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    What We Learned About Our Human Ancestors in 2011

    Genetic hints of extinct human lineages — and the benefits we might have received from having sex with them — were among the discoveries this year regarding the evolution of our species.

    Other key findings include evidence strengthening the case that fossils in South Africa might be those of the ancestor of the human lineage. Research also suggests humans crossed what is now the desolate Arabian Desert to expand out of Africa across the world.

    Sex with extinct human lineages

    Although we modern humans are the only surviving members of our lineage, other kinds of humans once roamed the Earth, including familiar Neanderthals and the newfound Denisovans, who lived in what is now Siberia. Although some researchers once scoffed at the notion that our ancestors interbred with such extinct lineages, genetic analysis suggests that Neanderthal DNA makes up 1 percent to 4 percent of modern Eurasian genomes, while Denisovan DNA makes up 4 percent to 6 percent of modern Melanesian genomes.

    "Everywhere you look now, we find a little bit of interbreeding," said population geneticist Michael Hammer at the University of Arizona in Tucson.

    Our species might have also hybridized with a now-extinct lineage of humanity before leaving Africa, according to findings this year from Hammer and his colleagues. Approximately 2 percent of contemporary African DNA might have come from a lineage that first diverged from the ancestors of modern humans about 700,000 years ago. For context, the Neanderthal lineage diverged from ours within the past 500,000 years, while the first signs of anatomically modern human features emerged only about 200,000 years ago.

    Hammer noted that he and his colleagues were very conservative with their analysis, only looking for lineages that diverged even more from modern humans than Neanderthals. "It's possible there may be others we can detect that are more closely related to modern humans," Hammer told LiveScience.

    "We've probably just scratched the surface of what we might find," Hammer added. "We only looked at a small number of regions of the genome. This coming year, you'll see a lot of progress made with full genome data. This year, we should be able to confirm what we found and go way beyond that."

    Such canoodling had lasting effects on human evolution — sex with extinct human lineages might have endowed some of us with the robust immune systems we enjoy today. So-called HLA genes help our immune systems defend our bodies, and this year scientists discovered HLA variants that apparently originated in Denisovans and Neanderthals made their way into modern Eurasian and South Pacific groups, perhaps helping to protect our species as we expanded out of Africa.

    "We will definitely learn quite a bit more this upcoming year about some of the positive beneficial effects of interbreeding," Hammer said. "We've been working on it, and I know others are, too."

    The ancestor of the human lineage?

    A startling mix of human and primitive traits seen in the brains, hips, feet and hands of the extinct hominid known as Australopithecus sediba makes a strong casefor this species being the immediate ancestor to the human lineage, researchers said this year.

    The nearly 2-million-year-old A. sediba, discovered in South Africa, was first revealed last year. Australopithecus means "southern ape," and is a group that includes the iconic fossil Lucy, while sediba means "wellspring" in the South African language Sotho.

    The fossils display a mix of both human and more primitive features that hint it might be an intermediary form between Australopithecus and Homo, our lineage. For instance, it had a small brain compared with that of humans, but it had a relatively large brain region directly behind the eyes just as we do, one linked with higher mental functions such as multitasking. And like us, the specimen had hands equipped with a long thumb that might have been useful for tool-making, and a broad pelvis that might have later helped accommodate larger-brained offspring.

    Out of Arabia?

    Arabia was a legendary crossroads between the East and West for centuries, and this year research suggests it might have been pivotal at the dawn of history as the spot from which modern humans left Africa to expand across the rest of the world. [Photos: Our Closest Human Ancestor]

    When and how modern humans dispersed out of Africa has long proven controversial, but past evidence had suggested an exodus along the Mediterranean Sea or Arabian coast some 60,000 years ago. However, stone artifacts unearthed in the Arabian Desert at least 100,000 years old now suggest modern humans first left Africa by at least 40,000 years earlier than researchers had expected.

    Although the interior of the Arabian Peninsula is now a relatively barren desert, when these artifacts were made, copious rain fell across the area, making it a verdant paradise rich in resources. This is likely why humans leaving Africa traveled across Arabia instead of hugging the coast.

    "I hope that our findings will stimulate research in South Asia — India in particular — to find the remains of early anatomically modern humans in that part of the world,"archaeologist Hans-Peter Uerpmann from Eberhard Karls University in Tübingen, Germany, told LiveScience.

    "Our focus this year will be on gathering evidence to reconstruct the paleoclimate in southern Arabia during the ice age that lasted between 75,000 and 60,000 years ago," paleolithic archaeologist Jeffrey Rose at the University of Birmingham in England told LiveScience. This will help researchers determine how friendly or hostile the climate was back then "to help understand the fate of these early humans on the Arabian Peninsula."

    If these ancient peoples eventually died off in Arabia, they would just be a failed migration out of Africa. However, if they survived, they may be the ancestors "to all non-African people living on Earth," Rose said. "Only further exploration throughout Arabia will answer these questions."

    Follow LiveScience for the latest in science news and discoveries on Twitter @livescience and on Facebook.

     
    • Reidh  •  Los Angeles, California  •  4 mths ago
      Nothing was proven, therefore nothing was learned. Its still JUST A THEORY! Don't you get it?
      • Glowby 4 mths ago
        Nothing is ever proven in science, except in math and geometry.
        There's the fact of evolution, for which we have mountains of evidence, and there's the theory of evolution which explains how it happened. Just like there's the fact of gravity and theories explaining how it happens.
        Each of these theories have centuries of supporting evidence, and neither can find contradictory evidence.
        Just a theory? No. Don't you get it?
      • Reidh 4 mths ago
        still billed as Theory of Evolution. NO PROOF. atom bomb is proof of theory of relativity. Where is evolution atom bomb? No in evidence. Hence NO PROOF! GET IT? dumb a**?
    • Red Sunset  •  4 mths ago
      Happy New Year to All...welcome 2012!!! Long live the gang... spreading love and warm embrace.... enjoy posting...Lee J... the father of the birds tribe...
      • Jer M 4 mths ago
        Lee J isn't the father of what you call "the bird tribe". There is no father. It started with some people wanting to irritate a christian nut who thought birds were of the devil. Lee j had his bird avatar before this incident though.

        The Christian nut is gone now and since then some have changed their avatar. Some have kept it.
      • Red Sunset 4 mths ago
        Ohhh okay JerM -- IO thought so.. it was grandpa Born Again who said that actually... Howdy JerM.
    • Red Sunset  •  4 mths ago
      Jer M is back!!! My number one science guy. Glowby youre still my second, Cheese JJ Reist is my third now....mwahahahahhaLOL
      • Jer M 4 mths ago
        Actually Glowby and Cheese J Reist knows more science than me.
    • Xj  •  5 mths ago
      Things change - even in the material coded to provide genetic instructions. Once you accept that little fact, evolution is absolutely going to happen. Even if imperceptibly slow, itty-bitty changes of huge spans of time means big changes. To my mind, it would be impossible for evolution NOT to occur.
      • Daniel 5 mths ago
        Yes things change. But in what direction? Does a car, rock, world, star develop into a more complex thing or into a simplier steady state? A car will rust and be reduced down to iron and other basic minerals. Rocks break down, they do not become rock monsters except on TV in the Sci Fi world. Genetic change of the DNA does take place but there is no evidence this produces a new more complex species except in the fairy tale world of evolution. Instead in most cased the DNA change is bad or of no effect, the animal dies or cannot produce offspring, or the DNA is repaired by internal processes within the cell are remains stable for millions and billions of years. Look at the early fossil record for proof of this. Look at animals that are alive today and existed for millions of years.
    • Soni Wild  •  Newport, Minnesota  •  4 mths ago
      So, how long before we are pretty much inbreeding?
      • Glowby 4 mths ago
        Not until my cousin's 17th birthday.
      • Jer M 4 mths ago
        About the same time we start eating soylent green.
    • PappyStu  •  5 mths ago
      The problem with the gene pool is that there is no lifeguard.
    • K  •  Geneva, New York  •  4 mths ago
      I tried but I don't understand this?
    • WSK  •  5 mths ago
      The guys with the opposable thumbs always get the best cave women
    • Red Sunset  •  4 mths ago
      OK i will make LeeJ the first son of the birds tribe father... who was sent to earth to save us from the mythical believers and deliver us from the bondage of creationism... Praise LeeJ - R'amen...
    • C. Wyatt Hertz  •  Martinez, California  •  5 mths ago
      We could benefit from trying to learn more about ourselves as well.
    • Warren Y  •  Truth Or Consequences, United States  •  5 mths ago
      But noooo, the prehistoric women had to go after that new guy who could make fire...
    • not t  •  Intercourse, Pennsylvania  •  5 mths ago
      Mutts are always better.
    • MattP  •  5 mths ago
      We learned that people who tend to most closely resemble our early ancestors are far more likely to deny that they ever existed.
    • Bill F.  •  Dallas, Texas  •  5 mths ago
      By definition, those other human species are not extinct, if they are counted among our ancestors. We are them, even if they're only 1 - 4% of our genes.
    • Walter  •  5 mths ago
      Really awesome research, I look forward to future findings and what they may tell us about man's migration around the world. It may explain why we have found so little, because we haven't been looking deep enough.
    • Edward m  •  Bangkok, Thailand  •  5 mths ago
      i guess my genealogy research going back 16 generations is only a nit.Good job people!!!
    • Bill  •  5 mths ago
      This article is wrong. Plenty of Neanderthals are still alive. And commenting on Yahoo news stories.
    • Ridge walking  •  5 mths ago
      So, perhaps that's why my 1st and 2nd molars have three roots instead of the more common two roots. Also my jaw is on the small side and teeth on the large size.
    • Steven S  •  5 mths ago
      We Still Don't Know The Genetic Evolution of a Blonde Girl...
    • Blazin  •  Deridder, Louisiana  •  5 mths ago
      The way we are as a society towards each other is probably not as different. We still have a long way to go. If society evolved as fast as our tech did then maybe we could feel we have accomplished something.
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