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Denisovan Find Hints The Extinct Humans Colonized The 'Roof of the World'

Explore Tibetan Plateau adaptations and the significance of the Denisovan jawbone discovery for ancient human evolution.

The right half of a Denisovan jawbone was found in 1980 in Baishiya Karst Cave but only recently identified.Credit: Dongju Zhang/Lanzhou University

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On the mountainous Tibetan Plateau, small groups of nomadic herders still make a living two miles or more above sea level. Most of us would be poorly-equipped to deal with that altitude for long periods of time, but the Tibetans there have unique genetic adaptations that let their bodies function in the thin air.

Mysteriously, those genes seem to come from another species of human, the Denisovans, a little-understood group of hominins who died out tens of thousands of years ago. Until now, Denisovan remains had only been found in a single cave, at low altitude. That left the extinct species' high-altitude genes, like much else about their people, a puzzle. But the discovery of new Denisovan remains in Tibet might begin to change that.

Back in 1980, a monk praying in a cave found a mysterious human mandible, or jawbone, of which only the right half survives. Now scientists ...

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