ” Science 306 (2004): 1681.

24 D. Q. Fuller, E. Hildebrand. “Domesticating Plants in Africa” in: The Oxford Handbook of African Archaeology, ed. Peter Mitchell, Paul J. Lane (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013), 507–526; M. Madella et al. “Microbotanical Evidence of Domestic Cereals in Africa 7000 Years Ago”, PLoS One 9 (2014): e110177.

25 I. Lazaridis et al. “Genomic Insights into the Origin of Farming in the Ancient Near East”, Nature 536 (2016): 419–424; Skoglund et al. “Reconstructing Prehistoric African Population Structure”.

26 Lazaridis et al. “Genomic Insights”; Skoglund et al. “Reconstructing Prehistoric African Population Structure”; V. J. Schuenemann et al. “Ancient Egyptian Mummy Genomes Suggest an Increase of Sub-Saharan African Ancestry in Post-Roman Periods”, Nature Communications 8 (2017): 15694.

27 T. Güldemann. “A Linguist’s View: Khoe-Kwadi Speakers as the Earliest Food-Producers of Southern Africa”, Southern African Humanities 20 (2008): 93–132.

28 J. K. Pickrell et al. “Ancient West Eurasian Ancestry in Southern and Eastern Africa”, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the U.S.A. 111 (2014): 2632–2637.

29 Pagani et al. “Ethiopian Genetic Diversity”.

30 Skoglund et al. “Reconstructing Prehistoric African Population Structure”.

31 L. L. Cavalli-Sforza, F. Cavalli-Sforza. The Great Human Diasporas: The History of Diversity and Evolution (Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley, 1995).

32 M. Gallego Llorente et al. “Ancient Ethiopian Genome Reveals Extensive Eurasian Admixture Throughout the African Continent”, Science 350 (2015): 820–822.

33 D. N. Levine. Greater Ethiopia: The Evolution of a Multiethnic Society (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2000).

34 L. Van Dorp et al. “Evidence for a Common Origin of Blacksmiths and Cultivators in the Ethiopian Ari Within the Last 4500 Years: Lessons for Clustering-Based Inference”, PLoS Genetics 11 (2015): e1005397.

35 D. Reich et al. “Reconstructing Indian Population History”, Nature 461 (2009): 489–494.

36 Skoglund et al. “Reconstructing Prehistoric African Population Structure”.

37 Там же.

38 Там же.

39 J. K. Pickrell et al. “The Genetic Prehistory of Southern Africa”, Nature Communications 3 (2012): 1143; C. M. Schlebusch et al. “Genomic Variation in Seven Khoe-San Groups Reveals Adaptation and Complex African History”, Science 338 (2012): 374–379; Mallick et al. “Simons Genome Diversity Project”.

40 M. E. Prendergast et al. “Continental Island Formation and the Archaeology of Defaunation on Zanzibar, Eastern Africa”, PLoS One 11 (2016): e0149565.

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