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Rating: Summary: Essential reading Review: Clearly laid out like one of the classic undergraduate textbooks (e.g. Genes VII, Albers et al.), this is the only up-to-date introduction in the field. The authors make great efforts to link advances in genetics to other fields (e.g. linguistics, anthropology), as well as to organise chapters around key issues such as the spread of agriculture, offering space to key authors in these associated fields. Bibliographic/website sources are also well documented. Evidently, coverage is broad rather than deep, but if you need some basic background (e.g. I wanted to understand how Y-chromosome sequence data illuminated prehistoric migrations but needed some basic information on microsatellites) before proceeding to original papers, then this is the book for you.
Rating: Summary: A must have book for this field Review: Very up-to-date (msot references are from 2000 to 2003),
and well-written.
You will become an expert in this filed after studying this classic!
I bought a copy for myself, and another one for my advisor.
I have read it twice in a week!
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