Posted on 05/06/2010 3:45:02 PM PDT by antidemoncrat
Neanderthals mated with some modern humans after all and left their imprint in the human genome, a team of biologists has reported in the first detailed analysis of the Neanderthal genetic sequence.
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
By “human” do you mean “homo sapiens”?
Dental analysis for a long time has indicated that there was Neanderthal descent among European populations.
DNA analysis, now that it has found this evidence, can give a quantifiable figure, like 4%. So out of every 100 great to the n-th power grandparents that a typical European person has, it is likely that 4 of them were Neanderthals.
That’s the one I was looking for!
He kinda looks French.
This preposes that there were a spontaneous creation of some population of Homo Sapiens.
Unless I’m mistaken (and I often am), isn’t Neanderthal actually older than Homo Sapiens? Thus, the logical assumption I’m going from is that a mutation of a Neanderthal mating resulted in Homo Sapiens, and this mutation was adept at surviving until sexual maturity, where it’s progeny created more Homo Sapiens.
And as these Homo Sapiens reproduced, at some stage the obvious differences between Homo Sapiens and Neanderthal, this would lead to a separation of the species. Homo Sapiens being more frail, but smarter would eventually replace the more rugged but less intelligent Neanderthal.
I thought this was another Sandra Bullock/Jesse James story.
bttt
Signs?
They really posted signs?
Must have been the humans. Neandros didn’t read or write very well...
Are you sure? Really sure? Signs?
One species doesn't die out simply because a new species arises from an isolated European population. That species can also give rise to other species that spread out over the Earth, and could perhaps produce fertile crossbreeds with that other older species.
Follow?
They had cigars back then? |
LOL!
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Gods |
Obviously, whomever it is, they need to keep the blinds down. Thanks blam and Palter. :')Just adding to the catalog, not sending a general distribution.The Neandertal EnigmaFrayer's own reading of the record reveals a number of overlooked traits that clearly and specifically link the Neandertals to the Cro-Magnons. One such trait is the shape of the opening of the nerve canal in the lower jaw, a spot where dentists often give a pain-blocking injection. In many Neandertal, the upper portion of the opening is covered by a broad bony ridge, a curious feature also carried by a significant number of Cro-Magnons. But none of the alleged 'ancestors of us all' fossils from Africa have it, and it is extremely rare in modern people outside Europe." [pp 126-127] |
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Is that you Barry? Barry Hussein?
Evidence that beer is older than we thought........
bump
Neanderthal DNA found in the populations that left Africa and later split off to Europe and Asia, but not found in populations that remained in Africa.
Of course they did. Their offspring are running around Washington right now...every day.
The research indicated 1% to 4%. The 4% you, allmendream, mentioned is the high end. They compared the genomes of only five modern humans. One person to represent each 'race'. Sample size of 1, miniscule, to represent an entire population. Also to be considered is that some of the Neanderthal genome was reconstructed using software and current understanding of how DNA is chemically degraded; maybe there was some bias towards reconstruction in a modern human direction? The researchers' hypothesis is that admixture with a small number of Neanderthals occurred as modern humans - a relatively small group of them - were exiting Africa into Eurasia. That's why, to them, Neanderthal genes are so widespread, based on the five genomes they compared against. And why the Middle East is mentioned; the researchers argue that most of modern humanity, not just Middle Easterners, have a little Neanderthal ancestry.
Dental analysis does not mean much in terms of ancestry. Neanderthals also sometimes had red hair, which might lead some to conclude continuity between Neanderthal redheads and modern redhead descendants. But the Neanderthals' red hair was caused by a different mutation than moderns'; it's just that both mutations shut off eumelanin production in hair follicles. It definitely did not indicate. At most it suggested. Maybe there is something about the foods in that region that select for a particular tooth shape, just as maybe there is something in that environment that causes selection for red hair - or conversely the rest of the world causes red hair to not be favored?
And even if this research is correct in declaring that most humans have a small degree of Neanderthal ancestry, there is absolutely no way Australian Aborigines are homo erectus. The date of divergence, according to evolutionary theory, was far too long ago, the distance is much greater than that between homo sapiens and Neanderthals. They could not breed offspring. And yet Australian Aborigines can produce fertile offspring with white people - and presumably with members of other 'races' - to the same extent as other interracial couples. Not to mention, at least one Australian Aborigine has had his genome sequenced, and he came out homo sapiens. To make a long story short: DNA infinitely trumps morphology in providing evidence of descent.
http://www.sciencemag.org/special/neandertal/feature/index.html
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