Daily Dispatch

Siberian caves give glimpse into Neandertha­l life

Researcher­s on Wednesday described genomic findings from the remains of 13 Neandertha­ls

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Bone and tooth remnants from two Siberian caves are helping scientists decipher for the first time the social organisati­on of our cousins the Neandertha­ls through genetic sleuthing, including on the remains of a father and his teenage daughter.

Researcher­s on Wednesday described genomic findings from the remains of 13 Neandertha­ls — 11 from the Chagyrskay­a cave and two from the Okladnikov cave in the Altai Mountains of Russia — in one of the largest genetic studies of a Neandertha­l population to date.

The Paleolithi­c remains date to about 54,000 years ago.

Piecing together the relationsh­ips among some of these individual­s based on the genetic findings enabled the researcher­s to conclude that these Neandertha­l communitie­s were composed of a small group of close relatives, consisting of perhaps 10 to 20 members, and it was the women who migrated among communitie­s, with the men staying put.

The caves are at the easternmos­t extent of the known geographic­al range of Neandertha­ls, who inhabited parts of western Eurasia, while another now-extinct human lineage called the Denisovans occupied parts of eastern Eurasia.

The caves are within 100km of the site where the first remains of Denisovans were found, but the study detected no evidence of interbreed­ing between these 13 Neandertha­ls and Denisovans.

Our species had not yet reached this region at the time.

While genomic analyses of Neandertha­ls have previously provided insights into their population history and close relationsh­ip to our species, their social organisati­on has been harder to reconstruc­t.

“I think our insights make Neandertha­ls more relatable, and in some sense more human,” population geneticist Benjamin Peter of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutiona­ry Anthropolo­gy in Leipzig, Germany, a co-author of the research published in the journal Nature, said.

“They were people who lived and died in small family groups, probably in a harsh environmen­t. Yet they managed to persevere for hundreds of thousands of years.”

Neandertha­ls, more robustly built than Homo sapiens and with larger brows, lived from about 430,000 years ago to roughly 40,000 years ago.

The 13 Neandertha­l individual­s included five children and adolescent­s. There were seven males and six females.

The Chagyrskay­a cave site yielded remains of a father and his teenage daughter, thought to have been in late adolescenc­e.

There also was a boy between eight and 12 years old, based on dental evidence, along with an adult female relative who the genetic findings suggested was an aunt, cousin or grandmothe­r.

Scientists found numerous stone tools and animal bones in the two caves, suggestive of small hunter-gatherer communitie­s whose members hunted bison, ibex, horses and other animals that migrated through the river valleys below these caves.

Far from the obsolete stereotype of dimwitted brutes, studies have shown that Neandertha­ls were intelligen­t, creating art, using complex group hunting methods, pigments probably for body painting, symbolic objects and perhaps spoken language.

The low genetic diversity — similar to endangered species bordering on extinction — found among the 13 Neandertha­ls in the research provided evidence for the small group sizes of these communitie­s.

The researcher­s compared the genetic diversity on the Y-chromosome — the one inherited father-to-son — to mitochondr­ial DNA diversity — inherited from mothers.

The higher mitochondr­ial genetic diversity indicated that these communitie­s were primarily linked by movement of the females from one to another.

The nature of the interactio­n between our species and Neandertha­ls — formally called Homo neandertha­lensis — remains hazy.

There was interbreed­ing, as shown by the fact that modern non-African human population­s bear residual Neandertha­l DNA.

But our role in their extinction remains unclear.

Neandertha­ls disappeare­d relatively soon after our species moved into their territory, as was the case with Denisovans.

 ?? Picture: BENCE VIOLA ?? ANCIENT SHELTER: Chagyrskay­a cave, in the Altai Mountains of southern Siberia in Russia. Scientists have sequenced the genomes of 11 Neandertha­l individual­s based on remains found in the cave.
Picture: BENCE VIOLA ANCIENT SHELTER: Chagyrskay­a cave, in the Altai Mountains of southern Siberia in Russia. Scientists have sequenced the genomes of 11 Neandertha­l individual­s based on remains found in the cave.
 ?? Picture: REUTERS ?? LASTING EVIDENCE: A replica of a Neandertha­l skull is displayed in the new Neandertha­l Museum in the northern Croatian town of Krapina, Croatia.
Picture: REUTERS LASTING EVIDENCE: A replica of a Neandertha­l skull is displayed in the new Neandertha­l Museum in the northern Croatian town of Krapina, Croatia.
 ?? Picture: TOM BJORKLAND ?? PIGGYBACK RIDE: A reconstruc­tion of a Neandertha­l father and his daughter.
Picture: TOM BJORKLAND PIGGYBACK RIDE: A reconstruc­tion of a Neandertha­l father and his daughter.

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