All Non-Africans Part Neanderthal, Genetics Confirm JUL 18, 2011 11:25 AM ET // BY JENNIFER VIEGAS

If your heritage is non-African, you are part Neanderthal, according to a new study in the July issue of [I]Molecular Biology and Evolution[/I]. Discovery News has been reporting onhuman/Neanderthal interbreeding for some time now, so this latest research confirms earlier findings.

Damian Labuda of the University of Montreal’s Department of Pediatrics and the CHU Sainte-Justine Research Center conducted the study with his colleagues. They determined some of the human X chromosome originates from Neanderthals, but only in people of non-African heritage.

“This confirms recent findings suggesting that the two populations interbred,” Labuda was quoted as saying in a press release. His team believes most, if not all, of the interbreeding took place in the Middle East, while modern humans were migrating out of Africa and spreading to other regions.

The ancestors of Neanderthals left Africa about 400,000 to 800,000 years ago. They evolved over the millennia mostly in what are now France, Spain, Germany and Russia. They went extinct, or were simply absorbed into the modern human population, about 30,000 years ago.

Neanderthals possessed the gene for language and had sophisticated music, art and tool craftsmanship skills, so they must have not been all that unattractive to modern humans at the time.

“In addition, because our methods were totally independent of Neanderthal material, we can also conclude that previous results were not influenced by contaminating artifacts,” Labuda said.

This work goes back to nearly a decade ago, when Labuda and his colleagues identified a piece of DNA, called a haplotype, in the human X chromosome that seemed different. They questioned its origins.

Fast forward to 2010, when the Neanderthal genome was sequenced. The researchers could then compare the haplotype to the Neanderthal genome as well as to the DNA of existing humans. The scientists found that the sequence was present in people across all continents, except for sub-Saharan Africa, and including Australia.

“There is little doubt that this haplotype is present because of mating with our ancestors and Neanderthals,” said Nick Patterson of the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard University.Patterson did not participate in the latest research. He added, “This is a very nice result, and further analysis may help determine more details.”

David Reich, a Harvard Medical School geneticist, added, “Dr. Labuda and his colleagues were the first to identify a genetic variation in non-Africans that was likely to have come from an archaic population. This was done entirely without the Neanderthal genome sequence, but in light of the Neanderthal sequence, it is now clear that they were absolutely right!”

The modern human/Neanderthal combo likely benefitted our species, enabling it to survive in harsh, cold regions that Neanderthals previously had adapted to.

“Variability is very important for long-term survival of a species,” Labuda concluded. “Every addition to the genome can be enriching.”

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http://news.discovery.com/human/genetics-neanderthal-110718.htm

http://news.discovery.com/videos/did-we-eat-all-the-neanderthals.htm

@a4architect nilikuomba sub ya stima omwami niko juu ya mawe kitunguu iliwacha kunuka kwangu last year…

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@benja sijaget, nikiget nitakuambia…

safi kaka…

Since guys are asking for subsubcontracts kindly extend any interior fit out works.

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Okay okay

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQM4ebFILv4

So I guess it’s not discrimination if you treated different because after all we are different.… would you treat a goat the same as antelope???

So it now official that we are not the same, hence there must be a superior and an inferior race…

@4makind …yeah we r all homo sapiens sapiens but africans r 100% sapiens while the rest r 95% sapiens and 5% neanderthal.

that 5% is the chemical X that has all the mojo jojo needed to be super sapiens!

It Goes On…
[SIZE=6]Neanderthal DNA can influence everything from your skin to your cigarette habit [/SIZE]
Neanderthals may have died out tens of thousands of years ago, but their DNA still influences modern humans, according to a study published in Science today. Researchers from Vanderbilt University have confirmed a small but tangible link between Neanderthal DNA inherited by our interbreeding ancestors, and wide range of traits from blood clotting to depression. The effect is slight (the presence of Neanderthal DNA only affects 1 percent of a person’s risk of depression, for example), but significant, showing the lasting legacy of these ancient hookups.
More from the verge []

@4makind homo sapiens sapiens outlived neanderthals, meaning it was better adapted for survival

http://mic.com/articles/4634/survival-of-the-fittest-how-homo-sapiens-outlasted-neanderthals-to-become-modern-day-humans#.BRbrA1hY2

[SIZE=6]Survival of the Fittest: How Homo Sapiens Outlasted Neanderthals to Become Modern-Day Humans[/SIZE]
http://thumbs.mic.com/ZTFiYTFmNzMzMiMvanVWZFJSTWY0ZHpDazdyR0NPd2NSZU55U0Z3PS8yNXgyNS9zbWFydC9odHRwOi8vbWljLmNvbS9hc3NldHMvaW1hZ2VzL2dsb2JhbC9hdmF0YXIucG5n.png By Gary Sanford February 25, 2012
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I recently watched a BBC documentary entitled Out of Africa, a five-part series chronicling the migration of Homo sapiens out of Africa and into Asia, Australia, Europe, and the Americas. Although all five parts were fascinating, I was particularly rapt by the arrival of Homo sapiens (modern humans) into Europe some 40,000 years ago after a 70,000 year trek out of Africa, only to discover that Neanderthals, a proto-human and distant cousin had arrived some 100,000 years earlier. Neanderthals were a heartier, huskier species than Homo Sapiens, had a larger brain and more advanced technology, and had long since adapted to harsh European winters. However, 20,000 years or so later, Neanderthals had died out — completely. To this day, no Neanderthal genetic markers have been found in modern humans.

How is it possible that a physically more powerful, better environmentally adapted, and technologically more advanced proto-human did not survive, while Homo sapiens, the weaker, less advanced interloper, not only survived but burgeoned to eventually populate the entire globe and create the marvelously modern societies of today?

Paleoanthropologists hot on the Homo sapien trail out of Africa have discovered in Europe a marked difference between Homo sapiens and Neanderthals: Homo sapiens may not have produced better weapons and tools, at least then, but they did make a quantum leap to produce art. They carved, pottered, sculpted, painted, and even made musical instruments, all with an eye on style rather than just making meaningless pretty. More importantly, their art embodied and transmitted — as art does — their identity, spirituality, and, their strong affinity for community.