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paleoanthropology, genetics and evolution

mammoths

  • A problem of fuzzy mammoths

    Sat, 2011-06-04 03:56 -- John Hawks

    Paleogenomics is changing the way we study evolution. In a number of cases, it now allows us to study extinct organisms with the same methods as we study living ones. A study last year in PLoS Biology[1] used genetic evidence from living elephants, extinct mammoths and mastodons, to reconstruct the times that these species diverged.

    Woolly and Columbian mammoths

    Mammoths are back in the news this week because of a paper by Jacob Enk and colleagues [2]. I think this paper represents a very nice collaboration of paleontologists (Dan Fisher, Ross MacPhee) and paleogeneticists (led by Hendrik Poinar's lab). It's refreshing to read a paper that describes not only the way that the DNA was sampled but also the age and morphological attributes of the sampled mammoths. For example:

    This 60+ year old bull is exceptionally well preserved, and exhibits the classic character suite of his species, including low molar lamellar frequency (Figure S1 in Additional file 3), broadly divergent tusk alveoli, a markedly downturned mandibular symphysis, and tremendous body size. We used tusk fragments for the shotgun sequencing, and both tusk and bone samples for PCR and Sanger sequencing.

    Every genetics paper should have descriptions like that. Very nicely done.

    As an anthropologist, I pay a lot of attention to studies of elephants, because they are another long-lived social mammal, in some ways closer to us in population structure and dynamics than most primates. As in the case of hominins, some taxonomists have argued that we should recognize lots of fossil elephants, others question that distinctiveness. And just as we are discovering for hominins, the elephants are showing evidence for population mixture among groups once considered to be different species.

    Enk and colleagues sampled the mtDNA from two Columbian mammoths and one woolly mammoth from North America. The Columbian mammoth is seen by pretty much everybody as a separate species (Mammuthus columbi) from woolly mammoths (Mammuthus primigenius), and paleontologists have thought that they diverged 1-2 million years ago. Woolly mammoths were Holarctic animals, with a range that extended from Europe to North America, while Columbian mammoths were limited to the Americas south of the U.S.-Canada border, roughly. Already other researchers have recovered dozens of woolly mammoth sequences, and their phylogenetic relations are well characterized (as shown in the paper). What Enk and colleagues show is that the two Columbian mammoths both have mtDNA sequences that belong to a single, relatively young clade that is present in woolly mammoths in Alaska and Yukon.

    The simplest explanation is that the Columbian and woolly mammoths of North America were exchanging genes.

    The authors also suggest the possibility of incomplete lineage sorting (ILS) -- the retention of a single ancestral clade in two isolated species. This seems unlikely given the topology of the clade within woolly mammoths, but the authors omitted the crucial test: the date of the most recent common ancestor of the mtDNA within the clade. If it's truly younger than a million years, we might easily rule out ILS.

    Forest and savanna elephants

    A lot more information about the variation within living elephantids has appeared within the past year. Looking at them compared to the fossil species, it's pretty clear that taxonomists haven't done well matching taxonomic levels in these groups. Here is a quote from the paper by Rohland and colleagues, who considered the genetic relationships of forest and savanna elephants in Africa.

    We also find that savanna and forest elephants, which some have argued are the same species, are as or more divergent in the nuclear genome as mammoths and Asian elephants, which are considered to be distinct genera, thus resolving a long-standing debate about the appropriate taxonomic classification of the African elephants.

    Forest and savanna elephants may deserve a species rank, but we might equally say that the mammoth-Asian elephant divergence doesn't merit the genus rank it has historically been given. As reconstructed in the paper, the forest-savanna elephant and Asian elephant-mammoth divergences both fall within ranges from 2.5 to 5.5 million years. Some widely-recognized mammalian genera (e.g., Homo) are younger, but most mammalian divergences in this range of times are recognized below the genus rank. Should mammoths be put into Elephas? That would probably be a better recognition of the adaptive radiation of Eurasian elephants.

    One way to consider the question is by examining the pattern of speciation. With a large number of sampled loci, a far more detailed consideration of speciation can be achieved. This brings us back to a more careful examination of ILS.

    We find a higher rate of inferred [Incomplete Lineage Sorting (ILS)] in forest and savanna elephants than in Asian elephants and mammoths: (FE+SE)/(AL+ML) = 3.1 (P = 4×10−8 for exceeding unity; Table 2), indicating that there are more lineages where savanna and forest elephants are unrelated back to the African-Eurasian speciation than is the case for Asian elephants and mammoths (Table 2). This could reflect a history in which the savanna-forest population divergence time TFS is older than the Asian-mammoth divergence time TAM, a larger population size ancestral to the African than to the Eurasian elephants, or a long period of gene flow between two incipient taxa. (We use upper case “T” to indicate population divergence time and lower case “t” to indicate average genetic divergence time (t≥T)).

    "A long period of gene flow" would reflect a very gradual speciation event, which might argue that the two resultant species should be classified in the same genus. Or...it might suggest that the ecological differentiation actually commenced much earlier in time than the modal estimate, with later hybridization. Mammoths and Asian elephants, by contrast, seem to have a cleaner separation even though the genetic relationships are almost equally close.

    We're not quite able to test these alternatives, yet, because only a single individual has been sampled from most of these species. Testing for gene flow really will require larger samples of individuals. In particular, the longer geographic distance between Asian and mammoth samples compared to forest-savanna samples may mean that population structure is hiding within this comparison. I just find it remarkable that genetics has arrived at a point where the pattern of speciation of extinct species is within reach.

    The paper uses the extinct mammoth and mastodon comparisons as a frame for discussing the diversity and distinctiveness of African forest elephants. This is in a way unfortunate, because the mammoth-centric questions are probably more interesting to most readers. There's still a lot of productive biology to do there. But the status of forest elephants is a useful hook to hang a paper upon. Whether forest elephants should be given the status of a species has been a hot topic in proboscidean evolutionary biology during the past 10 years. Debruyne [3] gave a good historical review of the issues:

    Indeed, when discovered by Matschie in 1900, [forest elephants] were described as either a potential species, or a regional race of Cameroon (Matschie, 1900). Matschie advocated the usefulness of hydrographical basins in order to subdivide African elephants into distinct units. He thus contributed to the profusion of new taxa to be defined by the turn of the 20th century, so that the taxonomy of the African elephant quickly became extravagant, the most meagre morphological evidence being used to acknowledge a new form (Lyddeker, 1907). Up to 22 forms of Loxodonta were described that were finally assigned either to the savannah or the forest elephant—see Laursen and Bekoff (1978) for a review. Morphologists have addressed this question for decades according to their personal taxonomic perspectives. Some have considered that, although displaying a smaller size, smaller round ears—responsible for their designation as “cyclotis”—more toenail structures on both feet, thin down-pointing tusks and a flatter back and forehead, forest elephants belong to the same species—i.e., Loxodonta africana—as savannah elephants with whom they assumed were reproductively compatible (Backhaus, 1958; Carroll, 1988; Cousins, 1996). Many cases of intermediate morphology have supported this view, which had become prevalent (Laursen and Bekoff, 1978). Conversely, the “splitter” attitude led other authors to put forest elephants apart on the basis of the same anatomical distinctiveness (Frade, 1931; Frade, 1933; Allen, 1936; Petter, 1958). More doubtful morphological characters—extent of hair-covering, color of the skin, carriage of head—have been put forward to support this division.

    The problem became complicated upon recovery of genetic information. Most early phylogeography has been done using mtDNA. The deepest mtDNA clade in the African elephants defines two haplogroups, both of which are shared by the forest and savanna populations. Based on large samples of mtDNA alone, the two populations have been recently exchanging genes.

    Early analyses of nuclear microsatellites indicated the opposite pattern, with relatively little allele sharing between the two elephant varieties. I became interested in the question after a paper by Régis Debruyne (a coauthor on the current paper by Enk and colleagues as well). Debruyne emphasized the great gaps in our sampling of geographic variation in African savanna elephants. Providing some additional data, he showed a very deep mtDNA clade in many forest elephants that was also in many savanna elephants. He argued that the widespread evidence of gene flow refutes the hypothesis of different biological species of elephants.

    Rohland and colleagues also addressed the discordance between mtDNA and nuclear genetic variation.

    Our study also infers a strikingly deep population divergence time between forest and savanna elephant, supporting morphological and genetic studies that have classified forest and savanna elephants as distinct species [13],[16]–. The finding of deep nuclear divergence is important in light of findings from mtDNA, which indicate that the F-haplogroup is shared between some forest and savanna elephants, implying a common maternal ancestor within the last half million years [21]. The incongruent patterns between the nuclear genome and mtDNA (“cytonuclear dissociation”) have been hypothesized to be related to the matrilocal behavior of elephantids, whereby males disperse from core social groups (“herds”) but females do not [13],[38]. If forest elephant female herds experienced repeated waves of migration from dominant savanna bulls, displacing more and more of the nuclear gene pool in each wave, this could explain why today there are some savanna herds that have mtDNA that is characteristic of forest elephants but little or no trace of forest DNA in the nuclear genome [13],[14],[39],[40].

    The scenario may fit with the facts. It was proposed first by Roca and colleagues [4], who proposed it as a "genomic record of ancient habitat changes", which had brought the forest and savanna populations into contact across shifting hybrid zones. They reiterated the hypothesis in a later paper [5] supported with larger samples.

    Further progress will require larger samples and better models. I was interested in Debruyn's account of the geographic holes in genetic sampling across the African range of forest elephants. A highly-resolved test of recent gene flow demands finding and sampling potential contact zones between two populations. Some hypotheses can be tested surprisingly strongly using only a single individual from each population. But the power of such tests depends on the pattern of inbreeding in the past. We can imagine that the ancestry of a single individual stretches through the genealogical network of a species like a cone, widening into the past. Recent events are poorly tested by single individuals.

    If geographic structure is strong enough, distant populations will approximate different species in their recent genealogical connections. So the single individuals in the more recent study by Rohland and colleagues [1] carry a lot of weight.

    There are many parallels here between hominin population dynamics and the elephants. Also, as I pointed out in 2006, the elephant situation helps to clarify how we should consider genetic samples from living great apes.

    The past year has seen a real reversal in the race between data and analysis. For a long time, sequencing has been a bottleneck in serious analysis of population history. The genealogical connections among individuals ramify by double in every generation, so that the inheritance of a single gene reflects one possibility among countless trillions. If we can only afford to sequence a single gene, we are limited to a single sample of the genealogical links among individuals. Whole genomes give enormous samples of the genealogical history among samples. But they create their own challenges of analysis.


    References

    Synopsis: 
    Mammoth paleogenomics and African elephant population structure pose similar problems of sampling.
  • The Denisova mtDNA sequence: The X-Woman

    Wed, 2010-03-24 13:12 -- John Hawks

    In this week's copy of Nature, Johannes Krause and colleagues [1] report on the complete mitochondrial sequence of a pinky bone from Denisova Cave, in the Altai Mountains of Siberia.

    You might expect this sequence would look like a Neandertal. After all, two other specimens from a little further to the West have both produced mitochondrial sequences very similar to those of Neandertals from Europe.

    But you would be wrong. This sequence turns out to be a surprise.

    Instead of falling within the Neandertal clade, the sequence in this pinky bone lies as an outgroup to Neandertals and as an outgroup to modern humans.

    Assuming an average divergence of human and chimpanzee mtDNAs of 6 million years ago, the date of the most recent common mtDNA ancestor shared by the Denisova hominin, Neanderthals and modern humans is approximately one million years ago (mean = 1,040,900 years ago; 779,300–1,313,500 years ago, 95% highest posterior density (HPD)), or twice as deep as the most recent common mtDNA ancestor of modern humans and Neanderthals (mean = 465,700 years ago; 321,200–618,000 years ago, 95% HPD) (Fig. 3). Although the absolute dates depend on several assumptions and are subject to uncertainty (Supplementary Information), the fact that the divergence of the Denisova hominin mtDNA is about twice as old as the divergence of Neanderthal and modern human mtDNAs is robust to most assumptions (Krause et al. 2010: 2).

    If you are sharp-eyed, you may notice that mean value from the Neandertal-human comparison, at 465,700 years ago, is rather substantially lower than has previously been reported -- Green and colleagues [2] put this divergence at 660,000 years ago. Including the new Denisova specimen into the comparison provides a much more recent branch point than the human-chimpanzee divergence date. That means some of the ambiguity in the long branch between the chimpanzees and the human-Neandertal ancestor can be resolved, effectively pushing the Neandertal a little bit closer to us.

    As you might have guessed from the paper's title, the authors interpret the deep divergence of the new Denisova sequence as evidence of a previously unknown, "genetically distinct" lineage of hominins. I want to be very precise about what they say and don't say, because it is a very short paper. Nowhere in the paper do they use the word "species". But in the conclusion, they do discuss lineages and "forms".

    We note that the stratigraphy and indirect dates indicate that this individual lived between 30,000 and 50,000 years ago. At a similar time individuals carrying Neanderthal mtDNA were present less than 100 km away from Denisova Cave in the Altai Mountains, whereas the presence of an Upper Palaeolithic industry at some sites, such as Kara-Bom and Denisova, has been taken as evidence for the appearance of anatomically modern humans in the Altai before 40,000 years ago. Although these dates are associated with large and unknown errors, this temporal concurrence suggests that complete and successive replacements of distinct hominin forms, similar to what occurred in Western Europe, may not have taken place in southern Siberia. Rather, representatives of three genetically distinct hominin lineages may all have been present in this region at about the same time. Thus, the presence of Homo floresiensis in Indonesia about 17,000 years ago and of the Denisova mtDNA lineage in southern Siberia about 40,000 years ago suggest that multiple Late Pleistocene hominin lineages coexisted for long periods of time in Eurasia.

    The mention of Homo floresiensis in this conclusion seems unlikely to be an accident, particularly in Nature, the hobbits' birthplace. I haven't seen any press coverage of this yet, obviously, as I'm writing before the embargo breaks. But I can only imagine the likely spin: just as Homo floresiensis has demonstrated the diversity of archaeologically recent hominins in Asia, this new mitochondrial sequence adds even more to that diversity.

    One of my long-time correspondents is already calling it "the Yeti".

    Is this a new species?

    As my students have heard me say many, many times, gene trees are not species trees. The different genetic loci within a population have diverse genealogies. Often, when two populations diverge from each other, their gene genealogies will show similar patterns of divergence. But not always.

    When we look within a single population, gene genealogies are likewise diverse. but within a single population, there is no population divergence. There must be an oldest branch point in the genealogy of any single gene. Here's a question: how many individuals do you have to sample so that you are sure you will find this deepest branch point? The answer to that question depends on the frequencies of the lineages on either side of that branch. If one of them happens to be rare, you're unlikely to find it unless you sample lots and lots of individuals.

    And if the population is spread across a substantial amount of space, it is very likely that one of the clades will be geographically limited compared to the other.

    Put these two things together, and apply them to a widespread population like the Neandertals. It is pretty likely that if we sample a dozen Neandertals across a subset of their range, that we will miss the deepest divergence in the genealogy of a single gene. That may be what has happened here. By extending the known mitochondrial sample of Neandertals even further to the east, this study may have discovered a deeper branch point than was previously known within the Neandertal population.

    Indeed, a million-year-old clade divergence would be entirely normal for a large mammal. That's what we see in chimpanzees, and as I pointed out yesterday, it's smaller than the clade divergence we see among mammoth mtDNA across a similar time range and geographic extent.

    I think the mammoth paper makes a really nice comparison to this one. In that case, they discovered a deep clade divergence in an ancient population, one branch of which was geographically restricted within a part of northern Siberia. They didn't conclude that multiple species of mammoths had been sampled -- despite the fact that one mtDNA lineage significantly outlasted the other. That was variation within one geographically diverse species, consistent with what we know about other species' mtDNA variation.

    So it is unnecessary to posit the existence of an unknown species of hominins in southern Siberia, based on the mitochondrial evidence alone. Whether we're talking about an unexpected diversity of forms -- well, I want to see something other than a pinky bone.

    Does it add to our understanding of Neandertal phylogeography?

    Well, first we need to know if it's a Neandertal. We don't. It's a pinky bone.

    But if it were a Neandertal, then the appearance of a deep clade at the very eastern extent of the population's range might suggest something about its diversification. The western Neandertals in that scenario have relatively restricted diversity, as if they had descended from a recent mtDNA ancestor. That pattern would be consistent with a range expansion from the east to the west. So maybe the Late Pleistocene Neandertals invaded Europe from elsewhere?

    Could this be Homo erectus?

    Of course, at the very furthest eastern extreme of the Neandertal range, we might well be running out of Neandertals and running into another kind of hominin. Even as recently as 40,000 years ago, it is not entirely obvious who those hominins would have been. The archaeological transition is nowhere near as clear in the east as in Europe, and even in Europe the archaeological transition to Upper Paleolithic industries is not the same as the biological transition.

    Before 100,000 years ago, the humans in China could plausibly be assigned to Homo erectus. It seems likely that much, if not most, of the genetic heritage of the pre-40,000 year population of China would have been derived from these ancient Chinese hominins. It is unknown how much genetic exchange there would have been between east and west at this time. I suspect that there were substantial genetic exchanges, both along the southern coast of Asia and across Central Asia. So China might well provide an alternative geographical origin for this mitochondrial clade.

    If we look to China as the ancestor population for this mitochondrial sequence, we can ask whether the roughly million year divergence date makes sense. As a marker of populations, a single gene can inform us about the maximum time of population divergence, not the minimum. The minimum is in effect zero: in other words, a million-year-old divergence genetically could occur within a single human population. So a widespread human population across much of Asia could contain such a deep branch, just as Neandertal's -- equally widespread across West an and Central Asia -- could have contained such a branch.

    But a million-year-old divergence does tell us one thing: this cannot represent a Homo erectus population that originated in Africa 2 million years ago, colonized Asia around the time of Dmanisi, and was isolated after that time.

    In other words, it would argue strongly against the hypothesis of a deep divergence of eastern and western hominin species, starting with the initial dispersal of humans from Africa in the Early Pleistocene. It argues in favor of continued genetic exchanges or a more complex history of population movements.

    I hesitate to take this line of reasoning too far. It's a pinky bone.

    Could this be a modern human?

    Even though the date of the cave could be as recent as 30,000 years ago, it is very unlikely that this mitochondrial sequence would have occurred within the growing population of "modern" humans. A growing population is relatively unlikely to lose mitochondrial variants. An ancient clade like this one, which survived in the population for a million years, might have been just at the edge of extinction at the time the population started to grow and therefore might just have missed its opportunity to survive. But it seems sort of unlikely.

    Do they know more than they are letting on?

    In the back of my mind I'm thinking this: if Krause's team has done enough sequencing to do the entire mitochondrial genome, they surely already know something about what the nuclear genome looks like. The increasing success of DNA recovery from these very fragmentary fossils has been stunning over the last several years. It is incredible that we are likely to recover a substantial amount of autosomal sequence from the distal phalanx of a (did I mention?) pinky. A quick comparison against raw data, without much systematic analysis, would be enough to check the mtDNA result.

    I wonder if this is only the first shoe, and there is another left to drop? These guys know as well as I do the gene trees are not species trees, and that such an obvious point that -- even though this is Nature we're talking about -- the reviewers should have caught it.

    So maybe there are already hints that the autosomal comparison will fall in the same direction as the mitochondrial comparison with Neandertals: different from them, different from us.

    Maybe it's a Yeti after all.

    UPDATE (2010-03-24): Man, the press is worse than I imagined. Nature's news article goes fully with the "new species" interpretation -- even though the paper itself does not include the word "species" -- and every other outlet I've seen is following suit.

    I have to teach my class this afternoon where we'll be talking about this mtDNA sequence, so I don't have time for a longer update. Let me say very clearly: nothing about this sequence requires there to have been an undiscovered hominin species.

    UPDATE (2010-08-10): References updated.


    References

  • The other story about the mammoth DNA

    Wed, 2010-03-24 00:04 -- John Hawks

    I got to writing about a story a couple of years ago, and then stalled out. That happens every so often -- remember, most of my research-related entries are my own notes. You can only imagine how many half-written posts I have, but the AI on my computer has gotten better and better at archiving them.

    In this case, the half-written post lately has grown in relevance, so I've revisited it. In the summer of 2008, Thomas Gilbert and (many) colleagues reported on a phylogenetic analysis of 18 mtDNA genomes from extinct woolly mammoths.

    That's pretty cool, by the way. We now know a lot more about woolly mammoth mtDNA variation than we knew about human mtDNA variation in 1980.

    The mammoth mtDNA is an example of something slightly different than the usual phylogeography -- it adds the dimension of time. Call it phylotemporogeography, if you like. The best comparison? Neandertals -- a group for which the number of mtDNA sequences is very similar, over a similarly wide Palearctic geographic range. I wrote about Neandertal phylogeography last year ("Neandertal races?"), and the topic will surely return sometime this year.

    Different mammoth mtDNA clades, which originated millions of years ago, apparently became extinct at different times. The paper divided the mammoth mtDNA variation into two clades, which diverged approximately 1.7 million years ago. These two clades have different geographic distributions. One, which the authors termed, "clade I," was broadly distributed across Siberia and Beringia. The other, "clade II," appears to have been restricted to one area of Arctic Siberia, between the Taymyr Peninsula and the Lena River. Each of these clades has highly restricted diversity, and taking all the mammoth mtDNA sequences together, they are roughly as diverse as the within-subspecies diversity in living elephants. So that deep branch dividing the two clades accounts for a lot of the restricted diversity within mammoths.

    The interesting thing is that the two clades also have different temporal distributions, based on the radiocarbon dates associated with the remains. The geographically restricted clade II is systematically earlier. The time distributions overlap somewhat, but there is no clade II mtDNA after 30,000 years ago, while clade I lasts up to the extinction of the mammoths in the early Holocene.

    First question: why the deep branch? The simple answer is probably that it's just one of those things. It's difficult to weigh the importance of different parts of the geographic range of mammoths, so I hesitate to guess whether the relatively smaller region of clade II mammoths is "peripheral". It's not at a geographic extreme, but it's hard to judge the migration potential among these regions.

    The region occupied by a minor clade doesn't have to be peripheral or geographically isolated. The oldest branch point in a mtDNA tree is unlikely to be evenly balanced, and given that one clade is likely to be less numerous than the other, it is also likely to be geographically restricted. For all we know, the spatial distribution found among these mammoth mtDNAs is perfectly consistent with neutrality.

    Moreover, given the disappearance of clade II after 30,000 years ago, there aren't very many contemporary sequences that are clade I. We don't really know that they weren't evenly balanced at that time -- nor do we know what mtDNA clades may have been present in the broader range of mammoths across Europe and Beringia (although subsequent papers may have given some information on this).

    Second question: why the replacement of one clade by another? The authors first considered whether the mammoth mtDNA might have undergone a selective sweep:

    All of the observed substitutions appear to be between closely related amino acids. For those proteins having a close homolog with an experimentally determined structure (namely, COX1, COX2, COX3, and Cytb), we also modeled the structure of the mammoth proteins. All substitutions appear in regions on the surface or in loop regions that neither seem essential for proper folding nor would be expected to alter protein function in any obvious way. Therefore, the evidence from the modeled structures suggest [sic] that it is unlikely that the nonsynonymous differences found in the mitochondrial genomes of the two mammoth clades have resulted in any physiological disparities, and thus a selective advantage for clade I based on mtDNA sequence differences alone is not expected (Gilbert et al. 2008:8331).

    I think the authors have done as much analysis of this question as possible, given the available data, but I still think this is very weak evidence against selection as an explanation for the clade II extinction. After all, positively selected mtDNA variants are unlikely to change function in a major way -- big changes being much more likely to be bad under the usual Fisher model of adaptation.

    At any rate, the alternative hypothesis is local extinction, taking a geographically-localized clade with it.

    A more likely alternative is that the loss of clade II is a consequence of its restricted geographical distribution, because taxa with small ranges are generally more prone to extinction compared with widespread taxa. It is therefore conceivable that clade II was lost because of a demographic bottleneck resulting in genetic drift or a local population extinction.

    This seems contradictory. Given that there are no noticeable phenotypic differences between these clades, and that mtDNA clades I and II coexisted in the Lena-Kolyma region, a purely local demographic bottleneck doesn't make much sense. Now, there are alternatives that retain mtDNA neutrality -- for example, a demographic replacement of the Arctic Siberian mammoths by populations expanding from elsewhere (either east or south). This might have been driven by selection involving other aspects of physiology, enhanced by climate forcing. For instance, a long-lasting locally adapted population might give way to a more generalized form due to climate oscillations.

    Bottom line: mammoths were a dynamic population, capable of high mobility and rapid clade replacements on the scale of tens of thousands of years. And the Late Pleistocene was a time of high population turnover even across what should have been ideal mammoth habitat. That dynamism is not unusual for large, long-lived mammals, and is something we should be looking for in the DNA phylogeography of Late Pleistocene hominins.

    References:

    Gilbert MTP and 32 others. 2008. Intraspecific phylogenetic analysis of Siberian woolly mammoths using complete mitochondrial sequences. Proc Nat Acad Sci USA 105:8327-8332. doi:10.1073/pnas.0802315105

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Neandertals

For years, I've worked on their bones. Now I'm working on their genes. Read more about the science studying these ancient people.

Denisova

From a finger bone of an ancient human came the record of a completely unexpected population. My lab is working on the science of the Denisova genome.

Acceleration

The advent of agriculture caused natural selection to speed up greatly in humans. We're uncovering some of the ways that populations have rapidly changed during the last 10,000 years.

Malapa

Just outside Johannesburg, the Malapa site is producing some of the most exciting finds in human evolution. This site is the headquarters of the Malapa Soft Tissue Project.