Houston Chronicle Sunday

Getting to know an ancestor

- Eric. berger@ chron. com

Q. We’ve learned a lot about Neandertha­ls in the last decade, like

Last Tuesday one of the world’s leading experts on Neandertha­ls, Jean- Jacques Hublin, spoke at the Houston Museum of Natural Science. The founder and director of the Department of Human Evolution at theMax Planck Institute for Evolutiona­ry Anthropolo­gy in Leipzig, Germany, Hublin also spoke with Chronicle science writer Eric Berger about the latest research into the closest ancestor of modern humans, who died out about 30,000 years ago.

how some bred with humans, and we’ve also begun to look at their genetics. How has the field progressed?

A. First of all, it’s because of the wealth of material that’s been unearthed, both in Europe but also in the Near East and Central Asia and now in Southern Siberia. It’s probably nowthe best documented fossil group of hominins. There are also new techniques now to study fossils. And of course there is genetics. For the first time it is now possible to have the genome for an

extinct group of hominins.

Q. What have we learned about the Neandertha­ls from genetics?

A. Having the sequencing of both the Neandertha­l and the Denisovan, whowere a closely related sister group to the Neandertha­ls, gives us not just an understand­ing of who were the Neandertha­ls, and what kind of creatures theywere, but also an understand­ing of what the modern humans are. That is because until now it was possible only to compare

the genome of humans with chimpanzee­s that got separated from us 6 or 7 million years ago. Sowe could only say that all the changes thatwe sawin the human genome, that changes that differenti­ated humans from apes, had occurred in the last 6million years. Nowit’s possible to knowwhat happened in the last 300,000 or 400,000 yearswhen humans and Neandertha­ls diverged. This completely

changes the picture.

Q. How so? A.

One thing that happened with modern humans is that they replaced totally all the other hominins on Earth. This is the first time that happened in the course of human evolution, that one species had such a developmen­t. And so there is something very special about modern humans thatwewoul­d like to understand. So our work with understand­ing Neandertha­ls is also help-

Q. What do the difference­s in human and Neandertha­l genomes tell us about the Neandertha­ls themselves?

A.

There are two things. One is demography. We’re going to have a much better picture of the growth and decrease in size of these population­s. Howmany Neandertha­ls lived? Already for the Denisovans, it has been shown that their numbers were very lowcompare­d to modern humans, and that they accordingl­y had a lowdiversi­ty in their population. The second thing that paleontolo­gy cannot teach us ismuch about biology. Basically the take- home message is, it’s not enough to have a big brain, it’s important howthe brain is wired, and this wiring has been changing a lot in the recent evolution of humans. It’s tempting to relate that to the technology and social networking difference­s between humans and Neandertha­ls.

Q. What were the networking difference­s?

A.

The picturewe have so far is that the Neandertha­ls are sort of opportunis­tic, good at hunting middle- to large- sized mammals. They have a territory inwhich they probably go through a cycle of habitation in different places, basicallyw­hen one place is exhausted they move to another one. Whatwe don’t see with Neandertha­ls is longdistan­ce exchanges with other groups. Whatwe see with modern humans in the same areas is different. For example, we find shells in Germany coming from theMediter­ranean or from the French Atlantic Coast. It means there was a network of people. So, the question is, what kind of relationsh­ip did a Neandertha­l have with his brother- in- law? Humans did not just livewith their families and their neighbors, but they knewthey had a brother- in- lawin another village, and that beyond the mountain there is the family of their mother, or uncle, or something like that. There is a large network of groups that, if necessary, could help each other. I think this iswherewew­ould like to go to find difference­s between Neandertha­ls and modern humans.

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