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1 February 2011 Drafting Human Ancestry: What Does the Neanderthal Genome Tell Us about Hominid Evolution? Commentary on Green et al. (2010)
Michael Hofreiter
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Abstract

Ten years after the first draft versions of the human genome were announced, technical progress in both DNA sequencing and ancient DNA analyses has allowed a research team around Ed Green and Svante Pääbo to complete this task from infinitely more difficult hominid samples: a few pieces of bone originating from our closest, albeit extinct, relatives, the Neanderthals. Pulling the Neanderthal sequences out of a sea of contaminating environmental DNA impregnating the bones and at the same time avoiding the problems of contamination with modern human DNA is in itself a remarkable accomplishment. However, the crucial question in the long run is, what can we learn from such genomic data about hominid evolution?

© 2011 Wayne State University Press, Detroit, Michigan 48201-1309
Michael Hofreiter "Drafting Human Ancestry: What Does the Neanderthal Genome Tell Us about Hominid Evolution? Commentary on Green et al. (2010)," Human Biology 83(1), 1-11, (1 February 2011). https://doi.org/10.3378/027.083.0101
Received: 6 September 2010; Accepted: 1 September 2010; Published: 1 February 2011
KEYWORDS
HOMINID EVOLUTION
NEANDERTHAL GENOME
NEANDERTHALS
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