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DNA Evidence of New Human Ancestor from Australasia Found

Skeleton and restoration model of Turkana boy

<![CDATA[New genetic research into the DNA of modern Asia-Pacific humans has uncovered evidence that a new, mysterious and previously-unknown Australasian ancestor bred with early humans arriving from Africa. Before this new discovery, prevailing thought was that humanity originated in Africa and populated the Asia-Pacific region in two distinct waves. However, this new data suggests that those of Asian-Pacific descent may have a common origin stemming from just one migratory event. According to New Scientist, a team of researchers from Spain’s Pompeu Fabra University gathered genetic data from the indigenous people of mainland India, the nearby Andaman Islands, Papua New Guinea and Australia, only to find genetic material that was unique when compared to hominin species that had already been identified by scientists. This DNA is unique to the region, as East Asians and Europeans living today are without the genetic material, which has led scientists to suggest the DNA originates from an unknown human ancestor in the Pacific or South Asia. Jaume Bertranpetit, one of the authors of the new study, says that this mystery ancestor may very well be Homo erectus. While there’s no direct evidence that this was the case, the hominin, which is thought to have been the first to walk upright in a manner similar to modern humans, was the first to migrate from Africa. H. erectus fossils present in the Asian fossil record, dated to between 1.8 million years and 33,000 years old, put them in the right place at the right time to have contributed their genetic material. The only way to prove the theory would be to extract DNA samples from the remains of a H. erectus and then compare it to modern populations living in Australasia. This has proven difficult, as there has yet to be a H.erectus fossil discovery with enough genetic data intact to sample successfully. This differs from how scientists have derived the genome of an early hominin species known as the Denisovans after a cave in Siberia yielded a remarkably well-preserved finger bone. As if identifying the identity of the mystery species wasn’t complicated enough, it’s possible that the mystery DNA found within the samples was contributed by more than one unknown hominin living in or migrating to the region. With no frame of reference, there’s no way to isolate the new genetic material conclusively; with Denisovans, Neanderthals and at least one more hominin present within the region and interbreeding, it may be impossible to pinpoint just how many were there without additional ancient genomes to sequence. This is unlikely, as the climate of the Asia-Pacific features warm temperatures and high humidity levels which cause genetic material to degrade much more quickly than elsewhere. Regardless, this new study – and several others – have been building a case for just one single migratory movement by early humans out of Africa around 60,000 years in the past, changing the narrative when it comes to human evolution. The new study, published online in the journal Nature Genetics, can be found online at www.nature.com]]>

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