This
image provided by William Usaquen and Andrea Casas-Vargas shows the high plains
in Bogota, Colombia where a new group of humans lived 6,000 years ago. Credit:
William Usaquen, Andrea Casas-Vargas via AP
Scientists
have identified a new pod of ancient hunter-gatherers who lived near the land
bridge between North America and South America about 6,000 years ago.
Researchers are
still charting how human populations spread across the Americas thousands of years ago, arriving first in North
America before veering south. Groups that split off developed their own
collection of genes that scientists can use to piece together the human family
tree.
Discovered
through ancient DNA, the group lived in the high plateaus of present-day
Bogotá, Colombia—close to where the Americas meet. Scientists aren't sure
exactly where they fall in the family tree because they're not closely related
to ancient Native Americans in North America and also not linked to ancient or
present-day South Americans.
The new study was
published Wednesday
in the journal Science Advances.
"Up to this
point, we didn't believe there was any other lineage that would appear in South
America," said archaeologist Andre Luiz Campelo dos Santos with Florida
Atlantic University who was not involved with the new research. "This is
unexpected."
Just 4,000 years
later, these ancient humans were gone and a genetically-different human clan
inhabited the area. Scientists aren't sure exactly what happened to make them
fade away—whether they mixed into a new, bigger group or were pushed out
entirely.
Analyzing more
genes in South America will help confirm if this new group truly did disappear
or if there could be evidence of their descendants elsewhere, said Campelo dos
Santos.
Studying these
ancient Colombian genes are important to piecing together the
history of the Americas since ancient people had to cross this land
bridge to
settle in and spread across South America.
The area is "the gateway to the South American continent," said study author Andrea Casas-Vargas with the National University of Colombia.
Source: Ancient DNA uncovers unknown group near Americas' land bridge 6,000 years ago
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