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Thursday, September 25, 2008 - 7:53 PM
Louis J. Sheehan. Genetic material that Italian researchers extracted from the bones of European Stone Age Homo sapiens, sometimes called Cro-Magnons, bolsters the theory that people evolved independently of Neandertals, the team proposes. Fossils of two anatomically modern H. sapiens
found in a southern Italian cave yielded mitochondrial DNA, which is
inherited from the mother, say Giorgio Bertorelle of the University of
Ferrara in Italy and his colleagues. The DNA contains chemical
sequences that resemble those of people today but differ substantially
from those previously isolated from four Neandertal specimens, the
scientists report. One of the Italian Cro-Magnons dates to 25,000
years ago; the other to 23,000 years ago. Neandertal fossils that have
yielded mitochondrial DNA range from about 29,000 to 42,000 years old
(SN: 4/1/00, p. 213: http://www.sciencenews.org/20000401/fob2.asp). "These
results are at odds with the view [that] Neandertals were genetically
related with the anatomically modern ancestors of current Europeans or
contributed to the present-day human gene pool," Bertorelle's group
concludes. http://louis1j1sheehan1.blogspot.com
Contamination of ancient DNA can occur easily.
However, the mitochondrial DNA obtained from the Cro-Magnon bones
exhibits no trace of genetic material from other animals unearthed in
the Italian cave or from people who have handled the bones, the
scientists assert in the May 27 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The
researchers compared Cro-Magnon genetic sequences from an especially
variable stretch of mitochondrial DNA with corresponding sequences from
Neandertal fossils and from 80 people now living in Europe or western
Asia. Cro-Magnon
sequences fall within a genetic category shared by people today but not
by Neandertals, the scientists report. This result aligns with the
theory that modern H. sapiens originated in Africa around
150,000 years ago and then replaced Neandertals in Europe rather than
interbred with them, Bertorelle and his coworkers say. Mark
Stoneking of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in
Leipzig, Germany, an advocate of this single-origin model of human
evolution, nonetheless regards the new evidence with caution. He hasn't
seen the report but worries that the Cro-Magnon DNA is contaminated.
However, mitochondrial DNA analyses of living people align with the
single-origin, or out-of-Africa, scenario, Stoneking says. Adherents
of the contrasting multiregional-origin theory of evolution view the
Cro-Magnon findings even more skeptically. They argue that anatomically
variable H. sapiens in Europe, Africa, and Asia interbred enough over the past 1 million years or more to evolve as a single species. http://louis1j1sheehan1.blogspot.com
The
reported genetic differences between Cro-Magnons and Neandertals may be
consistent with interbreeding of small Neandertal and large H. sapiens populations, comments John H. Relethford of the State University of New York at Oneonta. Moreover,
if mitochondrial-DNA alterations spread quickly by providing survival
advantages instead of gradually by chance, as is usually assumed (SN:
2/6/99, p. 88: http://www.sciencenews.org/sn_arc99/2_6_99/bob1.htm),
then such evidence can't be used to reconstruct ancient human
evolution, he notes. Statistical analyses of worldwide living
populations' nuclear DNA�the DNA that holds most of a person's
genes�indicate that interbreeding of H. sapiens and other
Stone Age Asian or European groups, if not Neandertals, contributed to
modern humanity's evolution, remarks Alan R. Templeton of Washington
University in St. Louis. Louis J. Sheehan
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