The Japan Times - First 'concrete picture' of Neanderthal family revealed by DNA

EUR -
AED 4.341785
AFN 78.028377
ALL 96.794245
AMD 447.408056
ANG 2.11631
AOA 1084.117105
ARS 1708.386003
AUD 1.685211
AWG 2.128038
AZN 2.017355
BAM 1.960748
BBD 2.380056
BDT 144.414407
BGN 1.985424
BHD 0.445611
BIF 3501.479859
BMD 1.182243
BND 1.50209
BOB 8.16557
BRL 6.182655
BSD 1.181707
BTN 106.765406
BWP 16.322186
BYN 3.385743
BYR 23171.966812
BZD 2.376587
CAD 1.612887
CDF 2547.733818
CHF 0.915763
CLF 0.025819
CLP 1019.496041
CNY 8.212449
CNH 8.198939
COP 4294.001899
CRC 586.875925
CUC 1.182243
CUP 31.329445
CVE 110.54394
CZK 24.342628
DJF 210.108732
DKK 7.469998
DOP 74.407756
DZD 153.532609
EGP 55.578023
ERN 17.733648
ETB 183.298149
FJD 2.600108
FKP 0.865982
GBP 0.862996
GEL 3.186157
GGP 0.865982
GHS 12.945611
GIP 0.865982
GMD 86.89204
GNF 10367.159897
GTQ 9.063871
GYD 247.231168
HKD 9.235725
HNL 31.220781
HRK 7.537507
HTG 155.001121
HUF 380.895706
IDR 19811.736064
ILS 3.643691
IMP 0.865982
INR 106.96706
IQD 1548.00615
IRR 49801.995185
ISK 145.03801
JEP 0.865982
JMD 185.187291
JOD 0.83826
JPY 184.069945
KES 152.509252
KGS 103.387394
KHR 4768.031377
KMF 494.17727
KPW 1064.003808
KRW 1713.939315
KWD 0.363061
KYD 0.984785
KZT 592.444942
LAK 25418.030902
LBP 105820.273269
LKR 365.762945
LRD 219.792753
LSL 18.92716
LTL 3.490857
LVL 0.715127
LYD 7.470852
MAD 10.839652
MDL 20.011496
MGA 5237.193083
MKD 61.635428
MMK 2482.852516
MNT 4218.751034
MOP 9.509455
MRU 47.173034
MUR 54.253261
MVR 18.265934
MWK 2049.131324
MXN 20.399027
MYR 4.649168
MZN 75.368338
NAD 18.92716
NGN 1640.268227
NIO 43.48974
NOK 11.392335
NPR 170.82505
NZD 1.95491
OMR 0.454565
PAB 1.181677
PEN 3.978138
PGK 5.062775
PHP 69.823313
PKR 330.49034
PLN 4.223948
PYG 7839.782457
QAR 4.296943
RON 5.096056
RSD 117.429818
RUB 90.880676
RWF 1724.637263
SAR 4.433506
SBD 9.526636
SCR 16.235881
SDG 711.191278
SEK 10.530098
SGD 1.501277
SHP 0.886989
SLE 28.93537
SLL 24791.048015
SOS 674.201241
SRD 45.060612
STD 24470.047398
STN 24.561978
SVC 10.340092
SYP 13075.107266
SZL 18.934017
THB 37.422757
TJS 11.043059
TMT 4.149674
TND 3.417123
TOP 2.846558
TRY 51.402393
TTD 8.004163
TWD 37.347027
TZS 3054.963258
UAH 51.139442
UGX 4212.629909
USD 1.182243
UYU 45.51485
UZS 14466.503946
VES 439.369533
VND 30740.687809
VUV 141.322495
WST 3.223169
XAF 657.616391
XAG 0.013968
XAU 0.000239
XCD 3.195071
XCG 2.129674
XDR 0.817015
XOF 657.616391
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.817205
ZAR 18.869668
ZMK 10641.599935
ZMW 23.190419
ZWL 380.68183
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • RYCEF

    0.3300

    17

    +1.94%

  • BTI

    0.9000

    61.89

    +1.45%

  • RELX

    -5.4650

    30.065

    -18.18%

  • RIO

    2.2950

    94.815

    +2.42%

  • CMSC

    -0.0900

    23.66

    -0.38%

  • NGG

    1.4380

    86.048

    +1.67%

  • CMSD

    -0.1700

    23.91

    -0.71%

  • GSK

    0.5150

    52.985

    +0.97%

  • VOD

    0.2650

    15.175

    +1.75%

  • AZN

    -2.5900

    185.82

    -1.39%

  • JRI

    -0.0250

    13.125

    -0.19%

  • BCE

    0.3550

    26.185

    +1.36%

  • BP

    0.4550

    38.155

    +1.19%

  • BCC

    2.5600

    84.31

    +3.04%

First 'concrete picture' of Neanderthal family revealed by DNA
First 'concrete picture' of Neanderthal family revealed by DNA / Photo: PATRICK BERNARD - AFP/File

First 'concrete picture' of Neanderthal family revealed by DNA

The original Flintstones? The largest genetic study of Neanderthals ever conducted has offered an unprecedented snapshot of a family, including a father and his teenage daughter, who lived in a Siberian cave around 54,000 years ago.

Text size:

The new research, published in the journal Nature on Wednesday, used DNA sequencing to look at the social life of a Neanderthal community, finding that women were more likely to stray from the cave than men.

Previous archaeological excavations have shown that Neanderthals were more sophisticated than once thought, burying their dead and making elaborate tools and ornaments.

However little is known about their family structure or how their society was organised.

The sequencing of the first Neanderthal genome in 2010, which won Swedish paleogeneticist Svante Paabo the medicine Nobel prize earlier this month, offered a new way to discover more about our long extinct forerunners.

An international team of researchers focused on multiple Neanderthal remains found in the Chagyrskaya and Okladnikov caves in southern Siberia.

The scattered fragments of bones were mostly in a single layer in the earth, suggesting the Neanderthals lived around the same time.

"First we had to identify how many individuals we had," Stephane Peyregne, an evolutionary geneticist at Germany's Max Planck Institute and one of the study's co-authors, told AFP.

- 'Seem much more human' -

The team used new techniques to extract and isolate the ancient DNA from the remains.

By sequencing the DNA, they established there were 13 Neanderthals, seven males and six females. Five of the group were children or early adolescents.

Eleven were from the Chagyrskaya cave, many of them from the same family including the father and his teenage daughter, as well as a young boy and a woman who were second-degree relatives, such as a cousin, aunt or grandmother.

The researchers also worked out that one man was a maternal relative of the father because he had a genetic phenomenon called heteroplasmy, which only passes down a couple of generations.

"Our study provides a concrete picture of what a Neandertal community may have looked like," Max Planck's Benjamin Peter, who supervised the research along with Paabo, said in a statement.

"It makes Neandertals seem much more human to me," he added.

Genetic analysis showed that the group did not interbreed with its nearby relatives such as humans and Denisovans, hominins discovered by Paabo in caves just a few hundred kilometres away.

However we know that Neanderthals did breed with homo sapiens at some point -- Paabo's research also revealed that almost all modern humans have a little Neanderthal DNA.

- Rampant inbreeding -

The community of around 10 to 20 Neanderthals seems to have instead bred largely among themselves, displaying very little genetic diversity, the study found.

Neanderthals existed between 430,000 to 40,000 years ago, so this group was living in the twilight of its species.

The study compared the community's level of inbreeding to endangered mountain gorillas. Another explanation for the inbreeding could be that the Neanderthals lived in an isolated region.

"We are probably dealing with a very subdivided population," Peyregne said.

The researchers found that the group's Y-chromosomes, which are inherited from father to son, were far less diverse than its mitochondrial DNA, which is inherited from mothers.

This suggests that the women travelled more frequently to interact and breed with different groups of Neanderthals, while the men largely stayed home.

Antoine Balzeau, a palaeoanthropologist at France's National Museum of Natural History, said that fossils found in the Sidron Cave in Spain prompted suggestions of a similar Neanderthal community there, but far less complete genetic material is available.

Balzeau, who was not involved in the latest study, said it was "a very interesting technical feat".

But "it will have to be compared with other groups" of Neanderthals, he added.

K.Tanaka--JT