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C. Flower
23-12-2010, 08:29 PM
http://edition.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/asiapcf/12/23/siberia.human.ancestor.discovery/index.html?hpt=T2


The report is a bit vague, but a finger bone found in a Siberian cave two years ago now turns out to belong to a little girl of a human species somewhere "between neanderthal's and ourselves" - the wonders of genetic analysis...



An overlooked female pinkie bone put in storage after it was discovered in a Siberian cave two years ago points to the existence of a previously unknown prehistoric human species, anthropologists say.
And the lineage of that species may survive today in some people in Papua New Guinea and nearby islands, scientists say.
A report on the discovery of the finger was published in the December 23 edition of the scientific journal Nature.
Anthropologists say the 30,000- to 50,000-year-old finger is evidence of a new population of hominids they call Denisovans. The name is derived from the southern Siberian cave in which the finger bone was found.
Geneticists say the finger probably belonged to a 6- or 7-year-old girl.
"The whole story is incredible. It's like a surprising Christmas present," said Carles Lalueza Fox, a Spanish paleontologist not involved in the research who was quoted in the online article.
The 3 billion-letter nuclear genome derived from the child's finger shows that the ice-age population of early humans was more diverse than previously thought. Also, a comparison of the genome to modern humans indicates that Melanesian inhabitants of Papua New Guinea and various South Pacific islands inherited as much as 5 percent of their DNA from Denisovans.
The genome research was conducted at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany.
The Denisovans, the scientists say, were more closely related to Neanderthals than modern humans. The discovery in Siberia suggests they may have lived across a wide swath of Asia and are likely to have intermingled with the ancestors of modern humans who migrated eastward from Africa.

Lapsedmethodist
23-12-2010, 08:33 PM
More here:-
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-12059564

Andrew49
22-11-2011, 08:24 AM
' Evidence points to the existence of care and support networks within ancient human groups '

A healed fracture discovered on an ancient skull (unearthed at a cave near Maba, southern China, in 1958) from China may be the oldest documented evidence of violence between humans, a study has shown. The individual, who lived 150,000-200,000 years ago, suffered blunt force trauma to the right temple - possibly from being hit with a projectile. But the ancient hunter-gatherer - whose sex is unclear - survived to tell the tale: the injury was completely healed by the time of the person's death. PNAS Journal (http://www.pnas.org/content/suppl/2011/11/14/1117113108.DCSupplemental/pnas.201117113SI.pdf)

The Maba individual was not a modern human like us; it instead belonged to a poorly defined population of so-called "archaic" people who were living in East Asia at the same time the Neanderthals dominated Europe. It is possible that the Chinese specimen is linked to a mysterious population known as the Denisovans, who have been identified as a distinct group of ancient humans on the basis of DNA alone. The Maba individual survived for weeks or months at least" after sustaining the injury, based on the completely healed state of the fracture. Researchers believe such evidence points to the existence of care and support networks within ancient human groups.
"They hit each other, they squabbled, they had weaponry - so it became serious. But at the same time, they were helping each other out," Prof Trinkaus explained. The BBC (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-15823272)