4.8 Article

Denisovan ancestry and population history of early East Asians

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 370, Issue 6516, Pages 579-583

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.abc1166

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Funding

  1. Max Planck Society
  2. European Research Council through ERC [694707, 324139]

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We present analyses of the genome of a similar to 34,000-year-old hominin skull cap discovered in the Salkhit Valley in northeastern Mongolia. We show that this individual was a female member of a modern human population that, following the split between East and West Eurasians, experienced substantial gene flow from West Eurasians. Both she and a 40,000-year-old individual from Tianyuan outside Beijing carried genomic segments of Denisovan ancestry. These segments derive from the same Denisovan admixture event(s) that contributed to present-day mainland Asians but are distinct from the Denisovan DNA segments in present-day Papuans and Aboriginal Australians.

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