Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
Why did Neanderthals go extinct? Inbreeding probably wasn't to blame for their demise in northwestern Europe, a study suggests
Now, a study published June 24 in the journal Nature suggests that inbreeding may not have been the primary driver of ...
Live Science on MSN
Some of the last surviving Neanderthals were very diverse, suggesting inbreeding didn't doom them
Some Neanderthals living in northwestern Europe after 52,500 years ago were remarkably diverse, suggesting that they didn't ...
“Before the last glacial period, Neanderthals had diverse maternal lineages. As ice sheets advanced and habitable territory shrank, survivors appear to have concentrated in a climate refugium in ...
Analysis of 27 genomes reveals more diverse, better-connected populations and challenges the idea that genetic decline caused ...
Neanderthal babies have always been hard to study, mostly because their remains are so rare. That scarcity has left one of ...
A new way to use DNA to peer into the history of humanity is rewriting what experts know about our long-extinct cousins, the Neanderthals, US researchers said Monday. Previous research has suggested ...
NEW YORK -- Humans and Neanderthals cozied up from time to time when they lived in the same areas tens of thousands of years ago. But we don't know much about who got with whom, or why. A new genetic ...
Some Neanderthals living in northwestern Europe after 52,500 years ago were surprisingly diverse, suggesting that they didn't ...
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