Neanderthal Migration: DNA Shows Extensive Journey into Asia

Bruce Bower 2025-10-27 19:00:00

A fossil unearthed on Eastern Europe’s Crimean Peninsula has divulged the‌ strongest‌ genetic clues yet about Neandertals’ long-distance ​journeys into the heart ‍of Asia.

after identifying a bone ⁣fragment​ previously​ excavated at ‍Crimea’s Starosele rock-shelter as Neandertal, researchers⁣ extracted bits of mitochondrial DNA from the find.⁤ That genetic material displays close⁢ links to corresponding ​DNA segments already⁢ obtained from Neandertal fossils at three sites ⁣in the Altai region of Russian Siberia, ⁢say archaeologist Emily ⁤Pigott adn colleagues. Mitochondrial DNA typically gets passed from mothers to⁢ their children.

Along with shared stone tool–making styles, the findings⁤ indicate that Eastern European Neandertal ⁤groups journeyed⁢ some 3,000 ⁤kilometers⁢ east into Asia, where⁢ they left a ‌genetic and⁢ cultural legacy, the researchers report October 27 in proceedings of the National ‌Academy of Sciences.

“Long-distance‌ migrations ​by⁢ Neandertals facilitated contact and ⁢interbreeding with Homo ​sapiens and Denisovans in various parts of the ⁤world,” says Pigott, of the University of Vienna.

Protein analyses helped researchers identify a Crimean fossil (the probable leg bone⁣ seen here from two views) as that of a Neandertal. DNA‍ from the fossil showed links to Neandertals who⁤ lived 3,000 kilometers to the east.Emily Pigott

DNA and stone tools have‌ previously linked other Eastern European sites to the Altai ones in⁣ Siberia. But ‌the Crimean Neandertal was more closely related ⁢to its ⁤Altai counterparts, including a girl with a Neandertal mother and⁣ a Denisovan father.

Radiocarbon ​dating puts⁣ the Crimean Neandertal fossil, probably part of an upper leg bone, at between roughly⁣ 46,000 and 45,000 years‌ old. Neandertal treks from Europe to Siberia and⁣ perhaps ⁢as far ‍as East Asia ‌ occurred during periods of warming temperatures, Pigott’s team suspects. ‍Geologic studies place one such travel-friendly period at about 120,000 to 100,000 years ago. Another started around 60,000 years ago.

Thousands of fossils excavated at ‌Starosele are too fragmentary to classify as species by visual inspection. ⁣Analyses of protein residues in 150 Starosele bone‍ fragments identified most as the remains of horses. An abundance of horse fossils at the Crimean ‍rock-shelter aligns with evidence that Neandertals hunted⁢ wild horses.

Bruce‌ Bower has written about the behavioral sciences ⁤for Science News ⁤since 1984. He writes about ‍psychology, anthropology, ⁤archaeology and mental health issues.

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