logo
Jawbone dredged up from the seafloor expands the range of a mysterious species of ancient human

Jawbone dredged up from the seafloor expands the range of a mysterious species of ancient human

CNN10-04-2025

Summary
Scientists have identified a fossilized jawbone found off Taiwan's coast as belonging to a Denisovan man.
Researchers confirmed the ancient human's identity by analyzing protein fragments in teeth attached to the jaw.
This discovery marks the third confirmed location where Denisovans lived, spanning diverse environments across Asia.
Denisovans were first identified in 2010 from DNA extracted from a finger bone in Siberia.
The mysterious humans don't have a widely accepted official species name yet.
A fossilized jawbone dredged up by a fishing net from the seafloor 15 ½ miles (25 kilometers) off the coast of Taiwan in 2010 looked human, but for years scientists failed to nail down exactly where it fit in the human family tree.
Now, scientists have been able to confirm the identity of the mystery fossil, known as Penghu 1, through analyzing ancient protein fragments contained in teeth still attached to the jaw. The jawbone belonged to a Denisovan man, according to the findings published Thursday in the journal Science.
'We've determined and shown over the past couple of years that these proteins can survive longer than DNA does, and that if we have decent recovery, we can say something about the evolutionary ancestry of a specimen,' said study coauthor Frido Welker, an associate professor of biomolecular paleoanthropology at the University of Copenhagen's Globe Institute in Denmark.
Fishermen working off the coast of Taiwan long have dredged up the bones of ancient animals — elephants, water buffalo and hyenas — in their nets, relics of an ice age past when sea levels were lower and the ocean channel was a land bridge.
The Denisovan man likely lived on this strip of land that once existed between what's now China and Taiwan. This discovery establishes the third place that the enigmatic ancient humans first identified in 2010 were definitively known to have lived and shows that the Denisovans occupied a diverse range of environments: Siberian mountains, the high-altitude Tibetan Plateau and the humid subtropical latitudes, Welker added.
Fishermen who find fossils among their catch often sell their finds to antique shops, where collectors pick them up, said study coauthor Chun-Hsiang Chang, a curator of paleontology at Taiwan's National Museum of Natural Science. The museum has thousands of fossils found from the seabed in its collection.
One collector brought the jawbone, now identified as Denisovan, to the museum wanting to know more about the specimen, and Chang said he immediately realized it was unusual and encouraged the collector to donate or sell the fossil to the museum, which he did.
A paper Chang coauthored in 2015 argued the fossil belonged to the genus Homo, the grouping to which our species, Homo sapiens, and other ancient humans such as Neanderthals belong, but colleagues were not able to extract any ancient DNA from the fossil and couldn't verify the exact species.
It also wasn't possible to date the fossil accurately. Scientists believe it has an age range of between 10,000 and 70,000 or 130,000 and 190,000 years old, dating the bone to a time when past sea levels in that vicinity were low.
Chang took the specimen to Copenhagen in 2022 hoping to learn more from Welker and other scientists who were pioneering techniques to extract proteins from fossils, a field known as paleoproteomics.
Chang recalled airport security in Copenhagen stopping him when the case containing the jawbone passed through an X-ray machine. 'They stopped me and wanted me to open (the case),' he said. 'I thought maybe they were going to arrest me.' Chang said he was allowed to leave only after sharing his credentials and giving the security personnel 'a very short human evolution lesson.'
Before testing the jawbone, Welker and his colleagues sampled an elephant bone and pig bone from the same part of the seabed to work out which extraction methods would work best and determine whether proteins were still present. The team found proteins and proceeded with extracting them.
Two amino acid sequences from the proteins recovered from the specimen matched those known from the Denisovan genome — a complete set of genetic information sequenced from DNA. What's more, the lab work detected a type of protein with a sex-specific peptide called amelogenin, and Y-chromosome specific peptides revealed that the Denisovan individual was male, Welker said.
Denisovans were first identified in 2010 in a lab using DNA sequences extracted from a tiny fragment of finger bone found in Denisova Cave in Siberia's Altai Mountains, which is how the group got its name.
Genetic analysis subsequently revealed that the Denisovans, like Neanderthals, had once interbred with early modern humans. Traces of Denisovan DNA found in present-day people suggest the ancient species likely once lived across much of Asia, and the recent discovery of Denisovan fossils from outside their namesake cave has begun to show they occupied a wide range of places in Asia.
In 2019, scientists shared news that a jawbone found in a cave on the northeastern edge of the Tibetan Plateau, known as the Xiahe mandible, contained a Denisovan molecular signature. A Denisovan rib bone from the same cave was reported in 2024.
In 2022, scientists identified a tooth unearthed at a cave in Laos as Denisovan because it closely resembled the tooth from the Xiahe mandible. The clue placed the species in Southeast Asia for the first time, though scientists were not able to get any definitive molecular information from the molar to confirm it.
The good preservation of the proteins in the Penghu 1 mandible is surprising, given that it had been at the bottom of the sea for a long time, said archaeologist Zhang Dongju, a professor at China's Lanzhou University who worked on the Xiahe jawbone. She was not involved in the study.
'With the accumulation of Denisovan fossils and the increase of Denisovan-specific molecular signature identified, identification of Denisovan fossils will be easier,' she said. 'And I believe more Denisovan fossils will be found and identified in (the) future. And we will know more about this mysterious species.'
Katerina Douka, an associate professor in archaeological science at Austria's University of Vienna, described Denisovans as a paradox because scientists have detailed genetic information about the species but few fossils, so little is known about how they looked, although she noted they had 'exceptionally large' molars.
The Penghu 1 and Xiahe mandibles did not have wisdom teeth, which could indicate that their jaws did not protrude forward in their face, said Ryan McRae, a paleoanthropologist at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History in Washington, DC.
'Neither mandible has a chin, like modern humans do, so the front of their jawline would probably look flatter than ours,' McRae said by email. 'The authors wisely point out that the Penghu mandible is male, which means that it may exhibit the larger, more robust end of variation for this species. In other words, female Denisovans could look the same, or quite different, we just don't know yet.'
Douka and McRae weren't involved in the study.
The mysterious humans don't have a widely accepted official species name yet, although some scientists have suggested Homo juluensis, a classification that groups Denisovan fossils with other fossils from China, including 'dragon man,' a skull described in 2021.
Chang said that he and his colleagues hope to revisit the 4,000 or so fossils in the National Museum of Natural Science's collection that have been gathered from the seabed in the Taiwan Strait over the past 40 to 50 years and use the same proteomic methods applied to the Penghu 1 jawbone to investigate whether any other fragments belong to Denisovans.
'Maybe inside my collection there's some treasure we don't know about,' Chang said.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Rose-Hulman faculty, staff lauded for outstanding teaching, scholarship and service
Rose-Hulman faculty, staff lauded for outstanding teaching, scholarship and service

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Rose-Hulman faculty, staff lauded for outstanding teaching, scholarship and service

Three Rose-Hulman Institute faculty and staff have been recognized for their efforts in fulfilling hallmarks of the institute's educational mission: personal attention, dedication to student success and quality service, according to a campus news release. Daniel Chang, associate professor of electrical & computer engineering, received the dean's Outstanding Teacher Award, while Tim Grose, associate professor of China Studies, was presented with the Board of Trustees' Outstanding Scholar Award. Dale Long, director of media relations and executive editor of Echoes, earned the President's Outstanding Service Award. Employed at Rose-Hulman for 37 years, he is retiring at the end of June. The trio were recognized at this year's pre-commencement awards May 29 in Hatfield Hall and again Saturday during Rose-Hulman's 147th commencement. Each award winner consistently has received accolades and appreciation from campus community members, and their respective presenters acknowledged their contributions in making Rose-Hulman "a remarkable place for the world's best undergraduate science, engineering, and mathematics education in an atmosphere of individual attention and support," according to the news release. Chang, who teaches a range of courses from Introduction to Digital Systems to Advanced Computer Architecture, has been praised by students for his ability to clearly explain complex technical material through engaging storytelling, humor, and an inclusive classroom environment. Known for his 'never off-topic' policy that encourages genuine curiosity, Chang structures his courses with intention, clarity, and enthusiasm. Students consistently describe his teaching style as 'incredibly enthusiastic,' 'genuine,' and 'fun,' often noting that his own passion for teaching helps them find joy in learning even the most challenging concepts. Grose was recognized for his consistent and high-impact scholarship in the field of China Studies, with a particular focus on the Uyghur ethnic minority and issues of identity, policy, and repression within China. His widely cited 2019 book, 'Negotiating Inseparability in China: The Xinjiang Class and the Dynamics of Uyghur Ethno-National Identity,' received the Central Eurasian Studies Society Book Prize in the Social Sciences. A second book, 'Settling Xinjiang: China's Colonial Project,' is currently under review by University of Washington Press. For 37 years, Long has celebrated the people and progress of Rose-Hulman, documenting student triumphs, faculty achievements, and alumni legacies on campus and across the country.

The Humanist Who Designed a Deadly Weapon
The Humanist Who Designed a Deadly Weapon

New York Times

timea day ago

  • New York Times

The Humanist Who Designed a Deadly Weapon

Times Insider explains who we are and what we do and delivers behind-the-scenes insights into how our journalism comes together. Once, during an interview, I saw him in action as he described a run of knotty calculations he was doing in his head — the kind of math his peers usually worked out on paper or with computers. That gift was surely one reason that Enrico Fermi, a founder of the nuclear age who mentored him at the University of Chicago, called Richard L. Garwin 'the only true genius I have ever met.' It also played to a popular image of Dr. Garwin as slightly robotic, even computerlike, a thinking machine that happened to have legs. Dr. Garwin died last month at 97, leaving behind a legacy of contradictions. In 1951, at age 23, he designed the first hydrogen bomb, the world's deadliest weapon, a planet shaker that could end civilization. He then devoted his life to counteracting the terror. Over four decades of interviews, chats and social interactions, I learned that the man behind the stereotypes was full of surprises, which I wrote about in a recent article. He had a reputation for being cruel to those he saw as less talented. That may have been true in the prime of his professional life. But in person during his later years, Dr. Garwin came across as a gentle academic, a humanist whose life turned out to be rich in benevolent acts. Years ago, Gene Cittadino, a friend of mine who taught science history at New York University, asked me if Dr. Garwin might be willing to speak to his class. After the talk, Gene and several students took him to lunch and were regaled with stories about the presidents he advised. 'He was soft-spoken, sharp as a tack and funny,' Gene recalled. The whiz, he added, 'treated us with respect,' as if we were his colleagues. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Dehorning of S.African rhinos slashed poaching: study
Dehorning of S.African rhinos slashed poaching: study

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

Dehorning of S.African rhinos slashed poaching: study

The dehorning of rhinos resulted in a nearly 80-percent reduction in the poaching of the animals during a seven-year study in a major South African conservation area, researchers said Thursday. Sawing off the sought-after horns was also a fraction of the cost of other counter-poaching measures such as deploying rangers or tracking dogs, according to the study published in the journal Science. The study was carried out between 2017 and 2023 in 11 reserves around South Africa's famed Kruger National Park that protect the world's largest rhino population. During this period, some 1,985 rhinos were poached in the reserves in the Greater Kruger area despite $74 million spent mostly on reactive law enforcement measures that netted around 700 poachers, it said. By contrast, dehorning 2,284 rhinos cut poaching by 78 percent at just 1.2 percent of that budget, said the study published by the American Association for the Advancement of Science. "Some poaching of dehorned rhinos continued because poachers targeted horn stumps and regrowth, signalling the need for regular dehorning alongside judicious use of law enforcement," the study said. South Africa is home to most of the world's rhinos, including the critically endangered black rhino, and is a hotspot for poaching driven by demand in Asia where the horns are used in traditional medicine. Rhino horn is highly sought after on the black market, where the price by weight rivals that of gold and cocaine. Alongside ivory, the horns are coveted as status symbols or used in traditional medicine for their supposed aphrodisiac properties. "Ongoing socioeconomic inequality incentivises a large pool of vulnerable and motivated people to join, or poach for, criminal syndicates even when the risks are high," the researchers said. Corruption also played a role with gangs receiving insider tips to evade detection and arrest, they said. - Impacts unclear - "Although detecting and arresting poachers is essential, strategies that focus on reducing opportunities for and rewards from poaching may be more effective," the study said. It added, however, that "the effects of dehorning on rhino biology are still unclear, with present research suggesting that dehorning may alter rhino space use but not survival and reproduction." The co-authors of the study are from South Africa's Nelson Mandela University and the University of Cape Town, and various conservation groups including the Wildlife Conservation Network and United Kingdom's Save the Rhino International. South Africa had more than 16,000 rhinos at the end of 2023, mostly white rhinos, according to government data. But at least 34 rhinos were killed each month, the environment minister said in May. In 2024 South African scientists injected radioactive material into live rhino horns to make them easier to detect at border posts in a pioneering project aimed at curbing poaching. The radioactive material would not impact the animal's health or the environment in any way but make it poisonous for human consumption, according to the University of the Witwatersrand's radiation and health physics unit which spearheaded the initiative. Black rhinos are listed by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) as critically endangered. ho/br/rlp

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store