Guy's got a strong accent and the volume is quite low.
The ANE discussed is called Yana RHS: Yana river, “Rhinoceros Horn Site” (RHS)
Heres some background
These Ice Age Humans Somehow Survived North of the Arctic Circle
Here's the paper
The population history of northeastern
Siberia since the Pleistocene - Sikora et al 2019
Dan Davis is also a writer of historical fiction covering various periods. He has written some decent stuff covering the Indo-European expansion, among much else. I enjoyed this book. It is a typical historical fiction in some ways, but he covers the culture and period pretty well.
The Transformation of Europe in the Third Millennium BC:
the example of ‘Le Petit-Chasseur I + III’ (Sion, Valais, Switzerland)
https://sci-hub.do/10.1515/PZ.2007.010
"The megalithic cemetery of Sion-‘Le Petit Chasseur I+III’ offers a unique chance to analyse patterns of social change throughout most of the third millennium BC, and to demonstrate how a local population adjusts to the pan-European ideological changes of that period. Our analysis of the funeral monuments, the anthropomorphic stelae, and the material remains (which form three independent Quellengruppen) shows the tensions between tradition and innovation, and the successive adaptions of a local Late Neolithic population to the different
branches of the Bell Beaker ideology and the Early Bronze Age. We compare Sion with the similar structured site of Aosta-‘St.Martin-de-Corléans’, and locate both complexes in the wider framework of Europe in the third millennium BC. The comparison extends to include the immigration of the Yamnaya populations from the northern Pontic steppes into east and southeast Europe, and ends with the emergence of the Bell Beaker phenomenon on
the west of the Iberian Peninsula. This is all set into the wider transformation horizon between 2900 and 2700 BC. Specific innovations are described and analysed"