Researchers have created the largest human family tree ever, dating back to 100,000 years, which can predict common ancestors, including approximately when and where they lived. The study, published on Thursday in the journal Science, could have widespread applications in medical research, for instance identifying genetic predictors of disease risk. Until now, the main challenges in developing such a family tree were working out a way to combine genome sequences from many different databases and developing algorithms to handle data of this size. However, a new method developed by researchers at the University of Oxford in the UK can easily combine data from multiple sources and scale to accommodate millions of genome sequences. The method predicts common ancestors, including approximately when and where they lived, they said.