Genetic insights into the social organization of Neanderthals

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Skov, Laurits | Peyrégne, Stéphane | Popli, Divyaratan | Iasi, Leonardo N. M. | Deviese, Thibaut | Slon, Viviane | Zavala, Elena I. | Hajdinjak, Mateja | Sümer, Arev P. | Grote, Steffi | Bossoms Mesa, Alba | López Herráez, David | Nickel, Birgit | Nagel, Sarah | Richter, Julia | Essel, Elena | Gansauge, Marie | Schmidt, Anna | Korlević, Petra | Comeskey, Daniel | Derevianko, Anatoly P. | Kharevich, Aliona | Markin, Sergey V. | Talamo, Sahra | Douka, Katerina | Krajcarz, Maciej T. | Roberts, Richard G. | Higham, Thomas | Viola, Bence | Krivoshapkin, Andrey I. | Kolobova, Kseniya A. | Kelso, Janet | Meyer, Matthias | Pääbo, Svante | Peter, Benjamin M.

Edité par CCSD ; Nature Publishing Group -

International audience. Genomic analyses of Neanderthals have previously provided insights into their population history and relationship to modern humans1-8, but the social organization of Neanderthal communities remains poorly understood. Here we present genetic data for 13 Neanderthals from two Middle Palaeolithic sites in the Altai Mountains of southern Siberia: 11 from Chagyrskaya Cave9,10 and 2 from Okladnikov Cave11—making this one of the largest genetic studies of a Neanderthal population to date. We used hybridization capture to obtain genome-wide nuclear data, as well as mitochondrial and Y-chromosome sequences. Some Chagyrskaya individuals were closely related, including a father-daughter pair and a pair of second-degree relatives, indicating that at least some of the individuals lived at the same time. Up to one-third of these individuals' genomes had long segments of homozygosity, suggesting that the Chagyrskaya Neanderthals were part of a small community. In addition, the Y-chromosome diversity is an order of magnitude lower than the mitochondrial diversity, a pattern that we found is best explained by female migration between communities. Thus, the genetic data presented here provide a detailed documentation of the social organization of an isolated Neanderthal community at the easternmost extent of their known range.

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