Geographic population structure analysis of worldwide human populations infers their biogeographical origins
Published Online: 2014-04-29
Journal: Nature Communications•Publisher: Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Authors: •Ajay K. Royyuru•Alan Cooper•Amanda C. Owings•Andrew C. Clarke•Antonella De Montis•Arun Varatharajan Santhakumari•ArunKumar GaneshPrasad•Begoña Martínez-Cruz•Carla Maria Calò•Carlalynne Melendez•Chris Tyler-Smith•Christina J. Adler•Clio S. I. Der Sarkissian•Colin Renfrew•Daniel E. Platt•Daniela R. Lacerda•David Comas•David F. Soria Hernanz•Dmitri Chebotarev•Elena Balanovska•Eran Elhaik•Fabrício R. Santos•Francesco Cucca•Himla Soodyall•Hui Li•Ignazio S. Piras•Janet S. Ziegle•Jaume Bertranpetit•Jill B. Gaieski•John R. Mitchell•Jose Raul Sandoval•Laxmi Parida•Li Jin•Lisa Matisoo-Smith•Lluis Quintana-Murci•Luca Pagani•Manuela Atzori•Marc Haber•Matthew E. Kaplan•Michael Hammer•Miguel G. Vilar•Monica Marini•Nirav C. Merchant•Oleg Balanovsky•Oscar Acosta•Pandikumar Swamikrishnan•Paolo Francalacci•Pierre Zalloua•R. Spencer Wells•Ramasamy Pitchappan•Ricardo Fujita•Rocío Gómez•Sergio Tofanelli•Shilin Li•Syama Adhikarla•Tatiana Tatarinova•Theodore G. Schurr•Wolfgang Haak•Yali Xue