• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Did Humans Almost Go Extinct 900,000 Years Ago?

December 19, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

In 2023, a controversial study introduced a dramatic twist to the story of human history by suggesting that our species came to within a whisker of extinction almost a million years ago. Published in the prestigious journal Science, the research made headlines around the world, yet more recent examinations of the data suggest that our ancient ancestors’ dance with death may never have occurred.

To conduct their analysis, the authors of the original study developed a computational model called FitCoal, which they used to analyze the genetic history of more than 3,000 present-day individuals by tracing their mutations back in time in order to determine the population dynamics that could have given rise to the current distribution of these genetic variants. Among all African genomes included in the sample, the researchers detected signs of a population “bottleneck” some 900,000 years ago.

Advertisement

Based on their findings, the authors suggest that around 98.7 percent of the ancestral human community died out during this period, leaving global population numbers dwindling at just 1,280. The fact that this same bottleneck was not detected in non-African genomes, however, has never been satisfactorily explained, leaving many experts questioning whether the supposed crash actually occurred.

The reality of what happened was a very, very complicated thing – much more complicated than our simple models are going to be able to represent.

Dr Aylwyn Scally

Among those to challenge the findings is Dr Aylwyn Scally from Cambridge University, who told IFLScience that while FitCoal may have indicated an ancient population collapse, other models failed to replicate this signal. “All of these methods rely on differences between present-day people and differences in ancestry in order to infer things about the past, but actually by the time you go back hundreds of thousands of years, most of those differences have coalesced into a single ancestor,” he said.

“So present-day genetic differences are very uninformative about anything beyond about 200,000 years ago.”

Among the many statistical tools that have been created to try and reconstruct past population sizes are the likes of mutation spectrum history inference – aka mushi – as well as the multiple sequentially Markovian coalescent (MSMC) and various others. Despite all being slightly different, these models each rely heavily on assumptions and simplifications relating to mutation rates in order to calculate when and how this historical coalescence occurred.

Advertisement

According to Scally, these unavoidable presumptions limit the reliability of all such tools, since “the reality of what happened was a very, very complicated thing – much more complicated than our simple models are going to be able to represent. So there are lots of ways you can go wrong, lots of ways you can be misled.”

Suspecting that FitCoal may indeed have made a fundamental calculation error, several scholars have conducted their own analyses in the last few months, with damning results. For instance, one study – which has yet to be peer-reviewed – revealed that the proposed bottleneck is in fact impossible to detect using mushi, while another found that other established models also fail to pick up this population crash. 

It’s currently unclear exactly why this is so, although the authors of the first paper say it may have something to do with FitCoal using a different coalescence rate to the other tools.

Yet another paper, published this week in the journal Genetics, concluded that FitCoal is in fact too simplistic to accurately model ancient population dynamics, which may explain why all other models have produced contradictory findings. “FitCoal artifactually tends to infer a sharp bottleneck when there in fact is none. In other words, the reported severe bottleneck is likely a statistical artifact,” write the study authors.

Advertisement

The researchers also say that if our ancestors really did come so close to extinction, then a similar trace should be present in the genomes of all modern non-African populations. The fact that FitCoal didn’t see this only adds to the suspicion that its findings may be erroneous.

What’s more probable for most people in the field, is that their method is responding to some aspect of the data in a particular or unusual way, which is probably an artifact rather than the truth.

Dr Aylwyn Scally

Discussing the work of the researchers who first proposed the population crash, Scally says that “if your method is the only one that detects a particular signal, you need to have some explanation for why that might be the case. You need to explain why it is that your method is able to see this and nobody else is. But they don’t manage to do that in their paper.”

It’s this lack of clarification that has left so many researchers doubting the reliability of FitCoal and therefore suspecting that the supposed population bottleneck may simply be a statistical artifact – or error.

“What’s more probable for most people in the field, is that their method is responding to some aspect of the data in a particular or unusual way, which is probably an artifact rather than the truth,” says Scally.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Dollar set for first winning week in three with Fed in focus
  2. Soccer-Australian FA will probe allegations of abuse in women’s game
  3. Adding Gold To Wine Could Be The Key To Making It Taste Better
  4. The Atlantic Gulf Stream Was Unexpectedly Strong During The Last Ice Age – New Study

Source Link: Did Humans Almost Go Extinct 900,000 Years Ago?

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • New Brain Implant Can Decode Your Internal Monologue, Raising Fears Of Mind Reading
  • “Immediate, Sustained, And Devastating” Pain: The Most Venomous Mammal Packs An Extremely Nasty Sting
  • Domestic Cats Keeping Making Hybrids. That’s A Problem, And Yes – That Includes Some Pets
  • These Strange Little Lizards Have Toxic Green Blood, And No One Knows Exactly Why
  • How Does 2-In-1 Shampoo And Conditioner Work?
  • There Are 2-Billion-Year-Old “Millennium Rocks” In A Suburb, Hundreds Of Miles From Their Primeval Home
  • “That’s A Hellfire Missile Smacking Into That UFO”: Strange Video Emerges From US UAP Hearing
  • In 40,000 Years, Voyager 1 Will Have A Close Encounter With Gliese 445
  • Abnormally Long Gamma Ray Burst Unlike Anything We’ve Seen Before Baffles Astronomers
  • Critically Endangered Shark Meat Is Being Sold In US Stores For As Little As $2.99
  • Infectious Mouth Bacteria Lurking In Artery Plaques Could Be Behind Some Heart Attacks
  • What Would You Reach If You Kept Digging Under Antarctica?
  • First Visible Time Crystals Ever Made Have Astonishing Complexity And Practical Potential
  • “Something Undeniably Special”: The Chi Cygnids, A New Five-Yearly Meteor Shower, Peak This Month
  • A 200-Meter-Tall Event We Didn’t See Sent Signals Through The Earth For Nine Whole Days
  • Why Are So Many Volcanoes Underwater?
  • In 1977, A Hybrid Was Born In A Zoo. What It Taught Us Could Save One Of The Planet’s Most Endangered Species
  • How To Park A Dangerous Asteroid So It Doesn’t Bite You Later
  • New Study Finds Evidence For What Every Parent Knows About Bluey
  • New Breakthrough Takes Plastic Garbage And Turns It Into Tool For Carbon Capture
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version