Ancient DNA and Human Evolution
BBC Inside Science
BBC
4.6 • 1.3K Ratings
🗓️ 28 December 2017
⏱️ 35 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Twenty years ago, a revolution in the study of human evolution began. A team in Leipzig in Germany successfully extracted DNA from the bones of a Neanderthal man who died about 40,000 years ago. Thirteen years later, the same group unveiled the first complete genome sequence of another Neanderthal individual. Last year, they announced they'd retrieved DNA from much oldest archaic human bones, more than 400,000 years old.
Adam Rutherford talks to Svante Paabo, the scientist has led these remarkable achievements. Professor Paabo and his colleague Janet Kelso at the Max Planck Institute of Biological Anthropology in Leipzig discuss the genes in many European people alive today that originated in Neanderthals and were passed to modern humans when the two species interbred.
Adam also speaks to Johannes Krause who worked on the Neanderthal genome project in Leipzig but is now director of the Max Planck Institute of the Science of Human History. His latest research adds a new layer of intrigue and complexity to the relationship between our species and Neanderthals in deep time.
David Reich at Harvard University focuses on using ancient DNA to uncover the ancestry and movements of modern human hunter-gatherers in Eurasia from about 50,000 years to the Bronze Age, a few thousand years ago. Population movements occur on a cinematic scale, he says. (Podcast only).
The revelations of ancient genetics would not be possible and meaningful without the traditional disciplines of palaeoanthropology and archaeology. Adam goes to Gibraltar to seek the perspective of Clive Finlayson who leads excavations there as director of the Gibraltar Museum. Gibraltar is the most concentrated site of Neanderthal occupation in the world. As well as remains of a young Neanderthal child last year, the Rock's caves have also recently yielded the first example of Neanderthal cave art.
Transcript
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| 0:31.0 | Hello You, this is Inside Science from BBC Radio 4 first broadcast on the 28th of December |
| 0:37.0 | 2017. This is our Christmas special. No other field of science has experienced such an upheaval in the last few years as human evolution. |
| 0:47.0 | Much of the fuel of this perpetual revolution is to do with a new addition to the toolbox of those who study the human story and that is DNA. |
| 0:56.2 | There is much still to be learned from old bones but the genes of both living and the very |
| 1:00.6 | dead are transforming the history of our species and our cousins, |
| 1:05.0 | where we came from who we had sex with, how we got to be who we are. |
| 1:10.0 | So here for our end of year special we're reviewing the whole field, a snapshot of the current status of the story of us and what it means to us today. |
| 1:20.0 | Much of this was recorded at a scientific meeting at the Welcome Genome Campus near Cambridge, |
| 1:24.4 | where we were marking 20 years since the first successful attempt to weedle DNA from the bones of Neanderthals. |
| 1:31.3 | The scientist who's been at the Vanguard of ancient DNA science since the very beginning |
| 1:35.4 | is Svanti Perboe from the Max Planck Institute of Evolutionary anthropology in Leipzig, Germany. |
| 1:41.1 | The field has changed extremely dramatically, driven by technology really. |
| 1:46.0 | When I started in an early 80s, we were taking DNA out of a Neutcheon mummy, putting it into bacteria and letting the bacteria grow to multiply |
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