Publications by authors named "Yaroslav V Kuzmin"

Eyed needles are among the most iconic of Paleolithic artifacts, traditionally seen as rare indicators of prehistoric clothing, particularly tailoring. However, recent finds across Africa and Eurasia show that other technologies like bone awls also facilitated the creation of fitted garments. Nonetheless, the advent of delicate eyed needles suggests a demand for more refined, efficient sewing.

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  • The grey wolf was the first animal to be domesticated into dogs and lived through the last Ice Age when many other animals went extinct.
  • Scientists studied 72 ancient wolf genomes from different places to understand how wolves were connected and how they evolved over 100,000 years.
  • They found that dogs are more closely related to ancient wolves from eastern Asia, but some dogs in the Near East and Africa share ancestors with different wolves, which means there might have been several ways dogs were domesticated.
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Dogs have been essential to life in the Siberian Arctic for over 9,500 y, and this tight link between people and dogs continues in Siberian communities. Although Arctic Siberian groups such as the Nenets received limited gene flow from neighboring groups, archaeological evidence suggests that metallurgy and new subsistence strategies emerged in Northwest Siberia around 2,000 y ago. It is unclear if the Siberian Arctic dog population was as continuous as the people of the region or if instead admixture occurred, possibly in relation to the influx of material culture from other parts of Eurasia.

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  • Dire wolves were common large carnivores in Pleistocene America, but their evolution and extinction are not well understood.
  • Researchers sequenced five genomes from dire wolf sub-fossils dating back 13,000 to over 50,000 years to study their evolutionary history.
  • Findings reveal that dire wolves split from living canids about 5.7 million years ago, evolved in isolation without hybridizing with North American grey wolves or coyotes, and likely originated in the New World, contrasting with the Eurasian ancestry of grey wolves and coyotes.
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We present the high-quality genome sequence of a ∼45,000-year-old modern human male from Siberia. This individual derives from a population that lived before-or simultaneously with-the separation of the populations in western and eastern Eurasia and carries a similar amount of Neanderthal ancestry as present-day Eurasians. However, the genomic segments of Neanderthal ancestry are substantially longer than those observed in present-day individuals, indicating that Neanderthal gene flow into the ancestors of this individual occurred 7,000-13,000 years before he lived.

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Background: Virtually all well-documented remains of early domestic dog (Canis familiaris) come from the late Glacial and early Holocene periods (ca. 14,000-9000 calendar years ago, cal BP), with few putative dogs found prior to the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM, ca. 26,500-19,000 cal BP).

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The existing corpus of data on radiocarbon dates for Holocene sites in Northeastern Siberia was used as proxy to reconstruct the chronology of human occupation of the region. The problem of reservoir age correction in the Bering Sea region complicated this task and this issue needs to be solved in order to obtain more reliable age determinations for coastal archaeological sites. Using a chronology built after excluding the questionable dates from the database, the major patterns of human population dynamics and their possible correlation with climatic fluctuations were examined.

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Human remains from the Xarusgol Valley, Ordos Plateau, northwestern China, have been considered to date to the Late Pleistocene. In order to ascertain their true age, direct AMS (14)C dating of a femur collected in the early 1920s was conducted. The results demonstrate that the femur is very young, with one sample of 'post-bomb' age and the other sample c.

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