13 results on '"Veronika Siska"'
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2. Adapting Ontology-based Data Access for Data Spaces.
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Medina Andresel, Veronika Siska, Robert David, Sven Schlarb, and Axel Weißenfeld
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- 2024
3. Secure Computation and Trustless Data Intermediaries in Data Spaces.
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Christoph Fabianek, Stephan Krenn, Thomas Lorünser, and Veronika Siska
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- 2024
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4. Digital Battery Passports for a Circular Economy.
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Veronika Siska and Theresa Schredelseker
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- 2023
5. Climate shaped how Neolithic farmers and European hunter-gatherers interacted after a major slowdown from 6,100 bce to 4,500 bce
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Jay T. Stock, Francesca Tassi, Andrea Manica, Lia Betti, Michela Leonardi, Veronika Siska, Pierpaolo Maisano Delser, Robert Beyer, Philip R. Nigst, Ron Pinhasi, Anders Eriksson, Lily K. Bentley, Eppie R. Jones, Betti, Lia [0000-0003-2895-9718], Beyer, Robert M [0000-0003-2673-3096], Jones, Eppie R [0000-0002-4590-5415], Eriksson, Anders [0000-0003-3436-3726], Tassi, Francesca [0000-0001-8310-323X], Siska, Veronika [0000-0002-8057-1203], Leonardi, Michela [0000-0001-8933-9374], Maisano Delser, Pierpaolo [0000-0002-1844-1715], Bentley, Lily K [0000-0002-0365-6385], Nigst, Philip R [0000-0001-7330-8768], Stock, Jay T [0000-0003-0147-8631], Manica, Andrea [0000-0003-1895-450X], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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Social Psychology ,Slowdown ,Climate ,Population Dynamics ,Growing season ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Latitude ,Middle East ,03 medical and health sciences ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,Humans ,DNA, Ancient ,History, Ancient ,030304 developmental biology ,2. Zero hunger ,0303 health sciences ,business.industry ,Paleontology ,Agriculture ,Europe ,Geography ,Ancient DNA ,13. Climate action ,Paleoecology ,Period (geology) ,Biological dispersal ,Physical geography ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
The Neolithic transition in Europe was driven by the rapid dispersal of Near Eastern farmers who, over a period of 3,500 years, brought food production to the furthest corners of the continent. However, this wave of expansion was far from homogeneous, and climatic factors may have driven a marked slowdown observed at higher latitudes. Here, we test this hypothesis by assembling a large database of archaeological dates of first arrival of farming to quantify the expansion dynamics. We identify four axes of expansion and observe a slowdown along three axes when crossing the same climatic threshold. This threshold reflects the quality of the growing season, suggesting that Near Eastern crops might have struggled under more challenging climatic conditions. This same threshold also predicts the mixing of farmers and hunter-gatherers as estimated from ancient DNA, suggesting that unreliable yields in these regions might have favoured the contact between the two groups. By synthesizing information on archaeological sites, palaeoclimate reconstructions and ancient DNA, Betti et al. show that the Neolithic expansion in Europe was not a continuous process of diffusion, but a series of climate-driven episodes of varying speeds.
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- 2020
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6. The genomic formation of First American ancestors in East and Northeast Asia
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Leonid A. Vyazov, Kendra Sirak, Veronika Siska, N. Ezgi Altınışık, Ben A. Potter, Ron Pinhasi, Alexei Kassian, Edward J. Vajda, Fan Zhang, Martine Robbeets, Xiaoming Xiao, Stephan Schiffels, Pavel Flegontov, Robert Maier, Andrea Manica, Piya Changmai, Xiyan Wu, Daniel Fernandes, Johannes Krause, Eren Yüncü, Chao Ning, Carles Lalueza-Fox, Ke Wang, Olga Flegontova, David Reich, Lixin Wang, and Yinqiu Cui
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Geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Lineage (genetic) ,Evolutionary biology ,Drainage basin ,China ,Beringia - Abstract
Upward Sun River 1, an individual from a unique burial of the Denali tradition in Alaska (11500 calBP), is considered a type representative of Ancient Beringians who split from other First Americans 22000–18000 calBP in Beringia. Using a new admixture graph model-comparison approach resistant to overfitting, we show that Ancient Beringians do not form the deepest American lineage, but instead harbor ancestry from a lineage more closely related to northern North Americans than to southern North Americans. Ancient Beringians also harbor substantial admixture from a lineage that did not contribute to other Native Americans: Amur River Basin populations represented by a newly reported site in northeastern China. Relying on these results, we propose a new model for the genomic formation of First American ancestors in Asia.One Sentence SummaryAncient Beringians do not form the deepest American lineage, but harbor admixture from Amur River Basin populations.
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- 2020
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7. Das Staatssymbol im Karneval. Darstellung Wenzels in der Kunst der 1990er Jahre
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Veronika Siska
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- 2018
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8. The ancient origin of some modern Asian populations revealed by ancient DNA
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Veronika Siska and Andrea Manica
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Ancient DNA ,Geography ,Evolutionary biology - Published
- 2018
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9. A genomic Neolithic time transect of hunter-farmer admixture in central Poland
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Dominik Strapagiel, Jens Carlsson, Wiesław Lorkiewicz, Veronika Siska, Daniel Fernandes, Kendra Sirak, Paulina Borówka, Ryszard Grygiel, Andrea Manica, Błażej Marciniak, Ron Pinhasi, Elżbieta Żądzińska, Strapagiel, D [0000-0001-9752-4270], Żądzińska, E [0000-0003-1001-7319], Manica, A [0000-0003-1895-450X], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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0301 basic medicine ,Steppe ,Population genetics ,Human Migration ,Population ,Pastoralism ,lcsh:Medicine ,DNA, Mitochondrial ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Middle East ,0302 clinical medicine ,Bronze Age ,Humans ,DNA, Ancient ,lcsh:Science ,education ,Mesolithic ,History, Ancient ,education.field_of_study ,Multidisciplinary ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Chromosomes, Human, Y ,Farmers ,Human migration ,business.industry ,Genome, Human ,lcsh:R ,Genetic Drift ,Agriculture ,Genomics ,Archaeology ,Europe ,030104 developmental biology ,Geography ,Ancient DNA ,Genetics, Population ,lcsh:Q ,Poland ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Genome-Wide Association Study - Abstract
Ancient DNA genome-wide analyses of Neolithic individuals from central and southern Europe indicate an overall population turnover pattern in which migrating farmers from Anatolia and the Near East largely replaced autochthonous Mesolithic hunter-gatherers. However, the genetic history of the Neolithic transition in areas lying north of the European Neolithic core region involved different levels of admixture with hunter-gatherers. Here we analyse genome-wide data of 17 individuals spanning from the Middle Neolithic to the Early Bronze Age (4300-1900 BCE) in order to assess the Neolithic transition in north-central Poland, and the local impacts of hunter-farmer contacts and Late Neolithic steppe migrations. We evaluate the influence of these on local populations and assess if and how they change through time, reporting evidence of recurrent hunter-farmer admixture over three millennia, and the co-existence of unadmixed hunter-gatherers as late as 4300 BCE. During the Late Neolithic we report the appearance of steppe ancestry, but on a lesser scale than previously described for other central European regions, with evidence of stronger affinities to hunter-gatherers than to steppe pastoralists. These results help understand the Neolithic palaeogenomics of another central European area, Kuyavia, and highlight the complexity of population interactions during those times.
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- 2018
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10. Paleogenomic Evidence for Multi-generational Mixing between Neolithic Farmers and Mesolithic Hunter-Gatherers in the Lower Danube Basin
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Emma Lightfoot, Clive Bonsall, Andrea Manica, Michael Hofreiter, Veronika Siska, Gloria Gonzalez-Fortes, Ron Pinhasi, Pablo Arias, Angela Simalcsik, Eppie R. Jones, Adina Boroneanţ, María Dolores Garralda, Aurora Grandal-d'Anglade, Cătălin Lazăr, Marcos Vaqueiro Rodríguez, Juan Ramón Vidal Romaní, Labib Drak, Universidad de Cantabria, Lightfoot, Emma [0000-0002-0823-4720], Manica, Andrea [0000-0003-1895-450X], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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0301 basic medicine ,Human Migration ,Socio-culturale ,Context (language use) ,Structural basin ,Biology ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Ancient ,Cultural exchange ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,ddc:570 ,Cultural Evolution ,Report ,Humans ,DNA, Ancient ,Transect ,Life Style ,ancient DNA ,Mesolithic ,Institut für Biochemie und Biologie ,Iron Gates ,2. Zero hunger ,Genome ,Farmers ,Human migration ,business.industry ,Genome, Human ,Romania ,Eneolithic ,Chalcolithic ,DNA ,15. Life on land ,Antropología biológica ,Archaeology ,humanities ,Diet ,Neolithic transition ,030104 developmental biology ,Ancient DNA ,Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Fakultät ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Human - Abstract
Summary The transition from hunting and gathering to farming involved profound cultural and technological changes. In Western and Central Europe, these changes occurred rapidly and synchronously after the arrival of early farmers of Anatolian origin [1, 2, 3], who largely replaced the local Mesolithic hunter-gatherers [1, 4, 5, 6]. Further east, in the Baltic region, the transition was gradual, with little or no genetic input from incoming farmers [7]. Here we use ancient DNA to investigate the relationship between hunter-gatherers and farmers in the Lower Danube basin, a geographically intermediate area that is characterized by a rapid Neolithic transition but also by the presence of archaeological evidence that points to cultural exchange, and thus possible admixture, between hunter-gatherers and farmers. We recovered four human paleogenomes (1.1× to 4.1× coverage) from Romania spanning a time transect between 8.8 thousand years ago (kya) and 5.4 kya and supplemented them with two Mesolithic genomes (1.7× and 5.3×) from Spain to provide further context on the genetic background of Mesolithic Europe. Our results show major Western hunter-gatherer (WHG) ancestry in a Romanian Eneolithic sample with a minor, but sizeable, contribution from Anatolian farmers, suggesting multiple admixture events between hunter-gatherers and farmers. Dietary stable-isotope analysis of this sample suggests a mixed terrestrial/aquatic diet. Our results provide support for complex interactions among hunter-gatherers and farmers in the Danube basin, demonstrating that in some regions, demic and cultural diffusion were not mutually exclusive, but merely the ends of a continuum for the process of Neolithization., Highlights • Demic and cultural diffusions underlie the Neolithic period in the Danube basin • A large WHG genome component was present in Eneolithic communities in this region • The further east in Europe, the weaker the genetic component of Anatolian farmers • Environmental factors may account for a demic diffusion breakdown in these regions, A key question in archaeological research is whether the transition from hunting and gathering was more reliant on the movement of people or ideas. González-Fortes et al. show, based on genomes of several ancient humans, that in parts of Romania, it was actually a mix of both processes that took place during this so-called Neolithization process.
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- 2017
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11. Ancient Ethiopian genome reveals extensive Eurasian admixture in Eastern Africa
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Eppie R. Jones, John W. Arthur, Matthew C. Curtis, M. Gallego Llorente, Pierluigi Pieruccini, Kathryn Weedman Arthur, Jong Bhak, Jay T. Stock, Veronika Siska, Fiona Brock, Andrea Manica, Sean Stretton, Mauro Coltorti, Daniel G. Bradley, Anders Eriksson, Ron Pinhasi, Y.-K. Park, Thomas Higham, and Michael Hofreiter
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Genetics ,0303 health sciences ,education.field_of_study ,Genetic diversity ,Multidisciplinary ,Human migration ,business.industry ,Population ,Biological evolution ,Biology ,Genome ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Evolutionary biology ,Genetic variation ,Human genome ,education ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,030304 developmental biology - Abstract
Ancient African helps to explain the present Tracing the migrations of anatomically modern humans has been complicated by human movements both out of and into Africa, especially in relatively recent history. Gallego Llorente et al. sequenced an Ethiopian individual, “Mota,” who lived approximately 4500 years ago, predating one such wave of individuals into Africa from Eurasia. The genetic information from Mota suggests that present-day Sardinians were the likely source of the Eurasian backflow. Furthermore, 4 to 7% of most African genomes, including Yoruba and Mbuti Pygmies, originated from this Eurasian gene flow. Science , this issue p. 820
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- 2015
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12. Upper Palaeolithic genomes reveal deep roots of modern Eurasians
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Anders Eriksson, Gloria Gonzalez-Fortes, Sarah Connell, Thomas Higham, Ron Pinhasi, Ofer Bar-Yosef, Eppie R. Jones, Veronika Siska, Nino Jakeli, Mathias Currat, Tengiz Meshveliani, Anna Belfer-Cohen, Russell L. McLaughlin, David Lordkipanidze, Lara M. Cassidy, Michael Hofreiter, Marcos Gallego Llorente, Rui Martiniano, Andrea Manica, Cristina Gamba, Werner Müller, Zinovi Matskevich, Daniel G. Bradley, Eriksson, Anders [0000-0003-3436-3726], Manica, Andrea [0000-0003-1895-450X], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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Asian Continental Ancestry Group ,Male ,Asia ,South asia ,Steppe ,Evolution ,Human Migration ,European Continental Ancestry Group ,Socio-culturale ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Ancient history ,Biology ,European ,White People ,Article ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Asian People ,ddc:590 ,Bronze Age ,Genetics ,Humans ,Clade ,Biological sciences ,Institut für Biochemie und Biologie ,Mesolithic ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,geography ,Genome ,Multidisciplinary ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Genome, Human ,Human migration ,business.industry ,Europe ,Genomics ,Last Glacial Maximum ,General Chemistry ,Extern ,Paleogenomics ,ddc:500 ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Human - Abstract
We extend the scope of European palaeogenomics by sequencing the genomes of Late Upper Palaeolithic (13,300 years old, 1.4-fold coverage) and Mesolithic (9,700 years old, 15.4-fold) males from western Georgia in the Caucasus and a Late Upper Palaeolithic (13,700 years old, 9.5-fold) male from Switzerland. While we detect Late Palaeolithic–Mesolithic genomic continuity in both regions, we find that Caucasus hunter-gatherers (CHG) belong to a distinct ancient clade that split from western hunter-gatherers ∼45 kya, shortly after the expansion of anatomically modern humans into Europe and from the ancestors of Neolithic farmers ∼25 kya, around the Last Glacial Maximum. CHG genomes significantly contributed to the Yamnaya steppe herders who migrated into Europe ∼3,000 BC, supporting a formative Caucasus influence on this important Early Bronze age culture. CHG left their imprint on modern populations from the Caucasus and also central and south Asia possibly marking the arrival of Indo-Aryan languages., Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe; 1334
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- 2015
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13. The genetics of an early Neolithic pastoralist from the Zagros, Iran
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Sungwon Jeon, Michael Hofreiter, Anders Eriksson, Andrea Manica, Cristina Gamba, Deborah C. Merrett, Yun Sung Cho, Yuju Jeon, Ron Pinhasi, Marcos Gallego Llorente, Jong Bhak, Eppie R. Jones, Sarah Connell, Veronika Siska, Robert Beyer, Christopher Meiklejohn, Eriksson, Anders [0000-0003-3436-3726], Manica, Andrea [0000-0003-1895-450X], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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0301 basic medicine ,Human Migration ,Pastoralism ,Population ,Large population ,Iran ,DNA, Mitochondrial ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Ethnicity ,Humans ,DNA, Ancient ,education ,Phylogeny ,030304 developmental biology ,2. Zero hunger ,0303 health sciences ,education.field_of_study ,Principal Component Analysis ,Multidisciplinary ,Farmers ,Geography ,business.industry ,Human migration ,Genome, Human ,Genetic Variation ,Agriculture ,Europe ,030104 developmental biology ,Genetics, Population ,Phenotype ,Archaeology ,Haplotypes ,Ethnology ,Female ,ddc:500 ,Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Fakultät ,business ,ddc:600 ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
The agricultural transition profoundly changed human societies. We sequenced and analysed the first genome (1.39x) of an early Neolithic woman from Ganj Dareh, in the Zagros Mountains of Iran, a site with early evidence for an economy based on goat herding, ca. 10,000 BP. We show that Western Iran was inhabited by a population genetically most similar to hunter-gatherers from the Caucasus, but distinct from the Neolithic Anatolian people who later brought food production into Europe. The inhabitants of Ganj Dareh made little direct genetic contribution to modern European populations, suggesting those of the Central Zagros were somewhat isolated from other populations of the Fertile Crescent. Runs of homozygosity are of a similar length to those from Neolithic farmers, and shorter than those of Caucasus and Western Hunter-Gatherers, suggesting that the inhabitants of Ganj Dareh did not undergo the large population bottleneck suffered by their northern neighbours. While some degree of cultural diffusion between Anatolia, Western Iran and other neighbouring regions is possible, the genetic dissimilarity between early Anatolian farmers and the inhabitants of Ganj Dareh supports a model in which Neolithic societies in these areas were distinct.
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