The project outcomes are going to and will be published in several open access papers, as previously discussed:
1. Ancient biomolecules reveal ancestry, diet and microbiomes of Upper Palaeolithic hunter-gatherers from Sicily, Scorrano et al. is under revision of the Nature communication journal;
2. Mesolithic, Neolithic and Chalcolithic human whole genome characterization of Southern Europe populations, Allentoft et al., is in preparation for high-impact journal such as Nature or Science;
3. Proteomics analysis of oral dental calculus of Neolithic and Chalcolithic samples from Italy. Scorrano et al., is in preparation.
Results of the research have been presented at national/international conferences:
1. Scorrano G., et al., Multi-omics analysis of two Upper Palaeolithic individuals from Sicily. XXIII Congress of Italian Anthropological Association, Padua, 4th -6th September, 2019.
2. Scorrano G., et al, Components of human Palaeolithic diet identified using proteomic analysis of dental calculus from Southern Italy, Jena, 18th-21st September, 2018.
Moreover, I will present these results to the next American Association of Physical Anthropologist meeting that will take place in April 2020 in Los Angeles (CA), and to the next International Symposium on Biomolecular Archaeology that will take place in September 2020 in Toulouse (France).
Furthermore, I presented the results of this project on public outreach: TOURISMA.
I hereby confirm that I have always acknowledged EU funding of my work throughout the fellowship and will continue to do so when presenting or publishing work derived from results from this fellowship in the future.
This Marie Skłodowska-Curie action provided me the state of art training in the two most studied ancient biomolecules: DNA and proteins. The new expertise acquired during the project places me amongst the few individuals able to combine proteomic and genomic approaches, allowing me to be more competitive in the selection of new profiles in the molecular anthropological. As a matter of fact, after an initial collaboration with Prof. Eske Willerslev (Director of Centre for GeoGenetics) and Prof. Kristian Kristiansen (University of Gothenburg, Sweden) on Population genomics of the Viking world and on the European Bronze Age projects, I obtained a postdoc position at Lundbeck Foundation GeoGenetics Centre under the lead of Prof. Eske Willerslev one of the world leader in ancient genetic analysis.
Finally, the dynamic scientific environment of the Evogenomics and GeoGenetics sections and the interdisciplinary of the project allowed me to expand my network, consolidate the scientific relationship between Italy and Denmark and open new collaborations in Denmark and abroad.