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Peștera cu Oase

Peștera cu Oase (Romanian pronunciation: [ˈpeʃtera ku ˈo̯ase], meaning "The Cave with Bones") is a system of 12 karstic galleries and chambers located near the city Anina, in the Caraș-Severin county, southwestern Romania, where some of the oldest European early modern human (EEMH) remains, between 42,000 and 37,000 years old, have been found.[1][2]

Peștera cu Oase Cave
Peștera cu Oase
Oase 2 skull
location in Romania
Peștera cu Oase (Romania)
Locationnear Anina city
RegionCaraș-Severin county, southwestern Romania
Coordinates45°01′N 21°50′E / 45.017°N 21.833°E / 45.017; 21.833
History
PeriodsPaleolithic

While "Oase 1" lower jaw is fully mature, the facial skeleton is that of a mid-second-decade adolescent, therefore corresponding to a second individual, designated as "Oase 2". Further analyses have revealed that the left temporal bone represents a third individual, assessed as adolescent versus mature female, designated as "Oase 3".[3] However, additional finds and work have shown that the temporal bone derives from the same cranium as the "Oase 2" facial and parietal bones.[4] The lack of archaeological signs such as torches, charcoal or tools could suggest that the human remains may have washed in the cave through fissures. The "Oase 2" and "Oase 3" confirm a pattern already known from the probably contemporaneous "Oase 1" mandible,[3] indicating a mixture of archaic, early modern human and Neanderthal morphological features. Thus, the specimens exhibit a suite of derived "modern human" features like projecting chin, no brow ridge, a high and rounded brain case. Yet, these features are associated with several archaic aspects of the cranium and dentition that place them outside the range of variation for modern humans, like a large face, a large crest of bone behind the ear and big teeth that get even larger toward the back. This mosaic of Neanderthal and modern human resembles similar traits found in a 25,000 years old fossil of a child in Abrigo do Lagar Velho or in the 31,000 years old site of Mladeč, by Cidália Duarte, et al. (1999).

In 2015 genetics research revealed that the Oase 1 fossil had a recent Neanderthal ancestor, with an estimated 5-11% Neanderthal autosomal DNA. The specimen's 12th chromosome was 50% Neanderthal.[5][6]

The cave edit

In February 2002, a speleological team exploring the karstic system of Miniș Valley, in the southwestern Carpathian Mountains near Anina, discovered a previously unknown chamber with a profusion of mammalian skeletal remains. The cave, which seemed to have served primarily as hibernation room for the Late Pleistocene cave bear (Ursus spelaeus), presented unusual arrangements such as the placement of some remains on raised rocks, suggesting a certain human involvement in the accumulated deposits. In fact, speleologists Ștefan Milota, Adrian Bîlgăr and Laurențiu Sarcina discovered a complete human mandible on the paleosurface. The karstic chamber was designated as Peștera cu Oase (The Cave with Bones) and the human mandible as "Oase 1" (also dubbed Ion din Anina "John of Anina").[3]

The latest radiocarbon dates[dubious ] of the Oase fossils give an age of 37,800 years BP.[2] From a location close to the Iron Gates in the Danubian corridor, they may represent one of the earliest modern human populations to have entered Europe.[7]

Oase 1 edit

In June 2003 a further research team with Ștefan Milota, Ricardo Rodrigo, and Mircea Gherase discovered additional human remains on the cave's surface. Thus, an entire anterior cranial skeleton was found along with a largely complete left temporal bone and a number of frontal, parietal and occipital bone segments.

"Oase 1" exhibits morphological traits from early modern humans and archaic humans, including Neanderthal features.[8]

 
Phylogenetic position of ancient Upper Paleolithic Eurasian specimens.

DNA analysis of Oase 1 since 2015 has made a number of significant findings.

  • About 6-9% of the genome is Neanderthal in origin. This is the highest percentage of archaic introgression found in an anatomically modern human and together with the linkage disequilibrium patterns indicates that Oase 1 had a relatively-recent Neanderthal ancestor – about four to six generations earlier.
  • The autosomal DNA of Oase 1 by Fu et al. (2015) indicates that he (as it was a male) may have shared more alleles with modern East Asian populations than with modern Europeans. However, Oase shared equal alleles with Mesolithic Europeans and East Eurasians suggesting non pre LGM-European admixture in modern Europeans, part of it being from the Basal Eurasian ancestry that was carried to Europe by Anatolian farmers and Yamnaya pastoralists.[9]
  • Oase 1 belongs to an extinct Y-DNA haplogroup and an extinct mitochondrial DNA haplogroup.
    • Research by Poznik et al. (2016) suggests that Oase 1 Y-DNA belongs to haplogroup K2a*. That is, Oase 1 possesses SNPS similar to Ust'-Ishim man (also K2a*), 45,000-year-old remains from Siberia, and upstream from Haplogroup NO and a rare lineage found in two living males (from ethnic Telugu and Malay backgrounds, respectively, for whom Poznik et al. proposed the creation of a new subclade, named "K2a1").[10] (Earlier research by Fu et al. reported that Oase 1 belonged to a subclade of Y-DNA haplogroup F, other than haplogroups G, H, I and J – leaving open the possibility that Oase 1 belonged to macrohaplogroup K.)
    • According to Fu, Oase-1's maternal lineage is related to mitochondrial DNA haplogroup N, but diverged from all other N clades before they diverged from each other.[9]

Oase 2 edit

Oase 2
 
Forensic facial reconstruction of Oase 2. Exhibited in the Neanderthal Museum in Mettmann, Germany.
Scientific classification  
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Primates
Suborder: Haplorhini
Infraorder: Simiiformes
Family: Hominidae
Subfamily: Homininae
Tribe: Hominini
Genus: Homo
Species:

Researchers sequenced the genome of "Oase 2" (41,500–39,500 years old) to high coverage (20-fold) from its petrous bone.

Around 6% of "Oase 2"'s genome is Neanderthal in origin, which is lower than for "Oase 1"; however, this is still much higher than expected based on its age and what is seen in other Upper Palaeolithic genomes.

"Oase 2" belongs to the same basal subclade of mitochondrial DNA haplogroup N as "Oase 1". When compared against all DNA samples on record, "Oase 2" and "Oase 1" share the closest genetic affinity with each other. "Oase 1" and "Oase 2" appear to be from related, but not necessarily identical populations.

"Oase 1" shows an affinity for Ice Age Europeans that is not found in "Oase 2", while "Oase 2" is closer to Asians and Native Americans. "Oase 1" shows a genetic affinity for "Peştera Muierii 2" that is not found in "Oase 2". After "Oase 1", the next closest genetic affinity for "Oase 2" among ancient DNA samples is the c. 40kya Tianyuan man from Northern China. Neither "Oase 2" nor "Oase 1" are particularly close genetically to any modern human populations.[11]

Current research edit

Peștera cu Oase is subject to ongoing investigation. The on-site findings from the 2005 campaign are currently cross-examined at the Romanian "Emil Racoviță" Institute of Speleology, Australian National University, (electron spin resonance and uranium-series dating on 21 bone/tooth samples and 29 associated sediment samples), University of Bristol, (uranium-series analysis on 22 bone samples), University of Bergen, (uranium-series dating on 7 samples), University of Oxford (AMS radiocarbon dating on 8 bone/tooth samples), Max Planck Institute (stable isotope analysis and ancient DNA on 37 bone/tooth samples), University of Vienna (AMS radiocarbon dating on 25 bone/tooth samples).

A skull found in Peștera cu Oase in 2004/5 bears features of both modern humans and Neanderthals. Radiocarbon dating indicates that the skull is 37,800 years old, making it amongst the oldest modern human fossils ever found in Europe.[2] Erik Trinkaus (2007) concluded that the two groups interbred thousands of years ago.

Implications for research edit

The marked contrast between the morphological modernity of "early modern" humans and even late "classical Neanderthal" trait-packages,[12] as well as mitochondrial aDNA differences have suggested a major physical anthropological discontinuity and hence, a complete population replacement at the Middle-to-Upper Palaeolithic transition, leading to what one might call "Out of Africa with Complete Replacement" model.

However, more recent direct dating of fossils has demonstrated that early modern human remains were instead of the mid/late Holocene, hence much younger than supposed.[13]

In this context, the particular importance of the "Peștera cu Oase" findings resides both in the mixture of modern human and archaic (Neanderthal) features and in the fact that they are sufficiently complete to be taxonomically diagnosed and directly dated. Thus, the Oase fossils overlap in time for some 3000 years with late Neanderthals like those of Vindija Cave (Croatia) dated to ~32,000 radiocarbon years BP or less for Arcy-sur-Cure (France) at ~34,000 radiocarbon years BP. Besides, the notion that the Oase people are very close to the time of contact with Neanderthals is consistent with their archaic traits, and finds additional support in the patterns of spatio-temporal distribution of the latest Neanderthal remains.[7]

Since genetics does not reject the hypothesis of a Neanderthal-modern admixture, and morphological and archaeological evidence suggest that Neanderthal lineages survived into later Upper Paleolithic populations, "Peștera cu Oase" findings provide a strong argument in favor of an admixture model between regional Neanderthals and early modern humans.

Arguing with chronological overlapping and morphological blending, this model assumes significant Neanderthal/modern human admixture,[14] suggesting that already on their arrival in Europe, modern humans met, intermixed and interbred with Neanderthals.[15]

When modern humans entered Europe, they encountered people with the same cognitive capabilities and featuring identical levels of cultural achievement. In such a situation, the entire gamut of cultural interaction situations, from conflict to mutual avoidance and full admixture, must have ensued at the local and regional level. But the overall result in the long-term continental perspective was that of biological and cultural blending, the imbalance in the size of the gene reservoirs involved explaining the eventual loss of Neanderthal mtDNA lineages among later and extant humans.[7]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Fu Q. et al., "An early modern human from Romania with a recent Neanderthal ancestor", Nature 524, 216–219 (13 August 2015), doi:10.1038/nature14558.
  2. ^ a b c Wilford, John Noble (2 Nov 2011). "Fossil Teeth Put Humans in Europe Earlier Than Thought". New York Times. Retrieved 2012-04-19.
  3. ^ a b c Trinkaus, E., Milota, Ș., Rodrigo, R., Gherase, M., Moldovan, O. (2003), Early Modern Human Cranial remains from the Peștera cu Oase, Romania, Journal of Human Evolution, 45:245 –253
  4. ^ Trinkaus, E., Zilhão, J., Rougier, H., Rodrigo, R., Milota, S., Gherase, M., Sarcinã, L., Moldovan, O., Bãltean, I., Codrea, V., Bailey, S. E., Franciscus, R. G., Ponce de Léon, M., Zollikofer, C. P. E. (2006) The Peștera cu Oase and early modern humans in Southeastern Europe. In N.J. Conard (Ed.), When Neanderthals and modern humans met, pp. 145-164. Tübingen: Kerns Verlag
  5. ^ Anderson, Andrea (8 May 2015). "Team Characterizing DNA from Ancient Human with Recent Neanderthal Ancestry". www.genomeweb.com. Genome Web. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  6. ^ Fu, Qiaomei; Hajdinjak, Mateja; Moldovan, Oana Teodora; Constantin, Silviu; Mallick, Swapan; Skoglund, Pontus; Patterson, Nick; Rohland, Nadin; Lazaridis, Iosif (2015-08-13). "An early modern human from Romania with a recent Neanderthal ancestor". Nature. 524 (7564): 216–219. Bibcode:2015Natur.524..216F. doi:10.1038/nature14558. ISSN 0028-0836. PMC 4537386. PMID 26098372.
  7. ^ a b c Zilhão, J. (2006). "Neandertals and Moderns Mixed and It Matters". Evolutionary Anthropology. 15 (5): 183–195. doi:10.1002/evan.20110. S2CID 18565967.
  8. ^ Trinkaus, E.; Moldovan, O.; Milota, Ș.; Bîlgăr, A.; Sarcina, L.; Athreya, S.; Bailey, S. E.; Rodrigo, R.; et al. (2003). "An early modern human from Peștera cu Oase, Romania". PNAS. 100 (20): 11231–11236. Bibcode:2003PNAS..10011231T. doi:10.1073/pnas.2035108100. PMC 208740. PMID 14504393.
  9. ^ a b Qiaomei Fu; Mateja Hajdinjak; Oana Teodora Moldovan; Silviu Constantin; Swapan Mallick; Pontus Skoglund; Nick Patterson; Nadin Rohland; Iosif Lazaridis; Birgit Nickel; Bence Viola; Kay Prüfer; Matthias Meyer; Janet Kelso; David Reich; Svante Pääbo (13 August 2015). "An early modern human from Romania with a recent Neanderthal ancestor". Nature. 524 (7564): 216–219. Bibcode:2015Natur.524..216F. doi:10.1038/nature14558. PMC 4537386. PMID 26098372.
  10. ^ G. David Poznik et al., 2016, "Punctuated bursts in human male demography inferred from 1,244 worldwide Y-chromosome sequences" Nature Genetics, no. 48, pp. 593–599.
  11. ^ Siska, Veronika (2018). "Chapter 2: Palaeolithic Oase genome implies diversification and extinction events across Eurasia" (PDF). Human population history and its interplay with natural selection. University of Cambridge (Thesis). doi:10.17863/CAM.31536.   This article contains quotations from this source, which is available under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) license.
  12. ^ Ponce, De, León, Ms; Zollikofer, Cp (Aug 2001). "Peștera cu Oase". Nature. 412 (6846): 534–8. doi:10.1038/35087573. ISSN 0028-0836. PMID 11484052. S2CID 4394515.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  13. ^ Mellars, P (Feb 2006). "A new radiocarbon revolution and the dispersal of modern humans in Eurasia". Nature. 439 (7079): 931–5. Bibcode:2006Natur.439..931M. doi:10.1038/nature04521. ISSN 0028-0836. PMID 16495989. S2CID 4416359.
  14. ^ Soficaru, A.; Dobo, A.; Trinkaus, E. (2006). "Early modern humans from the Peștera Muierii, Baia de Fier, Romania". PNAS. 103 (46): 17196–17201. Bibcode:2006PNAS..10317196S. doi:10.1073/pnas.0608443103. PMC 1859909. PMID 17085588.
  15. ^ Trinkaus, Erik (2005). "Early Modern Humans". Annual Review of Anthropology. 34: 207–230. doi:10.1146/annurev.anthro.34.030905.154913. S2CID 9039428.

peștera, oase, romanian, pronunciation, ˈpeʃtera, meaning, cave, with, bones, system, karstic, galleries, chambers, located, near, city, anina, caraș, severin, county, southwestern, romania, where, some, oldest, european, early, modern, human, eemh, remains, b. Peștera cu Oase Romanian pronunciation ˈpeʃtera ku ˈo ase meaning The Cave with Bones is a system of 12 karstic galleries and chambers located near the city Anina in the Caraș Severin county southwestern Romania where some of the oldest European early modern human EEMH remains between 42 000 and 37 000 years old have been found 1 2 Peștera cu Oase CavePeștera cu OaseOase 2 skulllocation in RomaniaShow map of EuropePeștera cu Oase Romania Show map of RomaniaLocationnear Anina cityRegionCaraș Severin county southwestern RomaniaCoordinates45 01 N 21 50 E 45 017 N 21 833 E 45 017 21 833HistoryPeriodsPaleolithicWhile Oase 1 lower jaw is fully mature the facial skeleton is that of a mid second decade adolescent therefore corresponding to a second individual designated as Oase 2 Further analyses have revealed that the left temporal bone represents a third individual assessed as adolescent versus mature female designated as Oase 3 3 However additional finds and work have shown that the temporal bone derives from the same cranium as the Oase 2 facial and parietal bones 4 The lack of archaeological signs such as torches charcoal or tools could suggest that the human remains may have washed in the cave through fissures The Oase 2 and Oase 3 confirm a pattern already known from the probably contemporaneous Oase 1 mandible 3 indicating a mixture of archaic early modern human and Neanderthal morphological features Thus the specimens exhibit a suite of derived modern human features like projecting chin no brow ridge a high and rounded brain case Yet these features are associated with several archaic aspects of the cranium and dentition that place them outside the range of variation for modern humans like a large face a large crest of bone behind the ear and big teeth that get even larger toward the back This mosaic of Neanderthal and modern human resembles similar traits found in a 25 000 years old fossil of a child in Abrigo do Lagar Velho or in the 31 000 years old site of Mladec by Cidalia Duarte et al 1999 In 2015 genetics research revealed that the Oase 1 fossil had a recent Neanderthal ancestor with an estimated 5 11 Neanderthal autosomal DNA The specimen s 12th chromosome was 50 Neanderthal 5 6 Contents 1 The cave 2 Oase 1 3 Oase 2 4 Current research 5 Implications for research 6 See also 7 ReferencesThe cave editIn February 2002 a speleological team exploring the karstic system of Miniș Valley in the southwestern Carpathian Mountains near Anina discovered a previously unknown chamber with a profusion of mammalian skeletal remains The cave which seemed to have served primarily as hibernation room for the Late Pleistocene cave bear Ursus spelaeus presented unusual arrangements such as the placement of some remains on raised rocks suggesting a certain human involvement in the accumulated deposits In fact speleologists Ștefan Milota Adrian Bilgăr and Laurențiu Sarcina discovered a complete human mandible on the paleosurface The karstic chamber was designated as Peștera cu Oase The Cave with Bones and the human mandible as Oase 1 also dubbed Ion din Anina John of Anina 3 The latest radiocarbon dates dubious discuss of the Oase fossils give an age of 37 800 years BP 2 From a location close to the Iron Gates in the Danubian corridor they may represent one of the earliest modern human populations to have entered Europe 7 Oase 1 editIn June 2003 a further research team with Ștefan Milota Ricardo Rodrigo and Mircea Gherase discovered additional human remains on the cave s surface Thus an entire anterior cranial skeleton was found along with a largely complete left temporal bone and a number of frontal parietal and occipital bone segments Oase 1 exhibits morphological traits from early modern humans and archaic humans including Neanderthal features 8 nbsp Goyet Kostenki Sungir Zlaty kun Ust Ishim Oase Bacho Kiro Tianyuan Initial Upper Paleolithic wave East Eurasian nbsp Phylogenetic position of ancient Upper Paleolithic Eurasian specimens DNA analysis of Oase 1 since 2015 has made a number of significant findings About 6 9 of the genome is Neanderthal in origin This is the highest percentage of archaic introgression found in an anatomically modern human and together with the linkage disequilibrium patterns indicates that Oase 1 had a relatively recent Neanderthal ancestor about four to six generations earlier The autosomal DNA of Oase 1 by Fu et al 2015 indicates that he as it was a male may have shared more alleles with modern East Asian populations than with modern Europeans However Oase shared equal alleles with Mesolithic Europeans and East Eurasians suggesting non pre LGM European admixture in modern Europeans part of it being from the Basal Eurasian ancestry that was carried to Europe by Anatolian farmers and Yamnaya pastoralists 9 Oase 1 belongs to an extinct Y DNA haplogroup and an extinct mitochondrial DNA haplogroup Research by Poznik et al 2016 suggests that Oase 1 Y DNA belongs to haplogroup K2a That is Oase 1 possesses SNPS similar to Ust Ishim man also K2a 45 000 year old remains from Siberia and upstream from Haplogroup NO and a rare lineage found in two living males from ethnic Telugu and Malay backgrounds respectively for whom Poznik et al proposed the creation of a new subclade named K2a1 10 Earlier research by Fu et al reported that Oase 1 belonged to a subclade of Y DNA haplogroup F other than haplogroups G H I and J leaving open the possibility that Oase 1 belonged to macrohaplogroup K According to Fu Oase 1 s maternal lineage is related to mitochondrial DNA haplogroup N but diverged from all other N clades before they diverged from each other 9 Oase 2 editOase 2 nbsp Forensic facial reconstruction of Oase 2 Exhibited in the Neanderthal Museum in Mettmann Germany Scientific classification nbsp Domain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder PrimatesSuborder HaplorhiniInfraorder SimiiformesFamily HominidaeSubfamily HomininaeTribe HomininiGenus HomoSpecies H neanderthalensis H sapiensResearchers sequenced the genome of Oase 2 41 500 39 500 years old to high coverage 20 fold from its petrous bone Around 6 of Oase 2 s genome is Neanderthal in origin which is lower than for Oase 1 however this is still much higher than expected based on its age and what is seen in other Upper Palaeolithic genomes Oase 2 belongs to the same basal subclade of mitochondrial DNA haplogroup N as Oase 1 When compared against all DNA samples on record Oase 2 and Oase 1 share the closest genetic affinity with each other Oase 1 and Oase 2 appear to be from related but not necessarily identical populations Oase 1 shows an affinity for Ice Age Europeans that is not found in Oase 2 while Oase 2 is closer to Asians and Native Americans Oase 1 shows a genetic affinity for Pestera Muierii 2 that is not found in Oase 2 After Oase 1 the next closest genetic affinity for Oase 2 among ancient DNA samples is the c 40kya Tianyuan man from Northern China Neither Oase 2 nor Oase 1 are particularly close genetically to any modern human populations 11 Current research editPeștera cu Oase is subject to ongoing investigation The on site findings from the 2005 campaign are currently cross examined at the Romanian Emil Racoviță Institute of Speleology Australian National University electron spin resonance and uranium series dating on 21 bone tooth samples and 29 associated sediment samples University of Bristol uranium series analysis on 22 bone samples University of Bergen uranium series dating on 7 samples University of Oxford AMS radiocarbon dating on 8 bone tooth samples Max Planck Institute stable isotope analysis and ancient DNA on 37 bone tooth samples University of Vienna AMS radiocarbon dating on 25 bone tooth samples A skull found in Peștera cu Oase in 2004 5 bears features of both modern humans and Neanderthals Radiocarbon dating indicates that the skull is 37 800 years old making it amongst the oldest modern human fossils ever found in Europe 2 Erik Trinkaus 2007 concluded that the two groups interbred thousands of years ago Implications for research editThe marked contrast between the morphological modernity of early modern humans and even late classical Neanderthal trait packages 12 as well as mitochondrial aDNA differences have suggested a major physical anthropological discontinuity and hence a complete population replacement at the Middle to Upper Palaeolithic transition leading to what one might call Out of Africa with Complete Replacement model However more recent direct dating of fossils has demonstrated that early modern human remains were instead of the mid late Holocene hence much younger than supposed 13 In this context the particular importance of the Peștera cu Oase findings resides both in the mixture of modern human and archaic Neanderthal features and in the fact that they are sufficiently complete to be taxonomically diagnosed and directly dated Thus the Oase fossils overlap in time for some 3000 years with late Neanderthals like those of Vindija Cave Croatia dated to 32 000 radiocarbon years BP or less for Arcy sur Cure France at 34 000 radiocarbon years BP Besides the notion that the Oase people are very close to the time of contact with Neanderthals is consistent with their archaic traits and finds additional support in the patterns of spatio temporal distribution of the latest Neanderthal remains 7 Since genetics does not reject the hypothesis of a Neanderthal modern admixture and morphological and archaeological evidence suggest that Neanderthal lineages survived into later Upper Paleolithic populations Peștera cu Oase findings provide a strong argument in favor of an admixture model between regional Neanderthals and early modern humans Arguing with chronological overlapping and morphological blending this model assumes significant Neanderthal modern human admixture 14 suggesting that already on their arrival in Europe modern humans met intermixed and interbred with Neanderthals 15 When modern humans entered Europe they encountered people with the same cognitive capabilities and featuring identical levels of cultural achievement In such a situation the entire gamut of cultural interaction situations from conflict to mutual avoidance and full admixture must have ensued at the local and regional level But the overall result in the long term continental perspective was that of biological and cultural blending the imbalance in the size of the gene reservoirs involved explaining the eventual loss of Neanderthal mtDNA lineages among later and extant humans 7 See also editPeștera Muierilor Prehistoric RomaniaReferences edit Fu Q et al An early modern human from Romania with a recent Neanderthal ancestor Nature 524 216 219 13 August 2015 doi 10 1038 nature14558 a b c Wilford John Noble 2 Nov 2011 Fossil Teeth Put Humans in Europe Earlier Than Thought New York Times Retrieved 2012 04 19 a b c Trinkaus E Milota Ș Rodrigo R Gherase M Moldovan O 2003 Early Modern Human Cranial remains from the Peștera cu Oase Romania Journal of Human Evolution 45 245 253 Trinkaus E Zilhao J Rougier H Rodrigo R Milota S Gherase M Sarcina L Moldovan O Baltean I Codrea V Bailey S E Franciscus R G Ponce de Leon M Zollikofer C P E 2006 The Peștera cu Oase and early modern humans in Southeastern Europe In N J Conard Ed When Neanderthals and modern humans met pp 145 164 Tubingen Kerns Verlag Anderson Andrea 8 May 2015 Team Characterizing DNA from Ancient Human with Recent Neanderthal Ancestry www genomeweb com Genome Web Retrieved 9 May 2015 Fu Qiaomei Hajdinjak Mateja Moldovan Oana Teodora Constantin Silviu Mallick Swapan Skoglund Pontus Patterson Nick Rohland Nadin Lazaridis Iosif 2015 08 13 An early modern human from Romania with a recent Neanderthal ancestor Nature 524 7564 216 219 Bibcode 2015Natur 524 216F doi 10 1038 nature14558 ISSN 0028 0836 PMC 4537386 PMID 26098372 a b c Zilhao J 2006 Neandertals and Moderns Mixed and It Matters Evolutionary Anthropology 15 5 183 195 doi 10 1002 evan 20110 S2CID 18565967 Trinkaus E Moldovan O Milota Ș Bilgăr A Sarcina L Athreya S Bailey S E Rodrigo R et al 2003 An early modern human from Peștera cu Oase Romania PNAS 100 20 11231 11236 Bibcode 2003PNAS 10011231T doi 10 1073 pnas 2035108100 PMC 208740 PMID 14504393 a b Qiaomei Fu Mateja Hajdinjak Oana Teodora Moldovan Silviu Constantin Swapan Mallick Pontus Skoglund Nick Patterson Nadin Rohland Iosif Lazaridis Birgit Nickel Bence Viola Kay Prufer Matthias Meyer Janet Kelso David Reich Svante Paabo 13 August 2015 An early modern human from Romania with a recent Neanderthal ancestor Nature 524 7564 216 219 Bibcode 2015Natur 524 216F doi 10 1038 nature14558 PMC 4537386 PMID 26098372 G David Poznik et al 2016 Punctuated bursts in human male demography inferred from 1 244 worldwide Y chromosome sequences Nature Genetics no 48 pp 593 599 Siska Veronika 2018 Chapter 2 Palaeolithic Oase genome implies diversification and extinction events across Eurasia PDF Human population history and its interplay with natural selection University of Cambridge Thesis doi 10 17863 CAM 31536 nbsp This article contains quotations from this source which is available under the Creative Commons Attribution 4 0 International CC BY 4 0 license Ponce De Leon Ms Zollikofer Cp Aug 2001 Peștera cu Oase Nature 412 6846 534 8 doi 10 1038 35087573 ISSN 0028 0836 PMID 11484052 S2CID 4394515 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Mellars P Feb 2006 A new radiocarbon revolution and the dispersal of modern humans in Eurasia Nature 439 7079 931 5 Bibcode 2006Natur 439 931M doi 10 1038 nature04521 ISSN 0028 0836 PMID 16495989 S2CID 4416359 Soficaru A Dobo A Trinkaus E 2006 Early modern humans from the Peștera Muierii Baia de Fier Romania PNAS 103 46 17196 17201 Bibcode 2006PNAS 10317196S doi 10 1073 pnas 0608443103 PMC 1859909 PMID 17085588 Trinkaus Erik 2005 Early Modern Humans Annual Review of Anthropology 34 207 230 doi 10 1146 annurev anthro 34 030905 154913 S2CID 9039428 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Peștera cu Oase amp oldid 1205260808, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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