‘Dragon Man’ DNA revelation puts a face to a mysterious group of ancient humans
- Scientists identified a near-complete skull unearthed in Harbin, China in 1933 as belonging to the Denisovans.
- The skull remained hidden after its discovery until the finder's family recovered and donated it to science in 2018 for study.
- Researchers extracted 95 ancient proteins from the fossil but failed to sequence DNA, confirming three distinct Denisovan protein variants.
- The 146,000-year-old skull offers the earliest complete physical description of Denisovans, resolving years of uncertainty about their appearance.
- This identification suggests Denisovans were widespread across Asia during the Middle Pleistocene and prompts reevaluation of human evolution in the region.
Insights by Ground AI
Does this summary seem wrong?
9 Articles
9 Articles
All
Left
1
Center
8
Right
First ever skull from ‘Denisovan’ reveals what ancient people looked like
Ancient proteins and calcified dental plaque identify heavy-browed fossil from China as a Denisovan. Ancient proteins and calcified dental plaque identify heavy-browed fossil from China as a Denisovan.
·United Kingdom
Read Full ArticleCoverage Details
Total News Sources9
Leaning Left1Leaning Right0Center8Last UpdatedBias Distribution89% Center
Bias Distribution
- 89% of the sources are Center
89% Center
11%
C 89%
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium