‘Super-archaic’ human mated with the primitive ancestor of both Denisovans and Neanderthals 700,000 years ago
- Researchers used special software to compare the DNA of ancient human fossils
- They also found that Denisovans and Neanderthals split 600,000 years ago
- This is a much older estimate of the species’ divergence than proposed before
A ‘super-archaic’ human mated with the primitive ancestor of both Denisovans and Neanderthals 700,000 years ago, researchers have concluded.
This was the earliest known episode of interbreeding between different populations of ancient humans — and involved the most distantly related species.
The ‘super-archaic’ humans split from all other humans in the evolutionary tree some two million years ago.
Experts had used special software to examine human evolutionary history based on genetic evidence recovered from fossils found in Spain‘s Sima de los Huesos cave.
The algorithm also concluded that Denisovans and Neanderthals were already distinct species 600,000 years ago — much earlier than previously thought.
A model developed by the same researchers in 2017, in contrast, had proposed that the two species split around 381,000 years ago.
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A ‘super-archaic’ human mated with the primitive ancestor of both Denisovans and Neanderthals 700,000 years ago, researchers have concluded. Pictured, the researcher’s model of the history of human evolution. The coloured lines between the branches represent episodes of interbreeding and the transfer of genes between the various human species
The team’s new model supports the view that modern humans and their ancestors dispersed out from Africa into Eurasia only three times.
These migrations are thought to have happened around 1.9 million years ago with the super-archaics, 700,000 years ago for the Neanderthal–Denisovan ancestors and 50,000 years ago for modern humans.
Large-brained hominins first appeared in Europe and Asia about 600,000 years ago, in the period known as the middle Pleistocene — which was an important milestone for early humans.
To shed light on this period in human evolution, anthropologist Alan Rogers of the University of Utah and colleagues considered eight models with various genetic combinations that may have resulted from interbreeding between early hominins.
They also included data from Neanderthals from the Altai Mountains of Siberia and the Vindija Cave in Croatia, as well as from modern Europeans.
‘We’ve never known about this episode of interbreeding and we’ve never been able to estimate the size of the super-archaic population,’ said Professor Rogers.
‘We’re just shedding light on an interval on human evolutionary history that was previously completely dark.’
‘These findings about the timing at which interbreeding happened in the human lineage is telling something about how long it takes for reproductive isolation to evolve,’ he added.
The algorithm also concluded that Denisovans (pictured) and Neanderthals were already distinct species 600,000 years ago — much earlier than previously thought
‘Our [statistical] software ignores the within-population component of genetic variation. For this reason, it is unaffected by recent changes in population size, which often interfere with efforts to study deep history,’ Professor Rogers added.
‘In effect, we have cleared away some of the brush that often obscures the view of the distant past.’
The full findings of the study were published in the journal Science Advances.
Experts had used special software to examine human evolutionary history based on genetic evidence recovered from fossils found in Spain’s Sima de los Huesos cave