Author Correction: 137 ancient human genomes from across the Eurasian steppes

@article{Damgaard2018AuthorC1,  title={Author Correction: 137 ancient human genomes from across the Eurasian steppes},  author={Peter de Barros Damgaard and Nina Marchi and Simon Rasmussen and Micha{\"e}l Peyrot and Gabriel Renaud and Thorfinn Sand Korneliussen and Jos{\'e} V{\'i}ctor Moreno-Mayar and Mikkel Winther Pedersen and Amy Goldberg and E. R. Usmanova and Nurbol Baimukhanov and Valeriy Loman and Lotte Hedeager and Anders Gorm Pedersen and Kasper Nielsen and Gennady Afanasiev and K. T. Akmatov and Almaz A. Aldashev and Ashyk Alpaslan and Gabit Baimbetov and Vladimir Ivanovich Bazaliiskii and Arman Z Beisenov and Bazartseren Boldbaatar and Bazartseren Boldgiv and Ch. M. Dorzhu and Sturla Ellingv{\aa}g and Diimaajav Erdenebaatar and Rana Basem Dajani and E. A. Dmitriev and Valeriy Evdokimov and Karin Margarita Frei and Andrey Gromov and Alexander Goryachev and Hakon Hakonarson and Tatyana Hegay and Zaruhi A. Khachatryan and Ruslan Khaskhanov and Egor P. Kitov and Alina Kolbina and Tabaldiev Kubatbek and Alexey Kukushkin and Igor Kukushkin and Nina Lau and Ashot Margaryan and Inga Merkytė and Ilya V. Mertz and Viktor K. Mertz and Enkhbayar Mijiddorj and Vyacheslav Moiyesev and Gulmira Mukhtarova and Bekmukhanbet Nurmukhanbetov and Zh. Orozbekova and Irina P. Panyushkina and Karol Pieta and Vaclav Smrcka and Irina Shevnina and Andrey Logvin and Karl-G{\"o}ran Sj{\"o}gren and Tereza {\vS}tolcov{\'a} and Angela M. Taravella and Kadicha Tashbaeva and Alexander A. Tkachev and Turaly Tulegenov and Dmitriy Voyakin and Levon Yepiskoposyan and Sainbileg Undrakhbold and Victor Varfolomeev and Andrzej Weber and Melissa A. Wilson Sayres and Nikolay Kradin and Morten E. Allentoft and Ludovic Orlando and Rasmus Nielsen and Martin Sikora and Evelyne Heyer and Kristian Kristiansen and Eske Willerslev},  journal={Nature},  year={2018},  volume={563},  pages={E16},  url={https://api.semanticscholar.org/CorpusID:13670282}}
The author list and Author Information section have been corrected online and Angela M. Taravella and Melissa A. Wilson Sayres have been added to the author list.

273 Citations

AmtDB: a database of ancient human mitochondrial genomes

AmtDB, the first database of ancient human mitochondrial genomes, is presented, which contains 1107 hand-curated ancient samples, freely accessible for download, together with the individual descriptors, including geographic location, radiocarbon dating, and archaeological culture affiliation.

Ancient Yersinia pestis genomes provide no evidence for the origins or spread of the Justinianic Plague

The contested historical context of the presented genomes with the Justinianic Plague is questioned and it is shown that the lower coverage genome might be rather related to the Black Death (1346–1353 AD).

Response to: ”Ancient Yersinia pestis genomes provide no evidence for the origins or spread of the Justinianic Plague”

It is emphasized that the results in another manuscript from the same group confirm and strengthen the finding of a most recent common ancestor between DA101 and the Justinianic plague strains.

Mitochondrial DNA Profiles of Individuals from a 12th Century Necropolis in Feldioara (Transylvania)

The analysis of the mitochondrial DNA control region of 13 medieval individuals from Feldioara necropolis reveals a genetically heterogeneous group where all identified haplotypes are different, except for the Central Asiatic haplogroup C seen in only one sample.

Paleogenomics of human remains in East Asia and Yaponesia focusing on current advances and future directions

This review briefly introduces the history of ancient DNA analysis leading to paleogenomics, outlines three sequencing stages (partial, draft, and complete genome sequencing) and capture methods, and discusses the necessity of high-quality sequencing for paleogenomes of Eastern Eurasia.

Ancient Components and Recent Expansion in the Eurasian Heartland: Insights into the Revised Phylogeny of Y-Chromosomes from Central Asia

In the past two decades, studies of Y chromosomal single nucleotide polymorphisms (Y-SNPs) and short tandem repeats (Y-STRs) have shed light on the demographic history of Central Asia, the heartland

Genomes from Verteba cave suggest diversity within the Trypillians in Ukraine

This work investigates the population dynamics of early agriculturalists from the eastern forest-steppe region of Ukraine based on the analyses of 20 ancient genomes from the site of Verteba Cave and reveals that the CTCC individuals’ ancestry is related to both western hunter-gatherers and Near Eastern farmers, has no local ancestry associated with Ukrainian Neolithic hunter-gathering and has steppe ancestry.

Mitogenomics of modern Mongolic-speaking populations

It is shown that along with very high levels of genetic diversity and lack of genetic differentiation, Mongolic-speaking populations exhibit strong genetic resemblance to East Asian populations of Chinese, Japanese, and Uyghurs.

Genomic Analysis of 18th-Century Kazakh Individuals and Their Oral Microbiome

This study combines human population genetics with genomic analysis of the oral microbiome of 18th-century people from the Kazakh Khanate in Kazakhstan to gain insight into their health status and explore bacterial coadaptation to recent dietary changes.
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