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Neanderthal Eyes Brown In Two Specimens, Controversial DNA Study Suggests

 |  By Traci Watson  |  Posted: 03/20/2012 1:23 pm Updated: 03/20/2012 8:39 pm

Neandertal

In museums around the world, reproductions of Neandertals sport striking blue or green eyes, pale skin, and gingery hair. Now new DNA analysis suggests that two of the most closely studied Neandertals—a pair of females from Croatia—were actually brown-eyed girls, with brunette tresses and tawny skin to match. The results could help shed new light on the evolution of the family that includes both modern humans and Neandertals, who died out some 30,000 years ago.

The study has provoked deep skepticism among several outside researchers, however, who criticize numerous aspects of its methodology. The results also run contrary to other genetic evidence and to a long-held hypothesis that Neandertals, who lived mostly in northern latitudes, must've had light skin to get enough vitamin D.

But even scientists who have doubts about the new research say it still provides food for thought. "Neandertals occupied a wide geographical range," says John Hawks of the University of Wisconsin, Madison, who was not involved in the study and who is also studying the physical traits of ancient humans, so "it's likely that they were variable in pigmentation. ... We are really at the first step."

The new study, to be published in the American Journal of Human Biology later this spring, looks at the genomes of three female Neandertals from Croatia. Their DNA was the basis of the first effort to compile a complete Neandertal genetic sequence, which was published in 2010.

The researchers focused their attention on 40 well-studied stretches of genetic material that help determine pigmentation in living people. A particular form of the gene known as TPCN2, for example, bestows brown hair in modern humans; any other form means hair that's another color.

One complication is that traits such as hair color are controlled by multiple genes. To determine the cumulative impact of multiple genes on one trait, the authors assumed they could simply add together the impact of individual genes. The female Neandertal known as Vi33.26, for example, had seven genes for brown eyes, one for "not-brown" eyes, three for blue eyes, and four for "not-blue eyes." By the researchers' reckoning, that means a six-gene balance in favor of brown and a negative balance for blue, so Vi33.26's eyes were probably brown. According to this method, all three Neandertals had a dark complexion and brown eyes, and although one was red-haired, two sported brown locks.

Study author Tábita Hünemeier of Brazil's Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul says she's not surprised by the results. "There was a large population of Neandertals in Europe," she says. "It's impossible that an entire population has red hair or blue eyes."

She and her colleagues validated their technique, in part by applying to it the genomes of 11 modern humans whose photos and DNA are publicly available. Nearly 60% of the formula's predictions matched the subjects' actual physical appearance, the authors say. The team considers that accuracy rate satisfactory, given the complexity of the genetics behind skin color and other physical traits.

But experts caution against giving those museum exhibits a makeover just yet. The problem with the additive technique is that different genes have different levels of impact, says Carles Lalueza-Fox of Spain's Institute of Evolutionary Biology in Barcelona. In 2007, he authored a paper showing that two Neandertals, one from Italy and one from Spain, carried a genetic variation likely to bestow pale skin and red hair. He argues that some pigmentation genes have such a powerful effect that they override the combined contributions of many weaker genes—a phenomenon that would render the new study's simple gene addition inaccurate. The lighter skin color seen in Europeans, for instance, is due almost entirely to a single gene, he says. "We know that there are some genes that have a very strong effect" on physical appearance, he says.

Another problem, Hawks says, is that the study focuses on the effects of genetic variations found in modern humans. But Neandertals' hair and skin tones were almost certainly influenced by genetic variations unique to Neandertals, who were a species different from modern humans. So the study doesn't, and can't, consider many of the factors that would've influenced how Neandertals looked.

Hünemeier responds that her team looked for new genetic variations unique to Neandertals and other ancient humans and came up empty-handed. She also says that other recent work confirms that it's possible to compute the impact of large numbers of genes using simple arithmetic.

Although Hünemeier and her critics differ on the methods her team used, they agree that the stereotypical view of Neandertals is too narrow. Lalueza-Fox says Neandertals probably had brown eyes and a variety of hair colors, and Hawks thinks Neandertals living in places such as Israel may have had darker skin than their European counterparts.

The uncertainty may not last much longer. Hünemeier and her critics alike think the growing trove of information about the DNA of ancient humans will soon reveal Neandertals' true colors. New genetic information is being generated on "hundreds of individual paleopopulations," Hünemeier says. "In 5 years we will have an ocean of information to study."

ScienceNOW, the daily online news service of the journal Science

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In museums around the world, reproductions of Neandertals sport striking blue or green eyes, pale skin, and gingery hair. Now new DNA analysis suggests that two of the most closely studied Neandertals...
In museums around the world, reproductions of Neandertals sport striking blue or green eyes, pale skin, and gingery hair. Now new DNA analysis suggests that two of the most closely studied Neandertals...
 
 
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07:53 AM on 08/17/2012
I dont care if shes got brown eyes, THAT CHICK IS STILL UGLY
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03:00 AM on 03/28/2012
Looking forward to further information.
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paddy523
better to be looking at it, than looking for it!
06:49 PM on 03/26/2012
HEY!!!! THAT GUY OWES ME 20 BUCKS!!!
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
12:28 AM on 03/26/2012
Actually, I have my own idea of how neanderthals look. They wear tricorner hats with teabags dangling from them. They have white skin and massive stomachs.
10:15 PM on 03/25/2012
OMG is that Shaun White in the photo at the top?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RAmen69
Someone is WRONG on the internet!
03:07 PM on 03/26/2012
No, CARROT TOP!
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iknowscottyknows
10:03 PM on 03/23/2012
This passes for science.
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Robert Nix
My bio is not micro
07:39 PM on 03/23/2012
Interesting. I was just reading a BBC article that is probably from these same researchers.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/8660940.stm
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hjs
But then of course, African swallows are non-migra
03:20 PM on 03/23/2012
Wow, I did not know Shaun White was a Neandertal. No wonder he's so good at snowboarding.
04:31 PM on 03/22/2012
WTF, is wrong with people? Even the most northern Nordic\ Scandinavian country isn't 100% blonde and blue eyed so why would you think 100% of Neandertals would be blonde or red haired with blue eyes?
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05:11 AM on 03/23/2012
They didn't they just found that in the first one they studied. The more they study, the more differences they find.

To be honest, I used to think all Neanderthals were blond and that's where the first blond jokes came from. Live and learn.
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susimar
frustrated and unemployed educator
12:00 PM on 03/22/2012
Awwwww..you mean the Aryans got it wrong???? lol
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VeggieLove
apparently, my micro-bio is empty
02:06 AM on 03/22/2012
Shaun White!
07:58 PM on 03/21/2012
Obviously. Brown eyes have dominant genes. It is much more likely that neanderthal had brown eyes than any other color.
05:09 PM on 03/21/2012
I'll bet they were great in bed, I mean, er, grass.
03:45 PM on 03/21/2012
Sounds to me like they are describing the two females as Bigfoot: Brown hair, brown eyes, tawny matching skin, LOL
02:00 PM on 03/21/2012
Looks like Carrot Top's been hittin' the juice a little too hard.