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Ancient girl’s skeleton provides new clues on human migration

Naia, one of the earliest inhabitants of the America has helped resolve a question of the link b/w ancestral and modern Native Americans.

Scientists have accurately determined the age of the oldest-known, well-preserved human skeleton, providing additional insights on how the Americas came to be populated.

The skeleton of the young woman named Naia was buried underwater for thousands of years in an elaborate cave system in the Yucatan Peninsula after she had apparently fallen into what was then a dry deep pit.

Now, a team of researchers, including Professor Yemane Asmerom and Research Scientist Victor Polyak at the University of New Mexico’s Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, have accurately determined the age of the oldest-known, well-preserved human skeleton.

Naia was one of the earliest inhabitants of the Americas and has helped resolve a long-standing question of the link between ancestral Americans and modern Native Americans.

The research paints a picture of a Paleoamerican skeleton with Native American DNA haplogroup that links Paleoamericans with modern Native Americans.

“The challenge, to date, has been finding a fossil of an adult complete enough to do the morphology work, preserved enough to have mitochondrial DNA, while at the same time having appropriate material for dating,” Asmerom said.

Divers transport the Hoyo Negro skull to an underwater turntable so that it can be photographed to create a 3-D model (AP)

Naia’s skull shape does not look like those of Native Americans, but the Beringian-derived mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) D1 haplogroup (D1) directly links her to the modern Native peoples of the Americas.

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The physical differences between Paleoamericans and Native Americans, likely resulted from in situ evolution rather than having a separate ancestry.

Her ancestors’ origins were in Beringia, an area once above water between Siberia and North America. The D1 haplotype likely developed after early humans moved into the area from elsewhere in Asia.

The near-complete human skeleton, with an intact cranium and preserved DNA, was found along with other extinct fauna by a team of scientific divers led by Alberto Nava Blank from Proyecto de Espeleologia de Tulum (PET) in the Sac Actun cave system located off the eastern Yucatan Peninsula in 2007.

The divers coined the location where Naia was found as “Hoyo Negro” (Black Hole) because of the hole’s vast impenetrable darkness.

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To unravel the mystery of Naia’s age, Asmerom and Polyak first conducted uranium-thorium dating of one of her teeth. And while those first results were promising, the results were inconclusive, researchers said.

The study was published in the journal Science.

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