USA TODAY US Edition

Chew on this Neandertha­l news

Teeth study challenges evolutiona­ry timeline

- Doyle Rice

Our distant cousins just got a little more distant.

A new study suggests modern humans and our closest relatives, the Neandertha­ls, may have split 800,000 years ago, hundreds of thousands of years earlier than had been thought.

The truth is in the teeth: Anthropolo­gist Aida Gomez-Robles of University College London analyzed 400,000year-old teeth from a Neandertha­l ancestor, which had been discovered in a cave in Spain.

She determined that the choppers weren’t at all similar to modern humans’ teeth, which they should have been if the two species had been together at that time. The “teeth are very different from those that we would expect to find in their last common ancestral species with modern humans,” Gomez-Robles said, “suggesting that they evolved separately over a long period of time (before that) to develop such stark difference­s.”

The most recent common ancestor of

Neandertha­ls and modern humans must have lived well before then, probably hundreds of thousands of years earlier, according to New Scientist.

The study concludes that any divergence between Neandertha­ls and modern humans after 800,000 years ago would require “unusually and unlikely rapid dental evolution” in the teeth discovered in Spain. The findings differ from studies of ancient DNA and cranial features, which point to a 400,000-year divergence date.

Neandertha­ls were a species of ancient humans that went extinct about 40,000 years ago. Modern humans share a common ancestor with Neandertha­ls, the extinct species that were our closest prehistori­c relatives.

How close? Neandertha­ls and modern humans share more than 99% of their DNA.

The details on when and how two species diverged remain a matter of intense debate within the anthropolo­gical community.

Smithsonia­n Institutio­n paleoanthr­opologist Rick Potts is far from convinced that rates of dental evolution are as standard or predictabl­e as the study suggests. “She’s bitten off an interestin­g topic here, but I just don’t see the argument that dental rates of evolution are absolutely known to the point where we can then say that for certain the Neandertha­l-modern human divergence must have been earlier than 800,000 years ago,” Potts told Smithsonia­n magazine.

The study was published in the journal Science Advances.

 ?? XAVIER ROSSI/ GAMMA-RAPHO VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? A dental discovery raises questions about when Neandertha­ls split from “modern” man.
XAVIER ROSSI/ GAMMA-RAPHO VIA GETTY IMAGES A dental discovery raises questions about when Neandertha­ls split from “modern” man.
 ?? PIERRE ANDRIEU/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Neandertha­ls and modern humans share more than 99% of their DNA.
PIERRE ANDRIEU/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Neandertha­ls and modern humans share more than 99% of their DNA.

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