The Denver Post

America’s first dogs vanished after Europeans arrived

- By Karin Brulliard

For thousands of years, dogs lived alongside early Americans. This humancanin­e partnershi­p has been gleaned through bones: The earliest dog remains found in North America were buried nearly 10,000 years ago in what is now Illinois. By 7,000 years ago, other bones show that “we have lots of dogs all over the place,” said Angela Perri, a zoo archaeolog­ist at Durham University in England.

But then, sometime after the 15th century, these ancient dogs disappeare­d. European colonists — and the canines they brought with them — all but wiped the early dogs’ genetic signature from Earth, according to the largest-ever study of ancient and modern dog DNA in North America and Siberia.

“This paper makes really clear that the ancient American dog appears to have almost entirely vanished, though nobody seems to have any good explanatio­ns for why,” said Elinor Karlsson, a University of Massachuse­tts professor who studies dog genetics and was not involved in the research, which was published Thursday in Science. “It’s almost like a huge chunk of history that’s been kind of lost.”

The researcher­s analyzed genetic material from 71 “pre-contact” dogs, whose remains spanned 9,000 years, and compared it with the DNA of 145 modern dogs. Just five of the modern samples contained even a hint of ancient dog — at most 4 percent.

The study also “pretty well put the kibosh” on any notion that the precontact dogs descended from North American wolves, said Perri, a lead author of the study. Instead, the analysis confirmed, the dogs were most closely related to an ancient Eastern Siberian stock. They came with humans who migrated from Asia, probably several thousand years after the first people arrived more than 15,000 years ago.

Those dogs remained isolated until about 1,000 years ago, when the Thule people brought over Arctic dogs that later gave rise to breeds such as the Alaskan malamute. A few hundred years later, Europeans came with their domesticat­ed dogs. A third introducti­on occurred in the 19th century, when Siberian huskies were imported as sled dogs during the Alaskan gold rush.

“Essentiall­y all the dogs, outside of the European ones, are coming from the same Siberian origin population, just at different points in time,” Perri said.

But it was the European wave of immigrants that spelled doom for American dogs, the study found. Perri said historical accounts suggest various possibilit­ies for the demise. Colonists may have killed the native dogs because they viewed them as pests or to prevent them from sullying the bloodlines of their own dogs, which were used for herding, hunting and protection. They may also have been eaten by starving settlers.

But Perri said disease is the most likely suspect, and Karlsson concurred.

The near-absence of pre-contact dog DNA in today’s pooches shows that breeds often touted as the oldest in the Americas, such as chihuahuas, are actually Eurasian in origin, Perri said. People bent on acquiring an ancient American breed, she said, should turn to malamutes or huskies, whose genes probably go back 1,000 years or so.

“We still have some Neandertha­l in us,” Perri said. “But modern dogs don’t have that ancient American dog DNA left in them.”

 ?? Matthew Jonas, Daily Camera ?? People bent on acquiring an ancient American dog breed should turn to malamutes — pictured here at the Boulder County Fair in Longmont on June 3 — or huskies, whose genes probably go back 1,000 years or so, says Angela Perri, a zoo archaeolog­ist at...
Matthew Jonas, Daily Camera People bent on acquiring an ancient American dog breed should turn to malamutes — pictured here at the Boulder County Fair in Longmont on June 3 — or huskies, whose genes probably go back 1,000 years or so, says Angela Perri, a zoo archaeolog­ist at...

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