The geography of recent genetic ancestry across Europe
Peter Ralph, Graham Coop

TL;DR
This study uses genomic data from 2,257 Europeans to map recent shared ancestry over the past three thousand years, revealing regional variations and the impact of historical migrations on genetic kinship.
Contribution
It provides one of the first large-scale surveys of recent genealogical ancestry across Europe using shared genomic segments and infers the distribution of common ancestors over time and geography.
Findings
Individuals in neighboring populations share 10-50 ancestors from the last 1500 years.
Shared ancestors from the previous 1000 years can number over 500.
Genetic sharing decreases exponentially with geographic distance, but remains significant across Europe.
Abstract
The recent genealogical history of human populations is a complex mosaic formed by individual migration, large-scale population movements, and other demographic events. Population genomics datasets can provide a window into this recent history, as rare traces of recent shared genetic ancestry are detectable due to long segments of shared genomic material. We make use of genomic data for 2,257 Europeans (the POPRES dataset) to conduct one of the first surveys of recent genealogical ancestry over the past three thousand years at a continental scale. We detected 1.9 million shared genomic segments, and used the lengths of these to infer the distribution of shared ancestors across time and geography. We find that a pair of modern Europeans living in neighboring populations share around 10-50 genetic common ancestors from the last 1500 years, and upwards of 500 genetic ancestors from the…
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