Dogs became man's best friend far earlier than thought, scientists find
Dogs became man's best friend far earlier than thought, scientists find 14 hours ago Pallab GhoshScience Correspondent A fragment of a jawbone found deep underground in a cave in Somerset has rewritten the story of when and how dogs became our best friends. DNA analysis shows the jaw belonged to one of the earliest known domesticated dogs and that people lived closely with them in Britain 15,000 years ago, thousands of years before farm animals were domesticated or cats padded into our homes.
"It shows that by 15,000 years ago dogs and humans already had an incredibly tight, close relationship – and this tiny jawbone, which seems like such a small thing, has helped to unlock the whole human story of how that partnership began. "
Over time, people started using these animals to help with hunting, guarding and tracking, turning them into working partners rather than wild predators. After hundreds of generations of human breeding, the dogs that emerged had shorter muzzles, smaller teeth and an enormous range of sizes, from lapdogs to hulking guardians. Marsh made the discovery by accident during his PhD project.
Scarcely believing the test results, Marsh told his friend and scientific collaborator Dr Lachie Scarsbrook, from the University of Oxford and LMU Munich, who takes up the story. "William tells me: 'I found dog from the early stone age,' and I'm like, 'No you haven't — every other dog has been a wolf,' but he's super confident of it. "He then shows us his results, and we're like, '(Gosh), this guy might have actually found a dog that far back in time. " Scarsbrook's actual language was more colourful than we can publish, because he knew just how important his friend's big breakthrough could prove. With the jawbone from Gough's cave now confidently identified as being from a dog, this allowed its genetic signature to be used to test specimens of a similar age from across western Europe and central Anatolia in modern Turkey, the large Asian peninsula that makes up most of the country. They all turned out to be dogs. "We've spent years trying to make sense of ancient samples whose DNA sits between wolves and dogs," Scarsbrook told me.
"Everything sat in no man's land because we simply couldn't tell where dogs truly began.
And the story, published in the journal Nature, gets even more intriguing with further genetic and chemical analyses. According to Dr Selina Brace of the Natural History Museum, the tests not only showed that the dogs were genetically similar – which means that the dogs' ancestors must have travelled across Europe with their masters, but that they ate the same food as their human owners.
So what this would suggest is an incredibly close relationship between humans and dogs. "
15,000 years ago, we see that level of companionship that we still see today. That's a really long relationship. " There has been archaeological evidence of small dog‑like animals from Late Ice Age caves in Germany, Italy and Switzerland that look like dogs and, in some cases, were buried alongside humans, suggesting a close relationship at about the same time.
A separate study, also in Nature, shows that the pets lying on our sofas today all descend from a dual ancestry, which had already spread around much of the northern world by the end of the Ice Age.
And that is a relationship that's developed over many, many years and it's unique to dogs and humans
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