'More advanced' farming women married hunter-gatherer men in Europe thousands of years ago, ancient DNA reveals

Two researchers discuss how ancient DNA is used to track how people moved and lived during Britain's Bronze Age.

A view of lush rolling hills under a cloudy gray sky. In the foreground is a faded narrow dirt road with stones on either side of it
Ancient DNA helps researchers uncover more clues about the bronze age in Britain.
(Image credit: Photo - Lyn Randle via Getty Images)

When ancient DNA studies began to gain attention, little more than a decade ago, the view took hold among geneticists that everything we thought we knew about the peopling of Europe by modern humans was wrong. The story was simpler than anyone was expecting: Europe was settled in just three massive migrations from the east.

First came the hunter-gatherers, more than 40,000 years ago. Then, after 9,000 years ago, there was an expansion of farming people from Anatolia during the Neolithic age.

Martin B. Richards
Research Professor in Archaeogenetics, Department of Physical and Life Sciences, University of Huddersfield

Martin B. Richards is Professor of Archaeogenetics at the University of Huddersfield, UK. He studied genetics at the Universities of Sheffield and Manchester, moving into archaeogenetic research at the University of Oxford in 1990. He subsequently moved to UCL, the University of Huddersfield, the University of Leeds, and finally back to Huddersfield in 2012, to take up a Research Chair in Archaeogenetics.

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