Antiquity’s miracle skin whitening method: migrate to Sweden, wait millennia
Deep Dives
Explore related topics with these Wikipedia articles, rewritten for enjoyable reading:
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Guido Barbujani
11 min read
Linked in the article (5 min read)
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Pitted Ware culture
10 min read
The article prominently features a reconstructed image from Pitted Ware Culture remains and identifies them as 'Europe's last hunter-gatherers' whose ancestors carried the earliest known genes for blue eyes, blond hair, and pale skin. This archaeological culture is central to the article's thesis about pigmentation evolution.

Welcome back to the Unsupervised Learning Journal Club, an occasional feature for paying subscribers where I review interesting papers in human population genomics. In the spirit of a conventional journal club, after each post, interested subscribers can vote on papers for future editions.
Recent editions:
Wealth, war and worse: plague’s ubiquity across millennia of human conquest
Where Queens Ruled: ancient DNA confirms legendary Matrilineal Celts were no exception
Eternally Illyrian: How Albanians resisted Rome and outlasted a Slavic onslaught
Homo with a side of sapiens: the brainy silent partner we co-opted 300,000 years ago
Brave new human: counting up the de novo mutations you alone carry
Genghis Khan, the Golden Horde and an 842-year-old paternity test
Ghost Population in the Machine: AI finds Out-of-Africa plot twists in Papuan DNA
Immigrants of Imperial Rome: Pompeii’s genetic census of the doomed
Free subscribers can get a sense of the format from my ungated coverage of two favorite 2024 papers:
Unsupervised Learning Journal Club #11
Today we’re reviewing a PNAS paper, Inference of human pigmentation from ancient DNA by genotype likelihoods (2025). The authors use paleogenetics and the latest in genomic inference to shine new light on the evolution of pigmentation in Eurasia, and particularly in Europe. It comes out of Guido Barbujani’s lab in the Department of Life Sciences and Biotechnology, Universitá degli studi di Ferrara, Ferrara. The first author is Silivia Perretti, at the same university.

By your skin you shall be known
...“Of the Ethiopians above Egypt [Nubia] and of the Arabians the commander, I say, was Arsames; but the Ethiopians from the direction of the sunrising (for the Ethiopians were in two bodies [Nubians and
This excerpt is provided for preview purposes. Full article content is available on the original publication.