Neandertals: Late archaic Homo sapiens

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Neandertals: Late archaic Homo sapiens

description

Neandertals: Late archaic Homo sapiens. How to classify?. ?. Distribution defined by Neandertal sites Southern Europe and Middle East Note: not in Africa. DNA samples. Neandertals:. Lived from c. 130,000 – c. 30,000 yBP Shared Europe with modern H. sapiens for c. 15,000 yrs. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Neandertals: Late archaic Homo sapiens

Page 1: Neandertals: Late archaic  Homo sapiens

Neandertals: Late archaic Homo sapiens

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How to classify?

?

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Distribution defined by Neandertal sitesSouthern Europe and Middle EastNote: not in Africa

DNA samples

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Neandertals:• Lived from c. 130,000 – c. 30,000 yBP• Shared Europe with modern H. sapiens for c. 15,000

yrs.• Height: 4.9 - 5.6 ft.• Weight: 110 - 143 lb.• Reduced tooth size• Decreased skeletal robusticity• Increase in brain size (to a mean of 1,445 cc)• Amud, Israel site: individual with brain of 1,740 cc• 55,000 – 40,000 yBP • Differ from modern humans in skull and extremities

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Skull differences

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Evidence of a large noseAdaptive?More surface area to warm andhumidify inhaled air?

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Is this Neandertal reconstruction accurate?

1909

Milford Wolpoff

Boule’sreconstruction

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Signature characteristic

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Information from Shanidar, Iraq site

45,000 yBP

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Neandertal stone implements

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The Neandertal Genome

• Reported in journal: Science, May 2010• Three bone fragments provided DNA samples• Vindija Cave site, Croatia (close to Shanidar Cave)• Each from a different female.• Dates: 38,000 ybp and 44,000 ybp• > 4 billion nucleotides sequenced• Compared to the genome of five contemporary

humans• South Africa (San), West Africa (Yoruba) , China

(Han), New Guinea (Papuan), and France (European).

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Relationship of Neandertals to present-day humans

• Neandertals were genetically closer to non-Africans than to Africans.

• Of the five individuals compared, non-Africans had 1-4% Neandertal DNA

• None of the two Africans had Neandertal DNA.

• This is not exactly compatible with a rigid interpretation of the Out-of-Africa model

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• An enigma! Neandertal DNA was in the individuals from China and Papua, New Guinea as well as Europe.

• Therefore, Chinese and Papuans are as closely related to Neandertals as Europeans.

• Yet, Neandertal fossils have never been found in either eastern Asia or New Guinea.

• Therefore, interbreeding must have taken place in the Middle-East region before modern humans expanded their range into these other areas.

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• None of the three Neandertals had genetic markers of modern humans.

• Gene flow was unidirectional: from Neandertals into modern humans.

• The general pattern of colonization between closely related populations:

• Gene flow is almost always takes place from the resident population into the colonizing population, not the reverse.

• Resident population: Neandertals• Colonizing population: anatomically modern humans

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Artifacts of teeth and ivoryDated at 45,000 yBPFrom a site in FranceNeandertal?