The evolutionary history of human populations in Europe
Iosif Lazaridis

TL;DR
This paper reviews the recent advances in understanding Europe's human evolutionary history through ancient DNA, detailing migrations, admixture events, and population changes from archaic humans to modern Europeans.
Contribution
It synthesizes recent genetic findings to provide a comprehensive timeline of human population dynamics in Europe over the past 430,000 years.
Findings
Modern humans arrived in Europe ~45kya.
Genetic evidence of Neandertal and Denisovan differentiation.
Major migrations include Near Eastern farmers and steppe populations.
Abstract
I review the evolutionary history of human populations in Europe with an emphasis on what has been learned in recent years through the study of ancient DNA. Human populations in Europe ~430-39kya (archaic Europeans) included Neandertals and their ancestors, who were genetically differentiated from other archaic Eurasians (such as the Denisovans of Siberia), as well as modern humans. Modern humans arrived to Europe by ~45kya, and are first genetically attested by ~39kya when they were still mixing with Neandertals. The first Europeans who were recognizably genetically related to modern ones appeared in the genetic record shortly thereafter at ~37kya. At ~15kya a largely homogeneous set of hunter-gatherers became dominant in most of Europe, but with some admixture from Siberian hunter-gatherers in the eastern part of the continent. These hunter-gatherers were joined by migrants from the…
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