Thursday, December 5, 2013
Ancient DNA from human relative sets age record
    
This    artist's rendering provided by Madrid Scientific Films in December 2013    shows Sima de los Huesos hominins who are estimated to have lived    approximately 400,000 years ago during the Middle Pleistocene.
    
      Experts said the work shows that new      techniques for working with ancient DNA may lead to more discoveries about      human origins.    
            NEW YORK — Scientists have reached farther back than ever into the        ancestry of humans to recover and analyze DNA, using a bone found in        Spain that's estimated to be 400,000 years old. So far, the achievement        has provided more questions than answers about our ancient forerunners.      
              The feat surpasses the previous age record of about 100,000 years for        genetic material recovered from members of the human evolutionary line.        Older DNA has been mapped from animals.      
              Experts said the work shows that new techniques for working with ancient        DNA may lead to more discoveries about human origins.      
              Results were presented online Wednesday in the journal Nature by        Matthias Meyer and colleagues at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in        Leipzig, Germany, with co-authors in Spain and China.      
              They retrieved the DNA from a thighbone found in a cave in northern        Spain. It is among thousands of fossils from at least 28 individuals to        be recovered from a chamber called the "Pit of the Bones." The remains        are typically classified as Homo heidelbergensis, but not everybody        agrees.      
              The age of the bones has been hard to determine. A rough estimate from        analyzing the DNA is around 400,000 years, which supports what Meyer        said is the current view of the anthropologists excavating the site.        Todd Disotell, an anthropology professor at New York University, said        geological techniques suggest the remains are older than 300,000 years        but it's not clear by how much. By comparison, modern humans arose only        about 200,000 years ago.      
              The researchers mapped almost the complete collection of so-called        mitochondrial DNA. While the DNA most people know about is found in the        nucleus of a cell, mitochondrial DNA lies outside the nucleus. It is        passed only from mother to child.      
              Researchers used the DNA to construct possible evolutionary family trees        that include the Spanish individuals and two groups that showed up much        later: Neanderthals and an evolutionary cousin of Neanderthals called        Denisovans. They assumed the DNA would show similarities to Neanderthal        DNA, since the Spanish fossils have anatomical features reminiscent of        Neanderthals.      
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By Malcolm Ritter of Associated Press


 
 
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