{'key': 'E2DLKXPV', 'version': 8800, 'library': {'type': 'group', 'id': 4590879, 'name': 'EmarBIB', 'links': {'alternate': {'href': 'https://www.zotero.org/groups/emarbib', 'type': 'text/html'}}}, 'links': {'self': {'href': 'https://api.zotero.org/groups/4590879/items/E2DLKXPV', 'type': 'application/json'}, 'alternate': {'href': 'https://www.zotero.org/groups/emarbib/items/E2DLKXPV', 'type': 'text/html'}}, 'meta': {'createdByUser': {'id': 10924589, 'username': 'jp.vita', 'name': '', 'links': {'alternate': {'href': 'https://www.zotero.org/jp.vita', 'type': 'text/html'}}}, 'creatorSummary': 'Meredith', 'parsedDate': '2017', 'numChildren': 0}, 'data': {'key': 'E2DLKXPV', 'version': 8800, 'itemType': 'magazineArticle', 'title': 'More than 4,000 years of genetic continuity in Lebanon', 'creators': [{'creatorType': 'author', 'firstName': 'Brand', 'lastName': 'Meredith'}], 'abstractNote': 'Lebanon is an ancient crossroad and the site of great human movement over thousands of years. But, what has been the impact on local populations of millennia of arrival and departure? Marc Haber – a Lebanese postdoctoral fellow at the Sanger Institute – and his team sequenced the entire genome from ancient Canaanite human remains and modern Lebanese populations to answer this question.', 'publicationTitle': 'Nature Middle East', 'publisher': '', 'place': '', 'date': '2017', 'volume': '', 'issue': '', 'pages': '', 'ISSN': '', 'DOI': '', 'citationKey': '', 'url': 'https://www.natureasia.com/en/nmiddleeast/article/10.1038/nmiddleeast.2017.130', 'accessDate': '', 'archive': '', 'archiveLocation': '', 'shortTitle': '', 'language': '', 'libraryCatalog': '', 'callNumber': '', 'rights': '', 'extra': 'Haber, M. et al. Continuity and admixture in the last five millennia of Levantine history from ancient Canaanite and present-day Lebanese genome sequences. American Journal of Human Genetics 101, 1-9 (2017).', 'tags': [], 'collections': ['PA349TTQ'], 'relations': {}, 'dateAdded': '2026-03-11T11:42:13Z', 'dateModified': '2026-03-11T11:45:09Z'}}