Mattias Sherman
@mattiassherman.bsky.social
750 followers 470 following 11 posts
PhD student in ancient genomics @ the Crick, London | wolf domestication, canine evolution, aDNA damage 🦴🐕🧬
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mattiassherman.bsky.social
Hi all! I'm Mattias, PhD in the Ancient Genomics Lab at the Francis Crick Institute (London, UK), and an evolution and ancient DNA enthusiast!

I'm currently working on dog domestication using ancient population genomics, and on understanding aDNA damage to improve the retrieval of degraded DNA.
Reposted by Mattias Sherman
devoevomed.bsky.social
Dire wolves might, but @itiscolossal.bsky.social didn't mutate any genes involved in behavior so their GMO grey wolves can't...
Reposted by Mattias Sherman
trstngnthr.bsky.social
One week left to apply!
trstngnthr.bsky.social
I have funding for a 2-year dry-lab postdoc to join our team @humanevouu.bsky.social 🧪 (Deadline Oct 21st)

The project will utilize modern and #aDNA data from humans and sheep to study environmental adaptation (including method development and simulations).

Please share!
www.uu.se/en/about-uu/...
Postdoctoral position in Population Genomics - Uppsala University
Postdoctoral position in Population Genomics, Department of Organismal Biology, Uppsala University
www.uu.se
Reposted by Mattias Sherman
eegcam.bsky.social
#newpreprint: "Climate Shaped the Global Population Structure of Leopards and their Extinction in Europe": www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...! Leopards are charming big cats but there are many mysteries around them. Thread 🧵
Reposted by Mattias Sherman
surtlab.bsky.social
As coding gets more plug and play, it becomes IMPERATIVE for us as educators to teach fundamentals about what the statistical tests are comparing and assumptions.

Students might not need to understand how to code things up, but they should understand what the snippets are doing and why
hormiga.bsky.social
Y'all. I just got ChatGPT to do everything in R for this manuscript. I mean EVERYTHING. And it's all legit and reproducible. I'm shook.

How are we mentoring our trainees in statistics now? Who needs to learn coding in R line by line, and who doesn't?

scienceforeveryone.science/statistics-i...
Statistics in the era of AI
How do we mentor, teach, and do stats when AI can do so much of the work?
scienceforeveryone.science
Reposted by Mattias Sherman
pontus-skoglund.bsky.social
PhD-opening in our ancient genomics lab this year, apply below!

We work on:
📜 Genetic history integrated with archaeology and history
📈 Natural selection and trait genetics
🐺 Evolutionary genomics of dogs and wolves
🦠 Ancient pathogen genomics
💀 Hominin evolution and ancient proteomics
crick.ac.uk
Motivated graduates with backgrounds in biological or biomedical sciences, physics, chemistry, mathematics, engineering and/or computer science are invited to apply to our 4-year fully funded PhD programme.

Apply by 05 November 2025

www.crick.ac.uk/careers-and-...
PhD students
Our PhD programme attracts the brightest scientific minds and is an opportunity for talented people to embark on their career in biomedical research.
www.crick.ac.uk
Reposted by Mattias Sherman
astrokatie.com
As a theoretical cosmologist, I'm frequently asked "what is the benefit of the work you're doing for people's lives?" Nothing I work on makes money or cures disease.

There are a few different answers one can give, at various levels of "convincing" / "actually relevant to why the work is done."

1/🧵
Reposted by Mattias Sherman
palaeogenomics.bsky.social
🦴🧬🦴🧬🦴

Abstract submission is now open for the 1st International Conference on Palaeogenomics!

June 23–26 2026, in Stockholm.

Join researchers from across the field for 4 days and >100 talks (+ poster sessions)!

Submit abstracts here 👉
icp2026.palaeogenomics.org/abstracts/

Deadline: Nov 30th
Reposted by Mattias Sherman
djvanness.bsky.social
A lot of people think that every international student admitted means one fewer spot for domestic students, when the opposite is more likely true - the tuition revenue international students bring allows public universities to provide substantial discounts to domestic students, improving access.
Reposted by Mattias Sherman
oskolkov.bsky.social
Our method, GENome EXogenous (GENEX) sequence detection, for identifying microbial-like regions in eukaryotic reference genomes is online in GigaScience track.smtpsendmail.com/9032119/c?p=...
Reposted by Mattias Sherman
jcampbellsmith.bsky.social
"I Contain Multitudes"

This digitally painted piece honors coyote by tracing its lineage from the first cells of life to the animal trotting our cities and the wilderness today.

The thread gives descriptions of all the extinct organisms shown in this piece (not to scale)
This digitally painted piece honors the survivor spirit of the coyote by tracing its lineage from the first cells of life to the animal trotting our landscapes today. Below the horizon, carefully chosen ancestors mark pivotal moments in adaptation, each contributing to the form and survivor we see today. Above the horizon, Coyote stands alert at the center, framed by both Denver’s skyline and a mountain backdrop, symbols of their ability to thrive in cities as well as wilderness. Embedded in the ground are the skulls and bones of carnivores whose lineages ended long ago, emphasizing Coyote’s persistence in contrast.
Reposted by Mattias Sherman
haam-community.bsky.social
🚨 The first HAAM elections are now open!

👥 Meet the candidates: haam-community.github.io/election2025/

🗳️ Cast your vote: forms.gle/6PKTRkqKn57J...

🔒 Voting closes 10 Oct, 23:59 CET!
⚠ HAAM Election 2025 ⚠ · HAAM Community
haam-community.github.io
Reposted by Mattias Sherman
archaeoamanda.bsky.social
So I caved and set up an account here. Not expecting anyone to interact however as this place seems very quiet! I’m here for #AboriginalArchaeology #humanosteology #zooarchaeology
#AustralianArchaeology
#archaeology.
Say hi and give me a follow
Reposted by Mattias Sherman
sallyaitken.bsky.social
We are searching for a Forest Ecophysiologist (tenure track Assistant or Associate Professor) to join the Department of Forest and Conservation Sciences, University of British Columbia Faculty of Forestry. Please share! Details are here: ubc.wd10.myworkdayjobs.com/ubcfacultyjobs
Reposted by Mattias Sherman
Reposted by Mattias Sherman
danielbolnick.bsky.social
Our department is adopting a 2-semester core course for entering grad students, 1 semester of grad evolution, 1 semester of ecology. I'd love to see what other depts are doing with equivalent EEB grad core courses, so if you teach one & are willing to share a syllabus & reading list please LMK
Reposted by Mattias Sherman
suziebirch.bsky.social
Perfect multispecies collaboration example! 😂
depthsofwikipedia.bsky.social
imagine if a family of beavers randomly showed up right now and finished whatever thing you've been putting off
In early 2025, beaver activity in the Brdy Protected Landscape Area, Czech Republic, contributed to the restoration of a wetland ecosystem. A family of beavers constructed a series of dams that coincidentally accomplished environmental goals of the Czech government, which had delayed its proposed project since 2018 for bureaucratic and financial reasons. The beaver-built dams saved the Czech government approximately US$1.2 million,
Reposted by Mattias Sherman
mattiassherman.bsky.social
If you work with #aDNA in or around London, you might be interested in joining us this Wednesday for a talk from @boothicus.bsky.social on integrating archaeology and ancient DNA, the first of this year's talk series organised by the London aDNA Network! Get in touch if you'd like to come along!
mattiassherman.bsky.social
We organise these talk+networking events every other month (typically at UCL) on various aDNA topics with researchers at every career stage, so feel free to check out our website and sign up for our mailing list: london-adna-network.github.io/index.html
london-adna-network.github.io
mattiassherman.bsky.social
If you work with #aDNA in or around London, you might be interested in joining us this Wednesday for a talk from @boothicus.bsky.social on integrating archaeology and ancient DNA, the first of this year's talk series organised by the London aDNA Network! Get in touch if you'd like to come along!
Reposted by Mattias Sherman
boothicus.bsky.social
Maybe worth highlighting that the people in this article identified through genetic ancestry testing very recent ancestors that in most cases met the social/legal criteria for citizenship in different countries. Your DNA doesn’t define your identity/belonging.

www.bbc.co.uk/news/article...
Citizenship: How ancestry DNA tests can lead to a new passport
The presenter of the BBC's DNA Trail explains how she battled to become a New Zealand citizen.
www.bbc.co.uk
Reposted by Mattias Sherman
ewanbirney.bsky.social
Postdoc in genomics or X-ray imaging - broadly defined? Want to run your own lab? PI in Cell biology and want to lead an area of science, hiring faculty and setting direction of an area? Want work in Europe's leading life science laboratory, working language English? Check out the jobs below!!
embl.org
EMBL @embl.org · Aug 7
We’re looking for curious, innovative science leaders at EMBL Heidelberg! 🔬🧬🦠

Join a vibrant, interdisciplinary community where collaboration and innovation are nurtured at all levels.

Take a look at these four open positions 👇
Reposted by Mattias Sherman
aveneziano.bsky.social
Natural disasters 🌪️ continue to kill years after they happen! Indirect effects of natural disasters could explain the observed higher mortality in south east US 🇺🇸! Data can save lives!

#science #data #climate 🧪 📊 🌍
climatenews.bsky.social
Excellent new video from PBS Terra about the long term climate change impact on the probability of death across the USA:
Did Scientists Just Figure Out Why People Die A DECADE Earlier in the Southeast US?
YouTube video by PBS Terra
youtu.be
Reposted by Mattias Sherman
training.ebi.embl.org
Thank you to everyone who joined us this week for the @embo.org Practical Course 'Methods for infectious disease modelling using genomics'.

Join us for 2026's EMBO Practical Course. Sign up for 'Causality in biomedicine' alerts and hear as this new course develops: www.ebi.ac.uk/training/eve...
🧬🧫
Reposted by Mattias Sherman
boothicus.bsky.social
“Today, we’re very similar to each other. Even the most different people are at most maybe 200,000 years separated, with little gene flow,” Reich said. “But 70,000 years ago, there were at least five groups far more different from each other than any groups living today.”