We investigate a network growth model in which the genealogy controls the
evolution. In this model, a new node selects a random target node and links
either to this target node, or to its parent, or to its grandparent, etc; all
nodes from the target node to its most ancient ancestor are equiprobable
destinations. The emerging random ancestor tree is very shallow: the fraction
g_n of nodes at distance n from the root decreases super-exponentially with n,
g_n=e^{-1}/(n-1)!. We find that a macroscopic hub at the root coexists with
highly connected nodes at higher generations. The maximal degree of a node at
the nth generation grows algebraically as N^{1/beta_n} where N is the system
size. We obtain the series of nontrivial exponents which are roots of
transcendental equations: beta_1= 1.351746, beta_2=1.682201, etc. As a
consequence, the fraction p_k of nodes with degree k has algebraic tail, p_k ~
k^{-gamma}, with gamma=beta_1+1=2.351746.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure