Via Slash Gear
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A group of German researchers announced this
week that they have completed sequencing of a Neanderthal genome. The
scientists say that the high-quality sequencing will be made available
online for other researchers and scientists to study. The researchers
were able to produce the genome using a toe bone found in a Siberian
cave.

This published genome is said to be far more detailed than a previous
“draft” Neanderthal genome was sequenced three years ago by the same
team. The group of researchers operate from the Max Planck Institute for
Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany. The researchers say that
the new genome allows individual inherited traits from the
Neanderthal’s mother and father to be distinguished.
In the future, the scientists hope to compare their new genome
sequence to that of other Neanderthals as well as comparing the genome
to another extinct human species with remains that were found in the
same Siberian cave. The other remains are of an extinct human species
called Denisovan. Certainly some researchers will compare this new
genome to that of humans.
The group of researchers intends to publish a scientific paper based
on new knowledge gained from studying the detailed genome. Specifically
the researchers plan to refine knowledge having to do with genetic
changes that occur in the genomes of modern humans after they parted
ways with Neanderthals and Denisovians.