Northwestern Europe’s Neanderthals Revealed as a Connected Regional Population, DNA Study Finds

A Nature study sequenced 27 Neanderthals from Belgium and France (plus a high-quality genome from a 45,000-year-old Goyet Cave individual) and found that late Neanderthals in northwestern Europe formed a connected regional population with close ties across the region. Belgian specimens show no signs of mating among close relatives, and none of the Neanderthal genomes carry recent human DNA, suggesting asymmetry with modern humans. There is no evidence that harmful mutations accumulated over time, indicating extinction was not simply due to genetic deterioration; the final chapter of Neanderthal life in this region remains open, highlighting regional diversity and connectivity prior to their disappearance around 40,000 years ago.
- Ancient DNA Sheds Light on Final Chapter of Neanderthal Life in Northwestern Europe Sci.News
- News - Genomes of Europe’s Last Neanderthals Analyzed Archaeology Magazine
- Neanderthals in Western Europe were doing well right before they went extinct Newsroom | UCLA
- New DNA study of Neanderthals bolsters suspicions of human-driven extinction EL PAÍS English
- Some of the last surviving Neanderthals were remarkably diverse — suggesting inbreeding didn't doom them Live Science
Reading Insights
0
2
8 min
vs 9 min read
94%
1,770 → 107 words
Want the full story? Read the original article
Read on Sci.News