The mystery DNA I'm referring to came from a female Neanderthal toe bone. This little lady was inbred. She had Neanderthal DNA, Denisovan DNA and some partial mystery DNA to her credit.
How about a link?
The mystery DNA I'm referring to came from a female Neanderthal toe bone. This little lady was inbred. She had Neanderthal DNA, Denisovan DNA and some partial mystery DNA to her credit.
In the case of the Denisovans we lack a skull or other bone that would help us determine morphological features. We can't do that with a finger bone or teeth.
Maybe Chris needs to start with some basic facts
http://www.popsci.com/science/article/2013-04/fyi-why-are-there-no-native-monkeys-america
For a while they thought they might have her toe too. In the summer of 2010 a human toe bone had emerged, along with the enormous tooth, from Layer 11. In Leipzig a graduate student named Susanna Sawyer analyzed its DNA. At the symposium in 2011 she presented her results for the first time. To everyone’s shock, the toe bone had turned out to be Neanderthal, deepening the mystery of the place
Here's a big, fat softball, coming right over the plate, and I can't think of a punchline. Something about politicians would probably be apt.Higher reasoning is one of the factors that likely can be attributed to any primate currently residing in North America.
The high-coverage Neandertal genome shares many derived mutations with sub-Saharan Africans, while the high-coverage Denisova genome shares fewer. If these archaic populations were equally related to Africans, they would have the same number of shared derived mutations with Africans. Prüfer and colleagues infer that the Denisovan genome had ancestors who belonged to a yet more ancient hominin population. They suggest this population represents around 4 percent of the ancestry of Denisovans, and that it diverged from the common ancestors of Neandertals and sub-Saharan Africans sometime around a million years ago. The confidence intervals on both estimates are large.
About 6% of the genomes of Aboriginal Australians, New Guineans and some Pacific Islanders can be traced to Denisovans, studies suggest.
Yes Chris, we can. There are these people called paleontologists who are quite good at determining the morphological features of teeth and fingers if you give them a tooth and a finger bone.
Recall that there are people like Krantz who perpetuated a notion that Gigantopithecus was bipedal - and therefore bigfoot - simply from teeth and a couple of lower laws. We don't even really know if Giganto was all that big. It might have been much smaller than people generally suspect but had unusually robust jaws and teeth - not that far-fetched considering that its diet seems to have included a goodly amount of bamboo.
So complete morphology from a tooth and a finger bone? No, of course not. Enough to prove such a thing existed? From the DNA obtained, yes. So . . . find a bigfoot tooth, we'll describe it morphologically, and we'll sequence its DNA to determine where it sits on the branch of the Hominin family bush.
So when did inconclusive DNA results prove Bigfoot exists?
It didn't and it doesn't prove anything. Chris B.
Thanks, that's actually a good article and theory. I particularly liked this part:
"Primates are often intelligent, but that doesn't translate into adaptability. Think of the mountain gorilla, restricted to a few populations in forested central Africa, unable to live anywhere else. Adaptability is often a sign of intelligence, but intelligence in a species is no guarantee of adaptability."
Higher reasoning is one of the factors that likely can be attributed to any primate currently residing in North America. Without it, we certainly could have never adapted to the climate. Chris B.
No, he is mistaken about the mystery DNA.
The 8 year old girl's finger bone was Denisovan population
The tooth was from another member of the Denisovan population
The Toe Bone was Neandertal
The green stone bracelet found earlier in Layer 11 had almost surely been made by modern humans.
This is all laid out in this article.
http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2013/07/125-missing-human-ancestor/shreeve-text
That is an incredible thing in itself, but has nothing to do with the genome findings I have referred to. Chris B.