The
Neanderthals are a well-distinguished Middle Pleistocene population
which inhabited a vast geographical area extending from Europe to
western Asia and the Middle East. Since the 1950s paleoanthropological
studies have suggested variability in this group. Different sub-groups
have been identified in western Europe, in southern Europe and in the
Middle East. On the other hand, since 1997, research has been published
in paleogenetics, carried out on 15 mtDNA sequences from 12
Neanderthals. In this paper we used a new methodology derived from
different bioinformatic models based on data from genetics, demography
and paleoanthropology. The adequacy of each model was measured by
comparisons between simulated results (obtained by BayesianSSC software)
and those estimated from nucleotide sequences (obtained by DNAsp4
software). The conclusions of this study are consistent with existing
paleoanthropological research and show that Neanderthals can be divided
into at least three groups: one in western Europe, a second in the
Southern area and a third in western Asia. Moreover, it seems from our
results that the size of the Neanderthal population was not constant and
that some migration occurred among the demes.
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