About two hundred thousand years ago, or maybe a little less, a group of humans left Africa to explore the continents around it. These people belonged to the species Homo sapiens, and came from the same population that also included our ancestors, the population that paleontologists call “anatomically modern man”. They were the first to leave the continent where they developed, and in Asia they met people from another population, who were similar to them but also somewhat different: The Neanderthals. Whether the Neanderthals are a subspecies of Homo sapiens or a separate species is still a disputed question, but in any case they were close enough to our ancestral population to to be able to produce offspring With each other, and so they did. Additional waves of migration from Africa, which arrived afterwards, also multiplied with the Neanderthals, and with other populations. To this day, most of the world’s population carries in their cells some DNA that came from those ancient Neanderthals.

dictation Originally published on the Davidson Institute for Science Education website