university of illinois
1(人类学) professor ripan malhi looks to
2 to tell the story of how ancient humans first came to the americas and what happened to them once they were here. he will share some of his findings at the meeting, "ancient dna: the first three decades," at the royal society in london on nov. 18 and 19.
malhi, an
3(隶属的机构) of the institute for genomic biology at illinois, will describe his collaborative approach, which includes working with present-day native americans on studies of their
4 history.
he and a group of collaborators from the tsimshian nation on the northwest coast of british columbia, for example, recently found a direct ancestral link between ancient human
5 in the prince rupert island area and the native peoples living in the region today. that study looked at changes in the
mitochondrial(线粒体的) genome, which children inherit only from their mothers.
other studies from malhi's lab
6 changes in the y
7 or the protein-coding regions of the genome.
"the best opportunity to infer the
8 history of native americans and to assess the effects of european
9 is to analyze genomes of ancient native americans and those of their living descendants," malhi said.
"i think what makes my lab unique is that we focus not only on the initial peopling of the americas but also what happened after the initial peopling. how did these groups move to new environments and adapt to their local settings over 15,000 years?"
while continuing his work in british columbia, malhi also is setting up study sites in california, guatemala, mexico and illinois.
"what's interesting about the northwest coast and california is that these communities were complex hunter-gatherer societies, whereas in mexico and guatemala, it's more communities that transitioned to farming and then experienced the effects of european colonization," he said.
genomic studies can fill in the blanks on studies that seek to tell the story of life in the americas before and after european colonization, malhi said. researchers may draw the wrong conclusions about human history when looking only at artifacts and language, he said.