| A Y Chromosome Census of the British Isles: Capelli et al. found that different parts of the British Isles have sharply different paternal histories. An article from Current Biology. |
| BBC: Tanzania, Ethiopia Origin for Humans: Genetic studies have helped scientists identify the region of East Africa from where it is believed modern humans came. |
| BBC: English and Welsh are Races Apart: Genetic research suggests the Welsh are the "true" Britons while the English evolved from Anglo-Saxon invaders from modern-day Holland. |
| BBC: Europe's Seven Female Founders: Article and links regarding new genetic research which shows that everyone in Europe is descended from just seven women. |
| BBC: Genetic 'Adam Never Met Eve': Genetic studies suggest our most common paternal and maternal ancestors walked the planet more than 80,000 years apart. |
| Bradshaw Foundation: Journey of Mankind: Stephen Oppenheimer provides a graphic display of the peopling of the world, tracking routes through a synthesis of chromosome evidence, archaeology, climatology and fossil study. |
| Genetic Survey of Wirral and West Lancashire: Professor Steve Harding of Nottingham University heads a team looking for evidence for Viking descendants in this part of Britain. |
| Human Population Genetics Laboratory: Located in the Department of Genetics at the Stanford University School of Medicine. Includes personnel profiles, projects, and publications available in pdf format. |
| Imperial Cancer Research Fund Population Genetics Group: Provides information about the laboratory's work in population genetics. Includes CIL tools, staff details, and related links. |
| Molecular Evolution and Population Genetics: Links to a series of papers available as extracts and for full text download, from the University of Southern California. |
| National Geographic: Documentary Redraws Humans' Family Tree: Geneticist Spencer Wells claims that all humans alive today are descended from a single man who lived in Africa around 60,000 years ago, in the Journey of Man documentary. |
| National Geographic: The Genographic Project: A 5-year study by The National Geographic Society, IBM, geneticist Spencer Wells, and the Waitt Family Foundation to compile a genetic atlas. Project outline and methods, how to participate, news, genetics overview and an interactive atlas of the human journey. |
| Prospect Magazine: Myths of British Ancestry: Stephen Oppenheimer declares that ancestors of the British and Irish were Basques, not Celts. The Celts were not wiped out by the Anglo-Saxons, in fact neither had much impact on the genetic stock of these islands. |
| Science Spectra: Why Y?: Neil Bradman and Mark Thomas look at the Y chromosome in the study of human evolution, migration and prehistory. |
| The Center for Genetic Anthropology, University College London: Pursues research on the evolution and migrations of human populations in north Africa, east Africa, the Near East, Asia and Europe. Profile of staff, research themes and presentations. |
| The Human Genome Diversity Project: Stanford University describes this international project that seeks to understand the diversity and unity of the entire human species. Includes a summary of the purpose of the project and of the planning work done. |
| Y Chromosomes Rewrite British History: This article in Nature comments on the findings of Capelli et al. in their Y-chromosome census of the British Isles. |