In 1951, the geneticist Luigi Luca Cavalli-Sforza was teaching
in Parma when a student--a priest named Antonio Moroni--told him
about rich church records of demography and marriages between
relatives. After convincing the Church to open its records,
Cavalli-Sforza, Moroni, and Gianna Zei embarked on a landmark study
that would last fifty years and cover all of Italy. This book
assembles and analyzes the team's research for the first time.
Using blood testing as well as church records, the team
investigated the frequency of consanguineous marriages and its use
for estimating inbreeding and studying the relations between
inbreeding and drift. They tested the importance of random genetic
drift by studying population structure through demography of the
last three centuries, using it to predict the spatial variation of
frequencies of genetic markers. The authors find that drift-related
genetic variation, including its stabilization by migration, is
best predicted by computer simulation. They also analyze the
usefulness and limits of the concept of deme for defining Mendelian
populations. The genetic effect of consanguineous marriage on
recessive genetic diseases and for the detection of dominance in
metric characters are also studied.
Ultimately bringing together the many strands of their massive
project, Cavalli-Sforza, Moroni, and Zei are able to map genetic
drift in all of Italy's approximately 8,000 communes and to
demonstrate the relationship between each locality's drift and
various ecological and demographic factors. In terms of both
methods and findings, their accomplishment is tremendously
important for understanding human social structure and the genetic
effects of drift and inbreeding.
General
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