Researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, have retrieved nuclear genome sequences from the femur of a male Neanderthal discovered in 1937 in Hohlenstein-Stadel Cave, Germany, and from the maxillary bone of a Neanderthal girl found in 1993 in Scladina Cave, Belgium. Both Neandertals lived around 120,000 years ago, and therefore predate most of the Neanderthals whose genomes have been sequenced to date.
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The Maxillary bone of a Neanderthal girl from Scladina Cave, Belgium [Credit: © J. Eloy, AWEM, Archéologie andennaise] |
By examining the nuclear genomes of these two individuals, the researchers could show that these early Neanderthals in Western Europe were more closely related to the last Neanderthals who lived in the same region as much as 80,000 years later, than they were to contemporaneous Neanderthals living in Siberia.
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The femur of a male Neanderthal from Hohlenstein-Stadel Cave, Germany [Credit: © Oleg Kuchar, Museum Ulm] |
"The result is truly extraordinary and a stark contrast to the turbulent history of replacements, large-scale admixtures and extinctions that is seen in modern human history", says Kay Prüfer who supervised the study.
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Scladina Cave [Credit: D. Bonjean, © Archéologie andennaise] |
Intriguingly, unlike the nuclear genome, the mitochondrial genome of the Neanderthal from Hohlenstein-Stadel Cave in Germany is quite different from that of later Neanderthals - a previous report showed that more than 70 mutations distinguish it from the mitochondrial genomes of other Neanderthals.
Processing of samples in the ancient DNA laboratory and analysis of the sequencing data generated
[Credit: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology]
The study is published in Science Advances.
Source: Max Planck Society [June 26, 2019]
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