‘More Neanderthal than human’: How your health may depend on DNA from our long-lost ancestors
The group had traveled for thousands of miles, crossing Africa and the Middle East until finally reaching the dimly lit forests of the new continent. They were long-vanished members of our modern human tribe, and among the first Homo sapiens to enter Europe.
There, these people would likely have encountered their distant cousins: Neanderthals.
These small bands of modern-human relatives had hooded brows, large heads and squat bodies, and they had spent epochs acclimating to Europe’s colder climate. At several points across millennia, these two forms of humanity would meet, mingle and mate.
Tens of thousands of years later, these ancient encounters have left traces in the genetic code of billions of humans alive today. The lingering genes affect us in ways large and small, from our appearance to our risk of disease.
“In some places in our genome, we’re more Neanderthal than we are human,” Joshua Akey, a professor of integrative genomics at Princeton University, told Live Science.
These were our closest human relatives, and this is their legacy.
By 75,000 years ago, but possibly up to 250,000 years ago, the ancestors of most modern Eurasians first ventured out of Africa and into Eurasia. Here, modern humans came face-to-face with Neanderthals, who last shared a common ancestor with modern humans hundreds of thousands of years earlier and had been living in these continents ever since. On multiple occasions over the millennia, the groups interbred. [Continue reading…]