The social organization of the first fully sedentary societies that emerged during the Neolithic period in Southwest Asia remains enigmatic, mainly because material culture studies provide limited insight into this issue. However, because Neolithic Anatolian communities often buried their dead beneath domestic buildings, household composition and social structure can be studied through these human remains. Here, we describe genetic relatedness among co-burials associated with domestic buildings in Neolithic Anatolia using 59 ancient genomes, including 22 new genomes from Aşıklı Höyük and Çatalhöyük. We infer pedigree relationships by simultaneously analyzing multiple types of information, including autosomal and X chromosome kinship coeff...
Objectives: North Mesopotamia has witnessed dramatic social change during the Holocene, but the impa...
The archaeological documentation of the development of sedentary farming societies in Anatolia is no...
Supplemental data for Yaka et al., Variable Kinship Patterns in Neolithic Anatolia Revealed by Ancie...
The social organization of the first fully sedentary societies that emerged during the Neolithic per...
The Neolithic Transition to village life and food production first emerged in the Fertile Crescent (...
Çatalhöyük is one of the most widely recognized and extensively researched Neolithi...
Over multiple millennia, from the earliest traces of long-term occupation of camp sites (ca 20,000 B...
To explore kinship practices at chambered tombs in Early Neolithic Britain, here we combined archaeo...
Human population history and the social composition of human groups during the Middle Neolithic (MN)...
Recent studies showed that Neolithic populations in southwest Asia included distinct gene pools in t...
The archaeological documentation of the development of sedentary farming societies in Anatolia is no...
The Neolithic transition in west Eurasia occurred in two main steps: the gradual development of sede...
Twenty-four palaeogenomes from Mokrin, a major Early Bronze Age necropolis in southeastern Europe, w...
Humans differ from most other species in that we create our own ecological niche. Culture has thus s...
Objectives: North Mesopotamia has witnessed dramatic social change during the Holocene, but the impa...
The archaeological documentation of the development of sedentary farming societies in Anatolia is no...
Supplemental data for Yaka et al., Variable Kinship Patterns in Neolithic Anatolia Revealed by Ancie...
The social organization of the first fully sedentary societies that emerged during the Neolithic per...
The Neolithic Transition to village life and food production first emerged in the Fertile Crescent (...
Çatalhöyük is one of the most widely recognized and extensively researched Neolithi...
Over multiple millennia, from the earliest traces of long-term occupation of camp sites (ca 20,000 B...
To explore kinship practices at chambered tombs in Early Neolithic Britain, here we combined archaeo...
Human population history and the social composition of human groups during the Middle Neolithic (MN)...
Recent studies showed that Neolithic populations in southwest Asia included distinct gene pools in t...
The archaeological documentation of the development of sedentary farming societies in Anatolia is no...
The Neolithic transition in west Eurasia occurred in two main steps: the gradual development of sede...
Twenty-four palaeogenomes from Mokrin, a major Early Bronze Age necropolis in southeastern Europe, w...
Humans differ from most other species in that we create our own ecological niche. Culture has thus s...
Objectives: North Mesopotamia has witnessed dramatic social change during the Holocene, but the impa...
The archaeological documentation of the development of sedentary farming societies in Anatolia is no...
Supplemental data for Yaka et al., Variable Kinship Patterns in Neolithic Anatolia Revealed by Ancie...