Ancient dog DNA pushes back domestication to 16,000 years ago

TL;DR Summary
Two Nature studies of ancient dog and wolf DNA reveal the oldest dog remains come from a 15,800–16,000-year-old skull in Pınarbaşı, Turkey, pushing dog domestication back by about 5,000 years. The research shows dogs spread across Europe by around 14,300 years ago, were kept by hunter‑gatherers before the Neolithic farmers’ arrival, and include evidence of puppies buried near human graves, indicating a close human–dog relationship. While dogs clearly split from wolves long before farming, the exact domestication path remains unresolved due to a persistent genetic gap between dogs and wolves.
- Oldest Dog DNA Ever Found Reveals How Ancient Our Friendship Really Is ScienceAlert
- Dogs were widely distributed across western Eurasia during the Palaeolithic Nature
- Humans Had Dogs Before They Had Farming, Ancient DNA Confirms The New York Times
- New research uncovers more of the story of man’s best friend The Economist
- Ancient bones show dogs have been woven into human life for nearly 16,000 years The Conversation
Reading Insights
Total Reads
1
Unique Readers
5
Time Saved
4 min
vs 5 min read
Condensed
90%
945 → 90 words
Want the full story? Read the original article
Read on ScienceAlert