Ancient Jawbone That Sat in Antiques Shop Is 'Scarce Find'

Scientists say fossil found in Taiwan belonged to enigmatic human ancestors known as Denisovans
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Apr 11, 2025 10:31 AM CDT
Scientists Stumble on Jawbone From Enigmatic Ancestors
This illustration depicts a Denisovan male in Taiwan in the Pleistocene era, about 2.6 million to 11,700 years ago.   (Cheng-Han Sun via AP)

An ancient jawbone discovered in Taiwan belonged to an enigmatic group of early human ancestors called Denisovans, scientists reported Thursday. Relatively little is known about Denisovans, an extinct group of human cousins that interacted with Neanderthals and our own species, Homo sapiens. "Denisovan fossils are very scarce," with only a few confirmed finds in East Asia, says study co-author Takumi Tsutaya at the Graduate University for Advanced Studies in Japan. Before this find, the only known Denisovan fossils included partial jawbones, a few teeth, and part of a finger bone found in caves in Siberia and Tibet. Some scientists believe fossils found in a cave in Laos may also belong to Denisovans, reports the AP.

The probable identification of the jawbone from Taiwan as Denisovan expands the region where scientists know these ancient people once lived, says Tsutaya. The partial jawbone was first recovered when a fishing operation dredged the seafloor in the Penghu Channel, near the Taiwan Strait. After it was sold to an antiques shop, a collector spotted it and purchased it in 2008, then later donated it to Taiwan's National Museum of Natural Science. Based on the composition of marine invertebrates found attached to it, the fossil was dated to the Pleistocene era, though exactly which species of early human ancestor it belonged to remained a mystery.

The condition of the fossil made it impossible to study ancient DNA. Recently, however, scientists in Taiwan, Japan, and Denmark were able to extract some protein sequences from the incomplete jawbone. An analysis showed some protein sequences resembled those contained in the genome of a Denisovan fossil recovered in Siberia. The findings were published in the journal Science. While the new research is promising, Rick Potts, director of the Smithsonian Institution's Human Origins Program, said he'd like to see further data before confirming the Taiwan fossil as Denisovan.

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Potts, who wasn't involved in the new research, praised the study for "a fantastic job of recovering some proteins." But, he added, such a small sliver of material may not give a full picture. At one time, at least three human ancestor groups—Denisovans, Neanderthals, and Homo sapiens—coexisted in Eurasia and sometimes interbred, researchers say. "We can identify Neanderthal elements and Denisovan elements" in the DNA of some people alive today, said Tsutaya.

(More discoveries stories.)

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