Posted on 12/19/2013 12:22:35 PM PST by 2ndDivisionVet
A high-quality genome sequence obtained from a female Neanderthal toe bone reveals that the individuals parents were close relatives and that such inbreeding was prevalent among her recent ancestors, according to a paper published today (December 18) in Nature. But the sequence also reveals that interbreeding occurred between Neanderthals and other hominin groups, including early modern humans.
Did humans evolve like a constantly branching tree? A lot of people think so, said Milford Wolpoff, a professor of anthropology at the University of Michigan, who was not involved in the study. But theres also been this thread of thought, by some people like me, that humans evolved more like a network, where there are different populations and they split and sometimes they come back together and they mate. The new toe bone sequence data, he said, is really important because its giving us good evidence that theres been constant interbreeding between different human groups all through prehistory.
The toe bone was found in a cave in Denisova, Siberia, where the conditions for DNA preservation are near-perfect. The cave year-round has an average temperature of zero degrees Celsius and thats probably helping to contribute to the preservation, explained John Hawks, a professor of anthropology at the University of Wisconsin, who also did not participate in the study.
Indeed, the toe bone and its DNA were so well preserved that it was possible to obtain sequence data that is on the same level, as far as quality goes, as many other modern human genomes, said Kay Prüfer, an evolutionary geneticist from the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, who led the study. For every position in the genome we have on average 50 fragments covering it, which is amazing, he said. Just how amazing? Previously sequenced Neanderthal genomes have average coverages of 0.5 to 1.3.
Also amazing, was the fact that the toe bone was Neanderthal at all. Previous bone and tooth samples found in the cave had yielded high-quality DNA sequences identified as belonging to a new and different group of hominins called the Denisovans, who were named after the location. We were expecting that it [the toe] would be another Denisovan, said Prüfer, but, to our surprise, it wasnt.
Another surprise followed. The high degree of coverage allowed the team to observe subtle sequence differences that were present in the maternal and paternal copies of the chromosomes. But what we actually saw was that there are long stretches where the two copies of the chromosomes were actually very, very similar, said Prüfer, and that essentially means that the two parents must have been closely related. From the teams calculations, the parents were likely half siblings, an uncle and niece, or similar. And further sequence analysis indicated that inbreeding had been typical among the individuals recent ancestors. In fact, the level of variation was among the lowest observed for any organism, Prüfer said.
Despite the high degree of inbreeding that took place in the family of this particular Neanderthalnamed the Altai Neanderthalthere was also evidence that Neanderthals in general interbred with other hominin groups. The team compared the genomes of the Altai Neanderthal, a Denisovan, a number of modern humans, and Neanderthals from Croatia and the Caucasus mountains, and confirmed earlier indications that modern humans contain both Neanderthal and Denisovan DNA.
They also showed that Denisovans contained both Neanderthal DNA sequencesmost similar to that from the Altai Neanderthaland sequences absent from Neanderthals and modern humans, which thus appear to have come from an unknown archaic hominin group.
The general picture is that we have lots of different admixtures. So we see that any type of human group . . . seems to have some exchange of [genetic] material with another group, Prüfer said.
Besides revealing the complexities of ancient hominin mating habits, the high-quality Neanderthal and Denisovan genomes should also help scientists better understand modern humans, said Prüfer. We can now ask: What are the variants on the human lineage that are definitely new and that we all have and. . . that enabled us to do certain things that Neanderthals and Denisovans didnt accomplish, including growing to now seven billion people, living all over the planet, and having airplanes to go from A to B? If there is some genetic basis to that, then it is hidden in these changes, he said.
The good news, said Hawks, is that such genetic changes are few. There is not that much that sets modern humans apart from these ancient people . . . and thats a pretty cool message, he said.
K. Prüfer et al., The complete genome sequence of a Neanderthal from the Altai Mountains, Nature, doi:10.1038/nature12886, 2013.
So easy even a caveman can have sex.
(He's the one to the left of the Bigfoot hunters and young witness.)
Neanderthal and Denisovan DNA is not found in native born Africans.
That, of course, would fracture the politically correct conventional wisdom that all modern humans evolved on the exact same evolutionary branch from Africa.
I'm going to guess that Progressive journalists and Progressive academics are going to avoid that topic as long as they can.
I’m thinking you are correct.
Multi-regional evolution has been sidelined for a long time before these discoveries, for that very reason. But in parts of the world where academics aren’t encouraged to look like pajama boy, it has had better respect, even, if I recall correctly, being the dominant model.
Actually the from what i have seen it seems as per anthropological geneticist that the human race was almost wiped out ~50-100k years ago and we are all derived from a group of ~ 200 IIRC Bushmen in S Africa.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-dDXIX-y6aY
Fascinating video.
The Mating Habits of Early Hominins: “Nail it”.
What was his wrestling name?
“But the sequence also reveals that interbreeding occurred between Neanderthals and other hominin groups, including early modern humans.”
Oh my. This is going to open a whole new can of worms.
This may be what defines the races of today.
If you are _________ you are __% Neanderthal. I look for
this area of genetic anthropology to be shut down and all
data destroyed or hidden from the public soon.
I found it, and married her, but I digress.. ;)
I’d have to look it up...
Boxing.
The Russian Giant
Indeed he is! Trust me, I know these things........
WHAT If...... there were no... Neanderthals?....
They were just a gleam in some ones eye?..
-OR- a reason for an academic financial grant.. from givernment..
-OR- left wing controlled foundation...
Hey.... it’s possible... just a scam for academic funding..
Maybe not a pot induced gambit from some hippy...
i.e. Berkely.. Princeton, Yale, Harvard... Columbia...
BUT... that is always possible as well.. many professors are stoners..
Neanderthal forehead, Australopithecus cheekbones, Cro-Magnon jaw and chin.
There are certain parts of the Middle East where this study of inbreeding among primitive humanoids could be conducted on a live population group.
ping
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