Luigi Luca Cavalli-Sforza (1922–2018) was a researcher whose work explored the relationships between human genetic diversity and historical migrations, integrating genetics and anthropology to determine how humans populated the world. Prior to his work in human genetics, Cavalli-Sforza studied genetic recombination in bacteria and helped determine the system of genetic inheritance within Escherichia coli in the late 1940s. After pivoting his research focus and assuming a long-term teaching and research position at Stanford University in Stanford, California, in 1971, Cavalli-Sforza participated in studies that modeled human migration, focusing on the global spread of agriculture during the Neolithic period. He was also one of the founders in the creation of the Human Genome Diversity Project, or HGDP, an international scientific collaboration launched in the early 1990s to map the genetic diversity of human populations across the globe. Cavalli-Sforza’s interdisciplinary approach to studying human history and human evolution left its mark on the fields of both genetics and anthropology in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.