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Number of results
2003 | 44 | 3 | 269-290

Article title

Molecular phylogenetics employing modern and ancient DNA

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
Comparative studies of DNA in recent populations and characterisation of ancient hereditary material have contributed very interesting facts to our understanding of evolution of modern mankind. Analysis of DNA homology in related species, assessment of mutations and polymorphisms in various populations and new DNA sequence data from prehistoric finds allowed ? via sophisticated DNA extraction techniques, PCR, sequencing and digitalised processing of genetic information ? insights into possible roots of Homo sapiens and related species, migration patterns and ancient cultural habits, thus enriching the palaeoanthropological discipline. However, a presentation of this development would not be complete without pointing towards the methodological limitations and manifold presentations burdened with artifacts, data misinterpretation and unjustified conclusions. Presently, this modern field of research is in its consolidation phase and new parameters for quality control and authentication are being implemented to avoid spectacular but unfounded reports. It is expected that most of the problems connected to old biomolecules may be closely related to fossilisation parameters. The future challenge will be the full understanding of the complex and multi-faceted processes underlying diagenesis, including the elucidation of nucleic acid ?postmortem damage?.

Discipline

Year

Volume

44

Issue

3

Pages

269-290

Physical description

Contributors

author
author
author

References

Document Type

ARTICLE

Publication order reference

C.M. Pusch, Institute of Anthropology and Human Genetics, Division of Molecular Genetics, Wilhelmstr. 27, D-72074 Tubingen, Germany

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.element-from-psjc-57ba846c-eba3-32a2-bb8d-e68aec2604c9
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