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Denisovan DNA in Late Pleistocene sediments from Baishiya Karst Cave on the Tibetan Plateau.

Dongju ZhangHuan XiaFahu ChenBo LiViviane SlonTing ChengRuowei YangZenobia JacobsQingyan DaiDiyendo MassilaniXuke ShenJian WangXiaotian FengPeng CaoMelinda A YangJuanting YaoJishuai YangDavid B MadsenYuanyuan HanWanjing PingFeng LiuCharles PerreaultXiaoshan ChenMatthias MeyerJanet KelsoSvante PääboQiao-Mei Fu
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2020)
A late Middle Pleistocene mandible from Baishiya Karst Cave (BKC) on the Tibetan Plateau has been inferred to be from a Denisovan, an Asian hominin related to Neanderthals, on the basis of an amino acid substitution in its collagen. Here we describe the stratigraphy, chronology, and mitochondrial DNA extracted from the sediments in BKC. We recover Denisovan mitochondrial DNA from sediments deposited ~100 thousand and ~60 thousand years ago (ka) and possibly as recently as ~45 ka. The long-term occupation of BKC by Denisovans suggests that they may have adapted to life at high altitudes and may have contributed such adaptations to modern humans on the Tibetan Plateau.
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