Mum's a Neanderthal, Dad's a Denisovan: First discovery of an ancient-human hybrid [View all]
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-018-06004-0
A female who died around 90,000 years ago was half Neanderthal and half Denisovan, according to genome analysis of a bone discovered in a Siberian cave. This is the first time scientists have identified an ancient individual whose parents belonged to distinct human groups. The findings were published on 22 August in Nature1.
To find a first-generation person of mixed ancestry from these groups is absolutely extraordinary, says population geneticist Pontus Skoglund at the Francis Crick Institute in London. Its really great science coupled with a little bit of luck.
The team, led by palaeogeneticists Viviane Slon and Svante Pääbo of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, conducted the genome analysis on a single bone fragment recovered from Denisova Cave in the Altai Mountains of Russia. This cave lends its name to the Denisovans, a group of extinct humans first identified on the basis of DNA sequences from the tip of a finger bone discovered2 there in 2008. The Altai region, and the cave specifically, were also home to Neanderthals.
Given the patterns of genetic variation in ancient and modern humans, scientists already knew that Denisovans and Neanderthals must have bred with each other and with Homo sapiens (See 'Tangled Tree'). But no one had previously found the first-generation offspring from such pairings, and Pääbo says that he questioned the data when his colleagues first shared them. I thought they must have screwed up something. Before the discovery of the NeanderthalDenisovan individual, whom the team has affectionately named Denny, the best evidence for so close an association was found in the DNA of a Homo sapiens specimen who had a Neanderthal ancestor within the previous 46 generations3.
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