6 D. J. Meltzer. First Peoples in a New World: Colonizing Ice Age America (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2009).
7 J. H. Greenberg, C. G. Turner II, S. L. Zegura. “The Settlement of the Americas: A Comparison of the Linguistic, Dental, and Genetic Evidence”, Current Anthropology 27 (1986): 477–497.
8 P. Forster, R. Harding, A. Torroni, H.-J. Bandelt. “Ori gin and Evolution of Native American mtDNA Variation: A Reappraisal”, American Journal of Human Genetics 59 (1996): 935–45; E. Tamm et al. “Beringian Standstill and Spread of Native American Founders”, PloS One 2 (2017): e829.
9 T. D. Dillehay et al. “Monte Verde: Seaweed, Food, Medicine, and the Peopling of South America”, Science 320 (2008): 784–786.
10 D. L. Jenkins et al. “Clovis Age Western Stemmed Projectile Points and Human Coprolites at the Paisley Caves”, Science 337 (2012): 223–228.
11 M. Rasmussen et al. “The Genome of a Late Pleistocene Human from a Clovis Burial Site in Western Montana”, Nature 506 (2014): 225–229.
12 Povos Indígenas No Brasil. “Karitiana: Biopiracy and the Unauthor-ized Collection of Biomedical Samples”, https://pib.socioambiental. org/en/povo/ karitiana/389.
13 N. A. Garrison, M. K. Cho. “Awareness and Acceptable Practices: IRB and Researcher Reflections on the Havasupai Lawsuit”, AJOB Primary Research 4 (2013): 55–63; A. Harmon. “Indian Tribe Wins Fight to Limit Research of Its DNA”, New York Times, April 21, 2010.
14 Ronald P. Maldonado. “Key Points for University Researchers When Considering a Research Project with the Navajo Nation”, http://nptao.arizona.edu/sites/nptao/files/navajonationkey- researchrequirements_0.pdf
15 R. Skloot. The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks (New York: Crown, 2010).
16 B. L. Shelton. “Consent and Consultation in Genetic Research on American Indians and Alaska Natives”, http://www.ipcb.org/publi- cations/briefing_papers/files/consent.html.
17 R. R. Sharp, M. W. Foster. “Involving Study Populations in the Review of Genetic Research”, Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 28 (2000): 41–51; International HapMap Consortium. “The International HapMap Project”, Nature 426 (2003): 789–796.
18 T. Egan. “Tribe Stops Study of Bones That Challenge History”, New York Times, September 30, 1996; D. W. Owsley, R. L. Jantz. Kennewick Man: The Scientific Investigation of an Ancient American Skeleton (College Station: Texas A&M University Press, 2014); D. J. Meltzer. “Kennewick Man: Coming to Closure”, Antiquity 348 (2015): 1485–1493.
19 M. Rasmussen et al. “The Ancestry and Affiliations of Kennewick Man”, Nature 523 (2015): 455–458.
20 Там же.
21 J. Lindo et al. “Ancient Individuals from the North American Northwest Coast Reveal 10,000 Years of Regional Genetic Continuity”, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the U.S.A. 114 (2017): 4093–4098.
22 S. J. Redman. Bone Rooms: From Scientific Racism to Human Prehistory in Museums (Cambridge, MA, and London: Harvard University Press, 2016).
23 M. Rasmussen et al. “An Aboriginal Australian Genome Reveals Separate Human Dispersals into Asia”, Science 334 (2011): 94–98.
24 Rasmussen et al. “Genome of a Late Pleistocene Human”.
25 Rasmussen et al. “Ancestry and Affiliations of Kennewick Man”.
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27 E. Callaway. “Ancient Genome Delivers ‘Spirit Cave Mummy’ to US tribe”, Nature 540 (2016): 178–179.
28 Там же.
29 M. Livi-Bacci. “The Depopulation of Hispanic America After the Conquest”, Population and Development Review 32 (2006): 199–232; L. H. Morgan. Ancient Society; Or, Researches in the Lines of Human Progress from Savagery Through Barbarism to Civilization (Chicago: Charles H. Kerr, 1909).
30 Reich et al. “Reconstructing Native American Population History”.
31 Lindo et al. “Ancient Individuals”.
32 L. Campbell, M. Mithun. The Languages of Native America: Historical and Comparative Assessment (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1979).
33 L. Campbell. “Comment on Greenberg, Turner and Zegura”, Current Anthropology 27 (1986): 488.
34 P. Bellwood. First Migrants: Ancient Migration in Global Perspective (Chichester, West Sussex, UK / Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell, 2013).
35 Reich et al. “Reconstructing Native American Population History”.
36 W. A. Neves, M. Hubbe. “Cranial Morphology of Early Americans from Lagoa Santa, Brazil: Implications for the Settlement of the New World”, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the U.S.A. 102 (2005): 18309–18314.
37 Rasmussen et al. “Ancestry and Affiliations of Kennewick Man”.
38 P. Skoglund et al. “Genetic Evidence for Two Founding Populations of the Americas”, Nature 525 (2015): 104–108.
39 Povos Indígenas No Brasil. “Surui Paiter: Introduction”, https://pib.socioambiental.org/en/povo/surui-paiter; R. A. Butler. “Amazon Indians Use Google Earth, GPS to Protect Forest Home”, Mongabay: News and Inspiration from Nature’s Frontline, November 15, 2006, https://news.mongabay.com/2006/11/amazon-indians-use-googleearth-gps-to-protect-forest-home/
40 “Karitiana: Biopiracy and the Unauthorized Collection”.
41 Povos Indígenas No Brasil. “Xavante: Introduction”, https://pib.socioambiental.org/en/povo/xavante
42 M. Raghavan et al. “Genomic Evidence for the Pleistocene and Recent Population History of Native Americans”, Science 349 (2015): aab3884.
43 E. J. Vajda. “A Siberian Link with Na-Dene Languages”, in Anthropological Papers of the University of Alaska: New Series, ed. James M. Kari and Ben Austin Potter, 5 (2010): 33–99.
44 Reich et al. “Reconstructing Native American Population History”.
45 M. Rasmussen et al. “Ancient Human Genome Sequence of an Extinct Palaeo-Eskimo”, Nature 463 (2010): 757–762.
46 M. Raghavan et al. “The Genetic Prehistory of the New World Arctic”, Science 345 (2014): 1255832.
47 P. Flegontov et al. “Paleo-Eskimo Genetic Legacy Across North America”, bioRxiv (2017): doi.org/10.1101.203018.
48 Flegontov et al. “Paleo-Eskimo Genetic Legacy”.
49 T. M. Friesen. “Pan-Arctic Population Movements: The Early Paleo-Inuit and Thule Inuit Migrations” in: The Oxford Handbook of the Prehistoric Arctic, ed. T. Max Friesen and Owen K. Mason (New York: Oxford University Press, 2016), 673–692.
50 Reich et al. “Reconstructing Native American Population History”.
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52 R. R. da Fonseca et al. “The Origin and Evolution of Maize in the Southwestern United States”, Nature Plants 1 (2015): 14003.
Глава 8. Генетические корни восточных азиатов
1 X. H. Wu et al. “Early Pottery at 20,000 Years Ago in Xianrendong Cave, China”, Science 336 (2012): 1696–1700.
2 R. X. Zhu et al. “Early Evidence of the Genus Homo in East Asia”, Journal of Human Evolution 55 (2008): 1075–85.
3 C. C. Swisher III et al. “Age of the Earliest Known Hominids in Java, Indonesia”, Science 263 (1994): 1118–1121; P. Bellwood. First Islanders: Prehistory and Human Migration in Island Southeast Asia (Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell, 2017).
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