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DNA shows ancient Siberians domesticated dogs, who then helped settle America -- Secret History -- Sott net

© David Meltzer Evolutionary biologist Greger Larson flanks a whiteboard in his office at Oxford as he and his co-authors turn it into a palimpsest in November 2018 for their PNAS study. Human events are marked in blue and dog events in orange, with northeast Asia on the left and North America on the right. Co-author David Meltzer says it s what scientific convergence sometimes looks like. The study uses newly discovered archaeological sites and human-genome work to assert connections stretching further back than archaeological, paleontological, and other biological evidence could previously establish with any certainty. Audrey Lin from the Smithsonian s National Museum of Natural History, who was not involved in the study, told RFE/RL:

Trickster Cultural Center to reopen to the public March 2

DNA Shows Ancient Siberians Domesticated Dogs, Who Then Helped Settle America

DNA Shows Ancient Siberians Domesticated Dogs, Who Then Helped Settle America February 05, 2021 13:16 GMT Share share Print Scientists have long sought an indisputable link showing when humans first domesticated dogs, steering a few receptive gray wolves descendants toward lives as lapdogs. The origins of their domestic relationship is one of the most hotly debated questions around dogs undying loyalty to their masters and humankind’s unparalleled reliance on dogs to get a leg up on other predators in a frequently hostile environment. Now, a team of interdisciplinary researchers has used DNA and other evidence to assert a tandem movement in and then beyond northeastern Siberia at a key stage of human and canid development late in the last Ice Age.

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