The journal Human Evolution has published Jesse Ausubel’s “The Search for Leonardo’s Genome,” an expanded, fully referenced version of a talk Jesse gave in June 2022 to a meeting of the American Academy of Arts & Sciences. The Academy Bulletin will publish the colloquial version in its winter issue.
Jesse H. Ausubel, The Search for Leonardo’s Genome, Human Evolution 37 3-4: 221-228, 2022; DOI: 10.14673/HE2022341106
In this Frontiers in Biology paper, Dr. Piñar and collaborators in Italy and Austria investigated seven emblematic drawings of Leonardo da Vinci by third generation sequencing. When members of the LDV DNA Project read this interesting paper, they invited Dr. Piñar and her colleagues to join the Project team.
Manolito G. Torralba, Claire Kuelbs, Kelvin Jens Moncera, and Karen E. Nelson of the J Craig Venter Institute, La Jolla, California, and Rhonda Roby of the Alameda California County Sheriff’s Office Crime Laboratory, used small, dry polyester swabs to gently collect microbes from centuries-old, Renaissance-style art in a private collector’s home in Florence, Italy. Their findings are published open access in the journal Microbial Ecology, “Characterizing microbial signatures on sculptures and paintings of similar provenance.”
Concurrently available are a pair of papers by David Thaler, of the University of Basel and a guest investigator in the Program for the Human Environment. David’s papers are
Thaler’s papers form part of a collection now in press as a book: Actes du Colloque International d’Amboise: Leonardo de Vinci, Anatomiste. Pionnier de l’Anatomie comparée, de la Biomécanique, de la Bionique et de la Physiognomonie, edited by Henry de Lumley, CNRS editions, Paris.
Two major newswires, Agence France Presse and Agencia EFE, each did separate stories:
The ‘Institut de Paléontologie Humaine’ IPH, in collaboration with the Royal Castle of Amboise and nearby Clos Lucé Château, organized an international colloquium “Leonardo da Vinci, pioneer of comparative anatomy, biomechanics, bionics and physiognomy”. The two-day meeting took place on October 11 and 12 in Amboise, France, and was part of the many 2019 celebratory events ‘500 years of Renaissance in the Val-de- Loire’ on the 500th anniversary year of the death of Leonardo Da Vinci.