Mi gente latino!
Ya llegó ya está aquí. La primera reunión de Biomoleculas antiguas en Latinoamerica patrocinada por el @official-smbe.bsky.social . Reserven la fecha y estén al pendiente de las fechas importantes. Mas info en nuestra pagina web smbeperu.github.io/SMBEperu-esp/
Posts by Thomaz Pinotti
Currently, ybyra supports three human trees (ISOGG, Yfull and FTDNA – in both hg37 and hg38), as well as horse.
And it is quite fast: it took less than 2 hours to analyze a dataset of ~4,000 ancient males.
github.com/tpinotti/ybyra
we made a tool!
ybyra is a lightweight, flexible Y-chromosome haplogroup caller. It is faster, easier to tune and more robust than other tools particularly for low-coverage or ancient DNA data. And it has lots of detailed output – including plots!
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
Delighted to see our paper on the evolutionary history of the CCR5Δ32 deletion published this week in @cellpress.bsky.social. Work led by @ravnkirstine.bsky.social, Leonardo Cobuccio and Rasa Muktupavela, and co-supervised by me and @simorasmu.bsky.social. See 🧵 for main findings...
Victor Moreno Mayar, Clifford Tsosie, Eske Willerslev and Thomaz Pinotti Credit: Mike Adler
Researchers look at a Round House Credit: Thomaz Pinotti
A collaborative study initiated by the sovereign nation of Picuris Pueblo in New Mexico addresses gaps in traditional knowledge and furthers understanding of their population history and ancestry, according to a paper in Nature. go.nature.com/3YLNzfF 🏺 🧬 🧪
Ancient and present-day genomes from members of the Indigenous American tribe Picuris Pueblo in the US Southwest show genetic continuity with Ancestral Pueblo individuals from the Chaco Canyon, New Mexico.
https://go.nature.com/4cWV2Os
We hope this work contributes to greater respect for oral history and traditional knowledge. Research shaped unilaterally by researchers – its questions, narratives, and data control – has often brought little benefit to Indigenous ppl. We hope our collaboration encourages more equitable approaches.
Excited to share our study on and with Picuris Pueblo! It’s a true honor to have worked alongside the community. Combining oral history and genomics, we show a long-standing continuity in the US Southwest and challenge ideas of pre-Columbian population collapse.
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
Grazie mille, Marco!