America's only Clovis skeleton genome offers clues to Native American ancestry (Update)
February 12, 2014
America's only Clovis skeleton genome offers clues to Native American ancestry (Update)
8 hours ago by Mariette Le Roux
Nearly 13,000 years ago, a baby boy died in what is Montana today.
Mourners stained his tiny body with red ochre and entombed him with artefacts that had likely been in his family for generations.
After lying undisturbed for millennia, the infant's body was dug up by accident at a construction site in 1968the oldest skeleton ever found in the Americas.
Now, scientists say the remains have helped them settle a long-standing debate about the lineage of indigenous Americans, and shed light on the settlement of the last continent to be populated by modern humans.
After decoding the child's genome, an international team of experts said they can confirm that modern Native Americans are direct descendents of the first people to have settled the continent from Asia some 15,000 years ago, and not migrants from Europe.
More:
http://phys.org/news/2014-02-america-clovis-skeleton-genome-clues.html#jCp