Dwarkesh Podcast

David Reich – Why the Bronze Age was an inflection point in human evolution

513 snips
May 8, 2026
David Reich, a leading ancient DNA geneticist, explains why natural selection sped up around the Bronze Age. He describes how large-scale ancient DNA reveals rapid shifts in immune, metabolic, pigmentation, body-fat, and cognitive-related gene frequencies. He also offers a provocative rethinking of Neanderthals as genetically swamped modern-human offshoots and outlines the methods behind these discoveries.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
INSIGHT

Immune And Metabolic Loci Dominate Detectable Selection

  • Immune and metabolic traits show strong enrichment among detected selection signals, while behavioral traits show weaker enrichment.
  • Reich explains behavioral traits are highly polygenic (many tiny-effect loci), so current power detects immune/metabolic signals more easily.
INSIGHT

Bronze Age Was An Inflection Point For Selection

  • Selection intensified during the Bronze Age (roughly 4,000–2,000 years ago) across immune and metabolic loci.
  • Reich links this to higher population density, closer contact with animals, and new disease pressures as people shifted to urbanized farming and pastoralist lifestyles.
INSIGHT

Genetic Predictors Of Education And Cognition Rose In Bronze Age

  • Polygenic predictors for cognitive performance and years of schooling rose substantially over the last 10,000 years, mostly between ~4,000–2,000 years ago.
  • Reich reports an increase on the order of ~1 standard deviation across the period, concentrated in the Bronze Age window.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app