My friend Pontus Skoglund and his colleagues have JUST published this incredible new piece of research into Viking-era migrations - using ancient DNA and a brand new method called TWIGSTATS.
This epic piece of research is matched by an epic cover of first 2025 issue of Nature!
The cover art - by Oliver Uberti - is inspired by intertwined serpentine knots on Viking runestones and includes runes for the ‘letters’ of DNA: A, T, G, and C.
Additional runes for “man-journey-heritage” appear in the lower-right corner.
This new analysis includes a new piece of information relating to one of the stories in my latest book, Crypt: the remains of 30+ individuals from a mass grave in Oxford, thought to have been slaughtered in the 1002 St Brice’s Day Massacre, when Aethelred II used hate speech to incite ethnic violence against ‘Danes’ settled in England.
Ancient DNA analysis is an incredibly powerful tool for understanding populations, migrations and families in the past - archaeogeneticists are now in the business of reading entire ancient genomes. And this new Twigstats methods has made it even more powerful.
This is really exciting science. And it’s really hard. First the archaeogeneticists have to take samples from ancient bones, then they extract DNA from the samples, being very careful not to contaminate it with any other DNA.
They can boost the amount of DNA, getting it to copy itself many times until they have enough to work with. (They do this using a technique which also ends up as shorthand for DNA tests, like the one we got familiar with during the early years of the COVID pandemic: PCR).
Then the task comes of sequencing or ‘reading’ the DNA - deciphering the code, letter by letter. Ancient DNA might survive the ravages of time - but it’s usually broken up into tiny pieces, some just a hundred letters long - while a whole human genome is nearly 3000,000,000 letters long!
So the next stage is assembling those segments of code into a whole genome. It’s a mindblowingly huge puzzle which has only been made possible with advances in computing power.
But reconstructing an ancient genome is just the beginning. What the archaeogeneticists are really interested in is comparing lots of genomes - looking for similarities and differences. These are the key to understanding what was happening to populations in the past - and tracking migrations.
Over time, genomes acquire new mutations. Those mutations will be inherited by descendants of the person in whom the mutation first arose. While most of the genome will be identical between two people, the pattern of these little differences is crucial for working out what happened to populations over time - and for tracking families.
Archaeogeneticists have been able to compare genomes and work out how migration contributed to the spread of farming in the Neolithic, between 11000 and 5000 years ago, for instance. In the Stone Age, the differences between populations were relatively large and easy to spot.
But once you get to around 2000 years ago, into the Iron Age, there’s much less difference between populations. Pontus told me that distinguishing different Iron Age Scandinavian groups, for instance, is MUCH harder. It’s not a perfect analogy, but imagine trying to tell if someone is Norwegian or Danish by the appearance - it’s hard.
But Twigstats works by focusing on salient differences - and these are ones related to relatively recent mutations (with respect to the date of the individual sampled). It ignores older mutations which have been sifted and sorted through populations over time, creating confusing ‘noise’.
So it’s a bit like snipping a twig off a gene tree so you can focus on just those branches - and ignoring the rest of the tree. Hence the name: Twigstats.
Pontus and his colleagues tested their new technique on simulated data to make sure it worked - which it did, very well. Ten times better than anything else they’d tried before!
So they used it to look at some real samples. They looked at modern human and Neanderthal DNA - to test the theory that these species interbred with each other in the Palaeolithic.
Now this is something I’ve been following for years, ever since my first big landmark series for the BBC, The Incredible Human Journey. Back then, in 2008, there didn’t seem to be any evidence of modern humans (Homo sapiens) and Neanderthals mixing. At least, fossil bones weren’t providing a suggestion of interbreeding...
But then ancient DNA came along - with the first Neanderthal genome published in 2010. And then it seemed there WAS evidence for interbreeding, around 60,000 years ago.
But a few scientists have criticised this claim, saying that the patterns in the modern human DNA could have happened another way, just through genetic variants being sorted over time, creating a sort of mirage of an interbreeding event with Neanderthals.
Most archaeogeneticists still thought that interbreeding explained the pattern. But there was an element of doubt.
No longer! Twigstats finally puts that doubt to bed. Neanderthals and modern humans definitely met up and swapped genes with each other (delicately put). (painting by Tom Bjorklund)
Another finding published in the new paper - which mostly focused on Viking Age genomes, hence the beautiful cover of Nature - was that a 2nd-4th CE individual from the military/gladiator cemetery of Driffield Terrace in York, already known to have unusual ancestry, is now shown to have Scandinavian ancestry. That’s interesting because it shows how people were moving around quite a bit in northwest Europe in Roman times.
But the main focus of the study was the later first millennium - the Viking Age. And here, Pontus and his colleagues were able to use Twigstats to track migrations of different populations that have been difficult to ‘see’ before - because they’re all so similar.
They found evidence for migrations of Germanic people southward into Poland and Slovakia, as well as into south-central Europe and Britain.
They also found evidence of a previously unknown migration into Scandinavia, before the Viking Age - transforming the ancestry of Denmark and southern Sweden. Interestingly, this seems to coincide with a change in runic script and language - establishing Old Norse.
And finally, most of the individuals from the Viking Age mass grave in Oxford, that I wrote about in Crypt, were shown to have Scandinavian ancestries. It seems that they probably were ‘Danes’ killed on St Brice’s Day in 1002.
With a paper like this - announcing some new results and fascinating insights into medieval history - unveiled using a brilliant new technique, you can be sure that there will be more revelations to come!
There was something very odd in the PM’s speech last night - something which infuses RE in the primary school curriculum too: the idea that everyone in this country is religious in one way or another, when we know from polls that over half the population is not religious. 1/7
He said, “You can be a practising Hindu and a proud Briton as I am, or a devout Muslim and a patriotic citizen as so many others are; or a committed Jewish person and the heart of your local community, and all underpinned by the tolerance of our established Christian church.” 2/7
Is it really the established church that makes ours a tolerant society? Only 12% of the UK population are self declared followers of the Anglican faith. Less than 2% are regular churchgoers. The RSPB has more members. 3/7
“While countries such as the US and France have made vaccines available to anyone who wants them, the UK will probably continue restricting free access to select groups, and may reduce access further in the future.” @sheencr writes: theguardian.com/commentisfree/…
“In the UK, an estimated 80,000 people have left employment owing to long Covid, and the cost of healthcare provision for people with long Covid is high and only increases over time. Despite the obvious social and economic costs, it seems neither living with long Covid nor its effect on the economy will be considered.”
“It has been estimated by the UK Health Security Agency that it expects to write off £229m worth of vaccines that we are committed to buy, or already hold, that ultimately won’t be used.”
The long history of humanity teaches us that migration has always been there - ever since (and before) our species spilled out of Africa to make the whole world our home. And most families just want to be able to look after their children. Every human life is precious.
Migration is likely to increase when communities face the repercussions of climate change, famine and conflict.
Taking all these things together - the fact of migration and the dignity of each human being - the challenge is then how we manage our societies, globally, to look after everyone as much as possible, to help families make choices that are right for them, and to give each child the chance of a good life.
A disturbing story of obfuscation, censorship and catastrophic decision-making is emerging from the COVID enquiry, as @Kit_Yates_Maths reports 1/
“Professor Yvonne Doyle’s Inquiry testimony presents a stark example of the sort of censorship experienced by scientists during the acute phase of the pandemic….”
“In January of 2020, the then-medical director for Public Health England undertook an interview on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme. In the piece, she candidly admitted there could well already be covid cases in the UK and that it would take months if not years to develop a vaccine.
Following the interview, she was advised “not to do any further media, and that the secretary of state [for Health and Social Care – Matt Hancock] would need to clear all media”” 2/
Other critiques we’re now learning about “were aired long after it was useful for the general public to hear them.” 3/
Some thoughts about the revelations from the COVID enquiry.
It is now blindingly clear that we were lied to.
We were signed up to a massive medical experiment - “herd immunity” - without consent. 1/5
To me, a very major issue is not just the callous decision to pursue herd-immunity-by-infection before a vaccine was available, but the fact that the government lied to the population about this being their strategy. 2/5
It’s similar to the lie about the “protective ring” around care homes. And the millions £££ spent on a publicity campaign in summer 2020 to say “schools are safe”. 3/5
@nosuchthing Anatomy pedantry alert!
Catching up on NSTAAF, my ears pricked up at the mention of lacrimal anatomy in whales. It reminded me just how pedantic an anatomist I am. And it sent me on a fascinating deep dive into whale and dolphin lacrimal anatomy… 1/12
The first “fact” was: “Whales don’t have tear ducts cos there’s no point in crying in the ocean”. The tear duct or nasolacrimal duct does not convey tears to the eye - it takes them away, draining into the nasal cavity. 2/12
As you later discussed, whales do produce tears - from their lacrimal glands. In fact, some whales have several tear glands around each eye, or an encircling belt of a gland. See:
3/12onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.100…