Imperial Valley Press

Mom was Neandertha­l: Fossil shows mix of humankind’s cousins

- By FRANK JORDANS of Toronto, researcher­s excavate a

BERLIN (AP) — Scientists say they’ve found the remains of a prehistori­c female whose mother was a Neandertha­l and whose father belonged to another extinct group of human relatives known as Denisovans.

The 90,000-year-old bone fragment found in southern Siberia marks the first time a direct offspring of these two groups has been discovered, according to a study published Wednesday in the journal Nature.

Both groups disappeare­d by about 40,000 years ago. Neandertha­ls lived in Europe and Asia, while fossils of Denisovans are known only from the cave where the fragment was found.

Past genetic studies have shown interbreed­ing between the two groups, as well as with our own species, which left a trace in the DNA of today’s people. But the new study is the first to identify a first-generation child with Neandertha­l and Denisovan parents.

“It’s fascinatin­g to find direct evidence of this mixing going on,” said Svante Paabo, one of the study’s lead authors.

Paabo said he was surprised by the discovery, given how relatively few remains of our evolutiona­ry relatives have been found around the world.

The cave near Mongolia where the bone was found contains some remains attributed to Neandertha­ls as well as Denisovans. But finding an actual offspring of the two groups — which are more different from each other than any two present-day human groups — seemed like a rare stroke of luck, Paabo said.

“The fact that we stumbled across this makes you wonder if the mixing wasn’t quite frequent,” said Paabo, a geneticist at Max Planck Institute for Evolutiona­ry Anthropolo­gy in Leipzig, Germany.

The finding doesn’t reveal how often such mating occurred and where, said Ron Pinhasi, a physical anthropolo­gist at the University of Vienna who wasn’t involved in the study.

“Had it happened frequently, we would not have such divergence between the Denisovans and Neandertha­l genomes,” he said.

The newly discovered DNA could be interprete­d in different ways, said Anders Eriksson, evolutiona­ry population geneticist at King’s College London who wasn’t involved in the study.

“I think they convincing­ly showed that geneticall­y this individual falls halfway between the Neandertha­l and Denisovan fossils found in the same cave,” he said. “But I’m less convinced that it is necessaril­y a first-generation offspring of a union between Neandertha­l and Denisovan.”

The fossil could instead have come from a population with roughly an equal mix of Neandertha­l and Denisovan ancestry, he said. It will take analysis of more fossils to find out, he said.

The researcher­s said the small bone fragment likely came from the arm or leg of a female who was at least 13 years old at the time of death. Comparison with other ancient DNA showed that the genes she inherited from her mother were more closely related to Neandertha­ls who lived later in Europe than to other Neandertha­l remains found in the cave, suggesting a wave of westward migration.

 ??  ?? In this 2011 photo provided by Bence Viola of the University cave for Denisovan fossils in the Altai Krai area of Russia. Bence VIolA/DePArTmenT of AnThroPolo­gy UnIVersITy of ToronTo/mAx PlAnck InsTITUTe for eVolUTIonA­ry AnThroPolo­gy VIA AP
In this 2011 photo provided by Bence Viola of the University cave for Denisovan fossils in the Altai Krai area of Russia. Bence VIolA/DePArTmenT of AnThroPolo­gy UnIVersITy of ToronTo/mAx PlAnck InsTITUTe for eVolUTIonA­ry AnThroPolo­gy VIA AP

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