Monday, June 8, 2026
ADVT 
Interesting

Dog, human genomes show long history together

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Oct, 2020 10:14 PM
  • Dog, human genomes show long history together

Somewhere near Lake Baikal on the Siberian steppes, archeologists were opening 7,000-year-old graves.

The bodies had been carefully interred. One was buried with a long, carved spoon. Another had been honoured with a necklace of elk teeth.

"They look like people being buried — except they're dogs," said Robert Losey, a University of Alberta archeologist.

Those ancient pets are not only moving evidence of their owners' esteem, they're now part of research hinting at how far back dogs and humans go.

"We don't just have a human history that's independent of everything else on Earth," said Losey, one of 56 international authors of a paper published Thursdaythat links human and canine genetics.

"We've been successful by relying on and altering the histories of other species."

The first dog probably emerged from a type of wolf, but no one knows when, or where, or who domesticated it. It was a while ago. The oldest dog burial dates back about 14,000 years.

Losey and his many colleagues sequenced the genomes of 27 ancient dogs — including the one with the elk-tooth collar — with a maximum age of about 11,000 years. They compared them with genomes of 17 ancient humans who lived in roughly the same time and place as the dogs.

The dog genomes showed that 11 millennia ago, dogs had been domesticated long enough to produce five separate genetic lineages. That suggests the relationship between humans and dogs was old even then.

"They'd already been around for a long time, enough to differentiate groups by the end of the ice age," said Losey.

Scientists also found the movement of those different dog genomes tracked the movement of the human genomes.

"When people migrated, they didn't migrate alone," Losey said. "They came with dogs, often a genetically distinct form of dogs."

When the first farmers came to Europe from what is now eastern Turkey, they didn't adopt the dogs already living there. They brought their own. The genomes of both species track together nicely.

That didn't always happen. But Losey and his colleagues found that throughout most of prehistory, humans lighting out for new territory preferred companions they already knew.

The differences between the genetic strands weren't breeds. Losey said the variation between dogs then was much less than it is today and that most of them would have looked much alike.

"They would have been somewhat diverse," Losey said. "Most or all of them would physically mix right in with a modern dog — some all-black dogs, some all-white dogs, some with floppy ears. If my neighbour were walking one of these dogs from 10,000 years ago, you wouldn't blink an eye."

Losey, a dog lover himself, said studying the relationship between humans and dogs gives him a little insight into that long-ago pet owner who laid his friend to rest by the shores of Lake Baikal.

"There's such a huge public interest in dogs," he said.

"Every time we learn even a little bit more about their long history with people, we get additional insight into what it means to live with these animals."

MORE Interesting ARTICLES

B.C.'s Five Conditions Set Out For Trans Mountain Pipeline Approval

B.C.'s Five Conditions Set Out For Trans Mountain Pipeline Approval
British Columbia Premier Christy Clark said Wednesday that all of her government's conditions had been met for approval of Kinder Morgan's Trans Mountain pipeline. Here is a list of the conditions the premier unveiled in 2012.

B.C.'s Five Conditions Set Out For Trans Mountain Pipeline Approval

Visit Florida To Pay $73,000 To Ceo After Rapper Kerfuffle

Visit Florida To Pay $73,000 To Ceo After Rapper Kerfuffle
Florida's tourism agency agreed Tuesday to pay its outgoing president and CEO $73,000 amid the fallout from the state's secret deal with rapper Pitbull and a video for his song "Sexy Beaches."

Visit Florida To Pay $73,000 To Ceo After Rapper Kerfuffle

Menopause For Killer Whales Involves Mother-Daughter Conflict: Study

Menopause For Killer Whales Involves Mother-Daughter Conflict: Study
VICTORIA — A study released today says mother-daughter conflicts over competition and co-operation are helping explain why killer whales go through menopause.

Menopause For Killer Whales Involves Mother-Daughter Conflict: Study

Canuck Cliche? Are Canadians Really As Nice As Meryl Streep And The World Insist?

Canuck Cliche? Are Canadians Really As Nice As Meryl Streep And The World Insist?
The notion that Canadians are extra nice is an enduring stereotype the Seattle-based writer wholeheartedly buys into, and it would seem a lot of Americans do, too.

Canuck Cliche? Are Canadians Really As Nice As Meryl Streep And The World Insist?

Emotional Portuguese PM Recalls His Father's Love For Goa

Emotional Portuguese PM Recalls His Father's Love For Goa
Costa, who is the first head of government of Goan origin, said he was honoured by Prime Minister Narendra Modi's invitation to visit India.

Emotional Portuguese PM Recalls His Father's Love For Goa

Perjury Conviction Upheld For Former Mountie Linked To Dziekanski Case

Perjury Conviction Upheld For Former Mountie Linked To Dziekanski Case
VANCOUVER — A former Mountie convicted of perjury in relation to the death of a Polish man at Vancouver's airport in 2007 has lost his appeal.

Perjury Conviction Upheld For Former Mountie Linked To Dziekanski Case