<p>Archaeological, osteological and genetic evidence suggests that Neanderthals lived in small groups<sup><CitationRef CitationID="CR1">1</CitationRef>,<CitationRef CitationID="CR2">2</CitationRef></sup>; however, less is known about whether these groups were part of isolated communities or belonged to larger, well-connected populations<sup><CitationRef CitationID="CR3">3</CitationRef></sup>. The dense concentration of broadly contemporaneous Neanderthal sites in the Meuse Basin, Belgium<sup><CitationRef CitationID="CR4">4</CitationRef></sup>, provides a rare opportunity to study regional populations at high resolution. Here we generated genetic data from 27 Neanderthals who lived less than approximately 52,500 years ago from ten archaeological sites in Belgium and France, including a high-coverage genome from a 45,000-year-old individual from Goyet, Belgium. We show that most of these individuals are more closely related to one another than to other contemporaneous late Neanderthals in Europe. Further, some of these individuals carry DNA from a Neanderthal lineage predating the split of late Neanderthals. Although these Neanderthals overlapped temporally with early modern humans in northwestern Europe from around 47,000 years ago, we find no evidence of recent gene flow from modern humans. They also do not show the genetic signatures of mating among close relatives found in Altai Neanderthals, suggesting that they lived in larger or better-connected groups. Moreover, genetic load did not accumulate over time, arguing against progressive genetic deterioration as a driver of Neanderthal extinction.</p>

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Genetic diversity of late Neanderthals in northwestern Europe

  • Alba Bossoms Mesa,
  • Elena Essel,
  • Stéphane Peyrégne,
  • Arev P. Sümer,
  • Leonardo N. M. Iasi,
  • Christian Heide,
  • Divyaratan Popli,
  • Cesare de Filippo,
  • Marie-Theres Gansauge,
  • Lars Gerullat,
  • Laurin Lippik,
  • Sarah Nagel,
  • Birgit Nickel,
  • Barbara Schellbach,
  • Anna Schmidt,
  • Johann Visagie,
  • Antje Weihmann,
  • Hugo Zeberg,
  • Julia Zorn,
  • Hélène Rougier,
  • Isabelle Crevecoeur,
  • Patrick Semal,
  • Grégory Abrams,
  • Thibaut Devièse,
  • Stéphane Pirson,
  • Kévin Di Modica,
  • Pierre Cattelain,
  • Christelle Draily,
  • Michel Toussaint,
  • Isabelle De Groote,
  • Frido Welker,
  • Cosimo Posth,
  • Marie Soressi,
  • Jean-Jacques Hublin,
  • Johannes Krause,
  • Svante Pääbo,
  • Matthias Meyer,
  • Janet Kelso,
  • Benjamin M. Peter,
  • Mateja Hajdinjak

摘要

Archaeological, osteological and genetic evidence suggests that Neanderthals lived in small groups1,2; however, less is known about whether these groups were part of isolated communities or belonged to larger, well-connected populations3. The dense concentration of broadly contemporaneous Neanderthal sites in the Meuse Basin, Belgium4, provides a rare opportunity to study regional populations at high resolution. Here we generated genetic data from 27 Neanderthals who lived less than approximately 52,500 years ago from ten archaeological sites in Belgium and France, including a high-coverage genome from a 45,000-year-old individual from Goyet, Belgium. We show that most of these individuals are more closely related to one another than to other contemporaneous late Neanderthals in Europe. Further, some of these individuals carry DNA from a Neanderthal lineage predating the split of late Neanderthals. Although these Neanderthals overlapped temporally with early modern humans in northwestern Europe from around 47,000 years ago, we find no evidence of recent gene flow from modern humans. They also do not show the genetic signatures of mating among close relatives found in Altai Neanderthals, suggesting that they lived in larger or better-connected groups. Moreover, genetic load did not accumulate over time, arguing against progressive genetic deterioration as a driver of Neanderthal extinction.