Albert Zink
Head of InstituteInstitute for Mummy Studies
Paleogenetic analysis of sixty Bolivian mummies provide precious insights into the genetic history ...
Bioarcheological studies of mummified pre-Columbian remains from Bolivia. Understanding and ...
Life and death in ancient Egypt – Computed tomographic and paleogenetic examinations for the ...
"Celts" up & down the Alps: Origin and Mobility patterns on both sides of the Alps during the Late ...
Genomic diversity of prehistoric individuals from the Iceman’s territory in the Eastern Italian Alps
Bologna Mummy Project
Iceman Conservation Project 2.0 Study on the state of conservation and feasibility
Illuminating the evolutionary history of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (MTBC)
Development and centralization of the laboratory infrastructures of the Institute for Mummy Studies ...
Inferring ancient human kinship structure and microbial evolution using paleogenetics
An interdisciplinary approach to study the history of Early Medieval populations in Trentino-Alto ...
ME Torino Mummy Study and Conservation Project
Illuminating the evolutionary history of the stomach pathogen Helicobacter pylori
Rediscovering Altamura: advanced multidisciplinary investigations on the skeleton from the Lamalunga ...
Assessment of missing links in atherogenesis via paleogenetic, computed tomography and stable ...
Early Medieval South Tyrol: anthropological, paleopathological and stable isotope analysis of human ...
Complete mapping of the tattoos present on the Iceman mummy
The Application of next generation sequencing to Archaeology
Molecular analysis of the microbiome and of infectious diseases in ancient human remains - from ...
Microscopic and Molecular de novo Analysis of the Iceman's Stomach Content
Le analisi sulle sepolture uomo-animale nella necropoli del Seminario Vescovile di Verona pongono le società pre-romane sotto la lente della ricerca
Paleopathologist Albert Zink explains how to untangle the chaos of ancient genetic traces and why blood vessel calcification is not just due to a bad lifestyle.
Interview with archaeogeneticist Johannes Krause and anthropologist Albert Zink
The pathogen of the deadliest form of the disease has been identified in mummified soft tissue belonging to members of the Florentine dynasty.
An interview with the authors of the first German textbook on "Osteological Paleopathology".