Waterloo Region Record

Digging DNA out of the dirt: Tracing ancient humans found in ‘empty’ caves

- Frank Jordans

BERLIN — No bones? No problem!

Scientists say they’ve figured out a way to extract tiny traces of ancient human DNA from dirt in caves that lack skeletal remains.

The technique could be valuable for reconstruc­ting human evolutiona­ry history, according to the study published Thursday in the journal Science.

That’s because fossilized bones, currently the main source of ancient DNA, are scarce even at sites where circumstan­tial evidence points to a prehistori­c human presence.

“There are many caves where stone tools are found but no bones,” said Matthias Meyer, a geneticist at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutiona­ry Anthropolo­gy in Leipzig, Germany, who co-authored the study.

The researcher­s collected 85 sediment samples from seven caves in Europe and Russia that humans are known to have entered or even lived in between 14,000 and 550,000 years ago.

By refining a method previously used to find plant and animal DNA, they were able to search specifical­ly for genetic material belonging to ancient humans and other mammals.

Scientists focused on mitochondr­ial DNA, which is passed down the maternal line, because it is particular­ly suited to telling apart closely related species. And by analyzing damaged molecules they were able to separate ancient genetic material from any contaminat­ion left behind by modern visitors

The researcher­s found evidence of 12 mammal families including extinct species such as woolly mammoth, woolly rhinoceros, cave bear and cave hyena.

By further enriching the samples for human-like DNA, however, the scientists were able to detect genetic traces of Denisovans — a mysterious lineage of ancient humans first discovered in a cave in Siberia — and Neandertha­ls from samples taken at four sites.

Crucially, one of the sites where they discovered Neandertha­l DNA was a cave in Belgium, known as Trou Al’Wesse, where no human bones had ever been found, though stone artifacts and animal bones with cut marks strongly suggested people had visited it.

Eske Willerslev, who helped pioneer the search for DNA in sediment but wasn’t involved in the latest research, said the new study was an interestin­g step, but cautioned that it’s difficult to determine how old sediment samples found in caves are.

“In general (it) is very disturbed and unless you can show that’s not the case you have no idea of the date of the findings,” said Willerslev, an evolutiona­ry geneticist at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark.

Meyer said the new method greatly increases the number of sites where archaeolog­ists will be able to find genetic evidence to help fill gaps in the history of human evolution and migration, such as how widespread Neandertha­l population­s were and which stone tools they were able to make.

Scientists may also be able to greatly expand their limited knowledge of the Denisovans, whose DNA can still be found in Melanesian­s and Aboriginal Australian­s today, by using the new procedure.

“In principle, every cave where there’s evidence of human activity now offers this possibilit­y,” Meyer told The Associated Press.

 ?? JOHANNES KRAUSE, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A researcher samples sediment at an archeologi­cal site in Belgium.
JOHANNES KRAUSE, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A researcher samples sediment at an archeologi­cal site in Belgium.

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