CDA Spring Lecture Series: Prof. Ludovic Orlando

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2673

Thursday, March 17
3:00 – 4:00 p.m.
On Zoom

The Genomic History of the Modern Domestic Horse: A Tale of Ancient Genomes

By Ludovic Orlando, Prof. Dr. Director, Centre for Anthropobiology and Genomics of Toulouse, CAGT

Theme
Ancient DNA – hosted by Prof. Brande Wulff.

Abstract

The horse is one of the most frequently represented species in the cave art record of Western Europe, where it was central to the subsistence economy of Pleistocene hunter-gatherer societies. Its domestication by the mid-Holocene represents one turning point in human history. It truly globalized the world for the first time as not only people but their genes, their culture and their diseases could then spread across the Old World at an unprecedented pace.

Charriots launched at full speed against the enemy lines or charging cavalries also provided warfare revolutionary tactics, which often proved decisive to some of the most famous battles in history. The horse was in fact paramount to the world economy up until the early 20th century when societies became increasingly mechanized. The global needs for horse meat, speed and power thus deeply impacted human history. They did not changed the horse anyless.

In this talk, I will show how my group made use of ancient genomics to unfold the 5,500 years-long history of horse domestication, revealing both the mysterious homeland of the modern domestic horse but also how human management, selection and admixture have contributed to reshape the horse genome through space and time until the present day.

About the speaker

Ludovic was born in 1977, the year when the first DNA sequencing technology was developed. He graduated his Ph.D. in 2003, at University of Lyon, France, twenty years after the first DNA molecule from an extinct organism was ever characterized and dedicated his whole career to ancient DNA research since. He was appointed as an Associate Professor the Ecole Normale Supérieure of Lyon in 2006 and joined the Centre for GeoGenetics at the University of Copenhagen as a Professor in Molecular Archaeology in 2010 to start his own research group.

Now back to France, his home country, he built the Centre for Anthropobiology and Genomics of Toulouse (CAGT) at University Paul Sabatier in 2020. This center merges together experts in Anthropobiology, Archaeology, Evolutionary Biology and Genomics to study of our global evolutionary past. Ludovic’s early career achievements feature the sequencing of the first Middle Pleistocene genome, the characterization of the first ancient epigenome and the identification of the homeland of horse domestication.

He has coauthored almost 200 scientific publications and several books. His work is supported by a number of prestigious research grants, including from the European Research Council.

Visit the Spring Lecture Series webpage to view the full schedule and learn more about the upcoming lectures.

This opportunity is brought to you by the Center for Desert Agriculture.

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