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it doesn't take much understanding of a gene sequence to place it. LadyLorraine Send a noteboard - 25/03/2010 05:41:18 PM
They can tell all that from an old pinky bone they dug up? Maybe it was just a person whose mother was also her sister or some such thing. Forgive me if I remain sceptical until they find something more than a pinky bone.

Well, they can extract DNA from fossilised mammoths, so why not a human(oid) pinky bone? Note that this does not give any information about looks, constitution or way-of-life, as stated in the article.

We've just recently "cracked" the DNA code right? I mean I'm no scientist, but if we're at the early stages of understanding DNA coding and sequences there is a lot that is subject to error. I'm certainly not saying it's not possible that she's a distant ancestor of humans I'm just not buying it, at the moment. I need something a bit more concrete than a pinky bone.


No, we don't understand every little genetic sequence, but we can compare sequences for differences. We've done a LOT of phylogenetic work with other species; the only difference here is that it's a Homo-type primate. This really, to be honest, is nothing new technique or scientifically. It's just a new sample offering new information. The scientific community has been doing things like this for years.

And doesn't generations of inbreeding cause all kinds of weird issues? Again, not saying this is the case, just asking.


Generations of inbreeding could be what caused the divergence, yes...but that does NOT mean that what results is not a separate species. Really, in breeding is what ultimately causes the development of a new species. Say you have one Species called the Beaver-Ox. A couple herds of Beaver-Oxen become trapped in a Valley high up in the mountains by a catastrophic land slide blocking the only exit accessible from the valley. Over time, the two herds interbreed and interbreed and in breed and in breed. A couple centuries down the line, a scientist comes along and samples both the original Beaver-Oxen that are scampering around the base of the mountains, and then the Valley Beaver-Oxen and discovers they have diverged into different species due to genetic constraints and possibly environmental differences and differences. Perhaps the Valley is colder, so the new Valley Beaver-Oxen have longer coats. Maybe they are also smaller and hardier with a lower reproductive rate due to their decreased habitat size, and have developed a resistance to a particular mountain disease that used to only affect the Beaver-Oxen when they'd be passing through the mountains.

Anyway, point is, "inbreeding" does not mean that these scientists are wrong in the slightest.
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Possible new human ancestor found in Siberia - 25/03/2010 03:26:22 AM 595 Views
Yes, I found that very exciting (link to new scientist article) - 25/03/2010 08:02:55 AM 391 Views
Humans and chimps have a last shared ancestor ca 5 million years ago *NM* - 25/03/2010 12:51:22 PM 140 Views
Yes, but - 25/03/2010 12:53:17 PM 414 Views
sounds like she would have been somewhere between Neanderthal and Homo Erectus - 25/03/2010 05:09:29 PM 371 Views
*NM* - 25/03/2010 05:11:51 PM 174 Views
oo that's awesome. *NM* - 25/03/2010 11:58:35 AM 162 Views
Re: Possible new human ancestor found in Siberia - 25/03/2010 04:21:03 PM 442 Views
DNA doesn't get weird because of that - 25/03/2010 04:42:45 PM 385 Views
Correct me if I'm wrong but... - 25/03/2010 04:54:51 PM 435 Views
You are wrong. - 25/03/2010 05:34:44 PM 378 Views
Usually when you correct someone - 25/03/2010 06:40:49 PM 437 Views
Re: Usually when you correct someone - 25/03/2010 06:46:02 PM 384 Views
Re: Usually when you correct someone - 25/03/2010 06:50:07 PM 416 Views
Re: Usually when you correct someone - 25/03/2010 06:51:45 PM 415 Views
Re: Usually when you correct someone - 25/03/2010 07:12:00 PM 403 Views
fine - 25/03/2010 07:15:44 PM 373 Views
Good - 25/03/2010 07:25:10 PM 400 Views
it doesn't take much understanding of a gene sequence to place it. - 25/03/2010 05:41:18 PM 457 Views
Re: it doesn't take much understanding of a gene sequence to place it. - 25/03/2010 06:46:56 PM 530 Views
what would they have to find for you? - 25/03/2010 06:59:34 PM 327 Views
Re: what would they have to find for you? - 25/03/2010 07:16:47 PM 424 Views
okay, think of it this way then. - 25/03/2010 07:47:38 PM 391 Views
What the? You've been in my office? - 25/03/2010 08:09:08 PM 387 Views
you're neither - 25/03/2010 08:12:25 PM 350 Views
That's good. I was starting to worry about myself - 25/03/2010 08:22:42 PM 386 Views
*shake head* DNA analysis doesn't need more than a pinky finger. - 25/03/2010 04:42:45 PM 352 Views
Please reread what I said - 25/03/2010 04:56:32 PM 417 Views
Re: Please reread what I said - 25/03/2010 05:23:49 PM 375 Views
please learn to fire your neurons. - 25/03/2010 05:28:10 PM 380 Views
Re: please learn to fire your neurons. - 25/03/2010 05:35:51 PM 498 Views
living in a small city in Kansas - 25/03/2010 05:41:54 PM 349 Views
Re: living in a small city in Kansas - 25/03/2010 05:44:09 PM 419 Views
I give you permisison - 25/03/2010 05:44:47 PM 338 Views
My neurons fire just fine... sometimes - 25/03/2010 06:55:39 PM 473 Views
That headline is misleading - 25/03/2010 06:00:16 PM 352 Views

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