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  <STUDY accession="ERP117296" alias="ena-STUDY-Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History-13-09-2019-07:19:50:894-406" center_name="Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History">
    <IDENTIFIERS>
      <PRIMARY_ID>ERP117296</PRIMARY_ID>
      <EXTERNAL_ID namespace="BioProject">PRJEB34400</EXTERNAL_ID>
      <SUBMITTER_ID namespace="Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History">ena-STUDY-Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History-13-09-2019-07:19:50:894-406</SUBMITTER_ID>
    </IDENTIFIERS>
    <DESCRIPTOR>
      <STUDY_TITLE>Kinship-based social inequality in Bronze Age Europe</STUDY_TITLE>
      <STUDY_TYPE existing_study_type="Other"/>
      <STUDY_ABSTRACT>Revealing and understanding the mechanisms behind social inequality in prehistoric societies is a major challenge. By combining genome wide data, isotopic evidence as well as anthropological and archaeological data, we go beyond the dominating supra-regional approaches in archaeogenetics to shed light on the complexity of social status, inheritance rules and mobility during the Bronze Age. We apply a deep micro-regional approach and analyze genome wide data of 104 human individuals deriving from farmstead-related cemeteries from the Late Neolithic to the Middle Bronze Age in southern Germany. Our results reveal that individual households lasting several generations consisted of a high-status core family and unrelated low-status individuals, a social organization accompanied by patrilocality and female exogamy, and the stability of this system over 700 years.</STUDY_ABSTRACT>
      <STUDY_DESCRIPTION>Revealing and understanding the mechanisms behind social inequality in prehistoric societies is a major challenge. By combining genome wide data, isotopic evidence as well as anthropological and archaeological data, we go beyond the dominating supra-regional approaches in archaeogenetics to shed light on the complexity of social status, inheritance rules and mobility during the Bronze Age. We apply a deep micro-regional approach and analyze genome wide data of 104 human individuals deriving from farmstead-related cemeteries from the Late Neolithic to the Middle Bronze Age in southern Germany. Our results reveal that individual households lasting several generations consisted of a high-status core family and unrelated low-status individuals, a social organization accompanied by patrilocality and female exogamy, and the stability of this system over 700 years.</STUDY_DESCRIPTION>
    </DESCRIPTOR>
    <STUDY_ATTRIBUTES>
      <STUDY_ATTRIBUTE>
        <TAG>ENA-FIRST-PUBLIC</TAG>
        <VALUE>2019-10-10</VALUE>
      </STUDY_ATTRIBUTE>
      <STUDY_ATTRIBUTE>
        <TAG>ENA-LAST-UPDATE</TAG>
        <VALUE>2019-09-13</VALUE>
      </STUDY_ATTRIBUTE>
    </STUDY_ATTRIBUTES>
  </STUDY>
</STUDY_SET>
