australian.museum/learn/science/human-evolution/the-denisovans/The Denisovans are the first ancient hominin species to be revealed by genes alone, not by fossil classification. While placed in the Homo genus, they have not yet been given a species classification as no physical description exists. They are named after the Denisova Cave in Russia where the first fossils were found.
Background of discovery
Age
The age range of about 500,000 to 30,000 years ago given for this species is based on dating of the few fossils that exist and inferences made from genetic studies and sediment analysis.
Sediment analysis at Denisova cave indicates the Denisovans occupied the site from 300,000 to 50,000 years ago. Denisovan fossils have only been found in layer 11 but are too fragmentary to be dated. Animal bones in the same layer have radiocarbon dates of 50,000 years old but the youngest part of layer 11 dates to 16,000–30,000 years old. The micro-stratigraphy needs more work to determine accurate dates for this layer and the Denisovan remains.
Genes reveal Denisovans are cousins of Neanderthals and that the two split sometime around 400,000 to 500,000 years ago. Research on Denisovan DNA in modern Papua New Guineans suggests that the two populations interbred around 46,000 years ago. It is also suggested that another interbreeding event took place about 30,000 years ago and possibly as recently as 15,000 years ago. The evidence for the latter date is disputed, but it seems likely Denisovans were still around at least 30,000 years ago.
Distribution
To date, the only fossil specimens come from Denisova Cave, a remote site in the Altai Mountains in Siberia, Russia, and the Baishiya Karst Cave on the Tibetan Plateau in China.
However, genetic studies indicate the Denisovan homeland once stretched from the Altai into eastern Asia. Denisovans contributed genes to present-day Melanesians and Indigenous Australians, so must have been present in an area where they could interact with the ancestors of these people as they migrated across southern Asia.
What the name means
While placed in the genus Homo, the Denisovans still have no agreed taxonomic name. They are named after the Denisova Cave, Siberia, Russia, where the first fossils were found and identified.
Denisova Cave was, at various times, home to three species of humans – the Denisovans, Neanderthals (Homo neanderthalensis) and modern humans (Homo sapiens). A Neanderthal toe bone, identified by DNA, was found in the cave in 2010 (in layer 11.4 of the East Gallery) and was contemporary with the Denisovan finger bone. Neanderthals also left Mousterian stone points and scrapers in that cave and the region, mostly dated to 40,000 years. The cave also held sophisticated stone tools and bone artefacts that may have belonged to Homo sapiens. Exact dates for the layers that the artefacts and fossils were found in is problematic and it seems most likely that occupation was sequential, not contemporaneous.
Important discoveries
Excavations at Denisova Cave have been ongoing since the 1970s, but it was more recent discoveries of human remains that made world headlines.
In 2008 a tiny finger bone (Denisova 3) was recovered from layer 11. As it was well preserved with a suitable date range (50,000 and 30,000 years old), it was sent for DNA analysis. The results of the mtDNA and nuclear DNA sequencing were published in 2010 – the bone belonged to a female from an unknown type of archaic human. While closely related to Neanderthals and modern humans, she was distinct enough to merit classification as a new species. Interestingly, the bone also had small amounts of Neanderthal DNA, indicating that the two groups had mixed previously. As the growth plate on her finger bone was not fused, the girl was aged between 5 and 7 years old when she died.
Other specimens from Denisova cave, all identified through their DNA, are:
Denisova 2: a molar found in 1984, estimate to be 122,700–194,000 years old
Denisova 4: a molar found in 2000
Denisova 8: a molar found in 2010
Denisova 11: a long bone fragment found in 2014 and determined to be from a hybrid (see below)
Denisova 13: fragment of parietal bone from the back of skull found in 2016 and announced in 2019 after mtDNA analysis
The first and, as of 2020, only Denisovan fossil recovered from a different site was announced in May 2019. A mandible, found in 1980 by a Buddhist monk as he explored the Baishiya Karst Cave in Gansu, China, was taken from storage and reanalysed. It was identified using protein analysis, as DNA could not be extracted. It’s dated to at least 160,000 years old through U-series dating of rocky material attached to the bottom of the jaw. The altitude of this new Denisovan’s home — 3,280 metres above sea level on the Tibetan Plateau — while surprising, does explain the Denisovans’ genetic contribution to modern Tibetans (see below).
All the specimens recognised as being Denisovan were done so on the basis of protein or DNA analysis. No specimen has yet been described as Denisovan based on physical characteristics. It is highly likely, however, that some of the unclassified hominin fossils from Asia, such as Penghu 1, Dali and Xuchang 1 and 2 (skull fragments unearthed in Lingjing in 2017) are Denisovan. However, they are not suitable for DNA testing, so their relationship to the Denisovan fossils remains unknown.
Denisovan finger bone fragment (replica) from which the DNA studies first revealed the new species.
Denisova 4 molar found in 2000
Xiahe lower jaw from Tibet
Denisova 11 leg bone fragment
Photograph of the 2 cm bone (Denisova 11)
Image: Buckley, Michael; Derevianko, Anatoly; Shunkov, Michael; Procopio, Noemi; Comeskey, Daniel; Fiona Brock; Douka, Katerina; Meyer, Matthias et al.
© Scientific Reports
Relationships to other species
Ancestry
Evidence suggest that Neanderthals, Denisovans, and modern humans are all descended from or share a common ancestor with Homo heidelbergensis. DNA evidence suggests this common ancestor lived about 600,000 to 750,000 years ago. It seems likely, therefore, that around this time an ancestral group of H. heidelbergensis left Africa and then split shortly after. One branch ventured northwestward into West Asia and Europe and became the Neanderthals. The other branch moved east, becoming Denisovans. Those that stayed in Africa evolved into modern humans.
Interbreeding
DNA evidence also makes it clear that these three closely related species later met and interbred, and that each species contributed genetic material to the others. For instance, living Europeans and Asians inherited about 1-4% of their DNA from Neanderthals, and Tibetans, Melanesians and Australian Aboriginals carry about 3-5 % of Denisovan DNA (this is explained by interbreeding of eastern Eurasian Denisovans with the modern human ancestors of these populations as they migrated towards Australian and PNG). Our species, Homo sapiens, may even have been interbreeding with Denisovans as recently as 15,000-30,000 years ago, according to a detailed analysis of the DNA of people living in Indonesia and Papua New Guinea published in 2019. If these dates are correct, the Denisovans are the most recently lived human species apart from our own.
Studies reveal that Denisovan DNA in modern humans can be advantageous. In 2014, researchers discovered that ethnic Sherpas likely inherited from Denisovans a ‘super athlete’ gene variant EPAS1 that helps them breathe easily at high altitudes.
One of the greatest discoveries relating to interbreeding between human species was that of a first-generation Neanderthal-Denisovan hybrid – or an individual whose parents belonged to two distinct species of humans. Denisovan 11 is a long bone fragment fossil found in Denisova Cave in 2012. It was stored in a collection of over 2000 unidentified bone fragments until 2016 when protein analysis on many of the fragments was performed to see whether they were human or animal.
Denisova 11 turned out to be human and was then sent for more detailed analysis. The fossil turned out to be from a girl – now nicknamed Denny – who was at least 13 years old and lived some 90,000 years ago. Her DNA analysis was published with great excitement in 2018 – Denny was a first generation hybrid with a Denisovan father and a Neanderthal mother. The genetic study was led by Svante Paabo and Viviane Slon from Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Germany.
Physical features
Since very few Denisovan fossils have been found, most of what we know about the extinct humans comes from their DNA. The species has not yet been described based on physical characteristics, but the following are apparent traits:
Molars
large and lack the specialised features found in Neanderthal teeth
have many unusual cusps and do not resemble modern human molars
share no derived morphological features with Neanderthals or modern humans, further indicating that Denisovans have an evolutionary history distinct from Neanderthals and modern humans.
Jaw
the Xiahe jaw from Tibet is strongly built and shorter than those of Neanderthals
Culture
While thousands of artefacts have been recovered from Denisova cave, none have so far been associated with the Denisovans. This makes it hard to form a detailed picture of cultural attributes specific to the Denisovans. However, it can be assumed that they were relatively advanced in terms of intelligence and lived a similar lifestyle to other humans at this time.
Further reading:
Reich, D.; Richard, E. G. et al. (23 December 2010). "Genetic history of an archaic hominin group from Denisova Cave in Siberia". Nature. 468 (1012): 1053–60.
Rex Dalton (March 24, 2010). "Fossil finger points to new human species. DNA analysis reveals lost relative from 40,000 years ago". Nature. 464 (7288): 472–73.
Gibbons, Ann (August 2011). "Who Were the Denisovans?" (PDF). Science. 333 (6046): 1084–87.
Slon, Viviane; Mafessoni, Fabrizio; Vernot, Benjamin; de Filippo, Cesare; Grote, Steffi; Viola, Bence; Hajdinjak, Mateja; Peyrégne, Stéphane; Nagel, Sarah; Brown, Samantha; Douka, Katerina; Higham, Tom; Kozlikin, Maxim B.; Shunkov, Michael V.; Derevianko, Anatoly P.; Kelso, Janet; Meyer, Matthias; Prüfer, Kay; Pääbo, Svante (2018-08-22). "The genome of the offspring of a Neanderthal mother and a Denisovan father". Nature. 561 (7721): 113–116
Warren, Matthew (22 August 2018). "Mum's a Neanderthal, Dad's a Denisovan: First discovery of an ancient-human hybrid - Genetic analysis uncovers a direct descendant of two different groups of early humans". Nature. 560 (7719): 417–418.
Zhan-Yang Li et al, Late Pleistocene archaic human crania from Xuchang, China. Science 03 Mar 2017: Vol. 355, Issue 6328, pp. 969-972
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