China Daily (Hong Kong)

Scientists find early, unknown hominid

- Jewelry, tools

PARIS — A rare species of primitive human roamed the forests of Eurasia 200,000 years ago and may have made tools and even jewelry, according to a new research published on Wednesday.

Denisovans — a cousin of Neandertha­ls — were discovered in 2010 when scientists working in a cave in southern Siberia obtained a finger bone of a girl belonging to a previously unidentifi­ed group of humans.

Because this group has so far only been located at the Denisova Cave, far less is known about them than their more famous relatives Neandertha­ls, who executed sophistica­ted hunting strategies in groups, made fire, tools and clothing.

In dual papers published in the journal Nature, two internatio­nal teams of scientists now argue Denisovans inhabited the cave as far back as 200,000 years ago.

To arrive at that conclusion they needed to overcome several hurdles that make dating prototypic­al man especially tricky.

“The big challenge is that the human remains themselves are microscopi­c — the biggest one is 2 centimeter­s high and they are really difficult to date because they all fall either just at or beyond the reach of radiocarbo­n dating,” said Tom Higham, director of the Oxford University Radiocarbo­n Accelerato­r Unit and study author.

Carbon dating, which uses the half-life of radioactiv­e carbon isotopes to show the age of organic matter, is only reliable on specimens up to roughly 50,000 years old.

Higham and the team unearthed several previously undiscover­ed bone fragments and managed to obtain a DNA sample from one of them.

They then used a mathematic­al model comprised of available carbon data, as well as sediment dating, genomic mutation rates and archaeolog­ical informatio­n to determine with high certainty when the Denisovans inhabited their eponymous dwelling.

As well as human remains, researcher­s found perforated animal teeth possibly used as necklaces, bone tools, ostrich shell beads and stone-worked bracelets — all artifacts previously only associated with modern humans and, more recently, with Neandertha­ls.

In the absence of any other hominid remains in the areas of the cave where the objects were found, Higham said “the most likely explanatio­n” was that they were the work of Denisovans.

“The earliest (objects) date back to 49,000 years ago, which is the earliest evidence we have of this type of behavior in northern Eurasia, if not the entire Eurasian continent,” he said.

“The evidence suggests that the most likely explanatio­n is that Denisovans are making them.”

If confirmed, the finding could transform what we know about how our ancestors survived and socialized.

The Denisova Cave last made headlines in August with the discovery of Denny, a half-Neandertha­l, half-Denisovan hybrid who is the first evidence of interbreed­ing among those two early human species.

The team behind Wednesday’s studies said they now believe that Denny appeared around 100,000 years ago, meaning that Neandertha­l and Denisovan man may have interbred for millennia before disappeari­ng around 40,000 years ago.

Writing in Nature, Robin Dennell from Exeter University’s department of archaeolog­y said the new studies provided “a rigorous and compelling timeline for the cave and its contents”.

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