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Ancient DNA Reveals Three Ancestral Components Shaped Neolithic Maghreb
Science
5/1/2026AI summary

Ancient DNA Reveals Three Ancestral Components Shaped Neolithic Maghreb

Research published in Nature examining DNA from Moroccan archaeological sites dating back over 7,400 years has revealed that agriculture in the Maghreb developed through three distinct ancestral components. European farmers crossed the Strait of Gibraltar, indigenous foragers adopted farming techniques while maintaining genetic isolation, and Levantine pastoralists arrived later via the Green Sahara corridor. This genetic blend underpins modern Maghrebi populations, including the Imazighen (Berbers), with the fundamental biological roots established during the African Humid Period.

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Ancient DNA Reveals Prehistoric Forest Beneath North Sea Was Major Ice Age Refuge
Science
4/23/2026AI summary

Ancient DNA Reveals Prehistoric Forest Beneath North Sea Was Major Ice Age Refuge

Researchers using ancient DNA (sedaDNA) analysis have discovered that Doggerland, a sunken landscape beneath the North Sea, hosted lush temperate forests of oak, elm and hazel at least 16,000 years ago—thousands of years earlier than previously thought. The study published in PNAS analyzed 252 sediment samples from 41 marine cores and found DNA from Pterocarya (walnut family) species 400,000 years older than their known extinction date, indicating isolated microrefugia allowed species to persist far longer. The findings suggest Doggerland was a significant refuge for plants, animals and early humans during the last Ice Age, with some parts remaining habitable until 7,000 years ago.

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Scientists Reconstruct Oldest Neanderthal Population in Central-Eastern Europe Using Ancient DNA
Science
4/22/2026AI summary

Scientists Reconstruct Oldest Neanderthal Population in Central-Eastern Europe Using Ancient DNA

Researchers have reconstructed what appears to be the oldest Neanderthal population in Central-Eastern Europe using DNA from a tooth found in Stajnia Cave, Poland. The mitochondrial DNA analysis, published in Scientific Reports, reveals genetic connections between Neanderthals in Central Europe and the Caucasus region, proving these ancient humans migrated and maintained contact across large territories rather than living in isolated communities.

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