Welcome to the Global Climate Change data visualization tool on MY NASA DATA. This page links you to a powerful data viewer that will allow you to examine all of the key climate change indicators that have been identified on the Global Climate Change website. You will be able to view these indicators on the Live Access Server (LAS) that we’ve configured for you to view global and local data pertaining to these key areas of interest. For all of the parameters below, after clicking on their respective links, please click on “Choose Dataset” button on the upper left hand side of the LAS page and then click on the cross directly to the left of the indicator that you’d like to view, for some browsers, the Choose Dataset dialogue box will automatically appear. We’ve provided a description of each parameter that is currently available. If you have and questions or issues with the LAS please email the MY NASA DATA support team. |
A Medley of Potpourri is just what it says; various thoughts, opinions, ruminations, and contemplations on a variety of subjects.
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Thursday, January 16, 2014
Chasing the Dream of Half-Price Gasoline from Natural Gas
A startup called Siluria thinks it’s solved a mystery that has stymied huge oil companies for decades. By Kevin Bullis on January 15, 2014
http://www.technologyreview.com/news/523146/chasing-the-dream-of-half-price-gasoline-from-natural-gas/?utm_campaign=socialsync&utm_medium=social-post&utm_source=facebookThe white pellets are a catalyst developed by the Silicon Valley startup Siluria, which has raised $63.5 million in venture capital. If the catalysts work as well in a large, commercial scale plant as they do in tests, Siluria says, the company could produce gasoline from natural gas at about half the cost of making it from crude oil—at least at today’s cheap natural-gas prices.
Natural gas burns much more cleanly than oil—power plants that burn oil emit 50 percent more carbon dioxide than natural gas ones. It also is between two and six times more abundant than oil, and its price has fallen dramatically now that technologies like fracking and horizontal drilling have led to a surge of production from unconventional sources like the Marcellus Shale. While oil costs around $100 a barrel, natural gas sells in the U.S. for the equivalent of $20 a barrel.
But until now oil has maintained a crucial advantage: natural gas is much more difficult to convert into chemicals such as those used to make plastics. And it is relatively expensive to convert natural gas into liquid fuels such as gasoline. It cost Shell $19 billion to build a massive gas-to-liquids plant in Qatar, where natural gas is almost free. The South African energy and chemicals company Sasol is considering a gas-to-liquids plant in Louisiana that it says will cost between $11 billion and $14 billion. Altogether, such plants produce only about 400,000 barrels of liquid fuels and chemicals a day, which is less than half of 1 percent of the 90 million barrels of oil produced daily around the world.
The costs are so high largely because the process is complex and consumes a lot of energy. First high temperatures are required to break methane down into carbon monoxide and hydrogen, creating what is called syngas. The syngas is then subjected to catalytic reactions that turn it into a mixture of hydrocarbons that is costly to refine and separate into products.
Siluria thinks it can succeed where others have failed not because it understands the chemistry better, but because it has developed new tools for making and screening potential catalysts. Traditionally, chemists have developed catalysts by analyzing how they work and calculating what combination of elements might improve them. Siluria’s basic philosophy is to try out a huge number of catalysts in the hope of getting lucky. The company built an automated system—it looks like a mess of steel and plastic tubes, mass spectrometers, small stainless steel furnaces, and data cables—that can quickly synthesize hundreds of different catalysts at a time and then test how well they convert methane into ethylene.
The system works by varying both what catalysts are made of—the combinations and ratios of various elements—and their microscopic structure. Siluria was founded based on the work of Angela Belcher, a professor of biological engineering at MIT who developed viruses that can assemble atoms of inorganic materials into precise shapes. Siluria uses this and other methods to form nanowires from the materials that make up its catalysts. Sometimes the shape of a nanowire changes the way the catalyst interacts with gases such as methane—and this can transform a useless combination of elements into an effective one. “How you build up the structure of the catalyst matters as much as its composition,” says Erik Scher, Siluria’s vice president of research and development.
The process of making and testing catalysts isn’t completely random—Siluria has the work of earlier chemists to guide it, and it has developed software that sorts out the most efficient way to screen a wide variety of possibilities. The result is that what used to take chemists a year Siluria can now do in a couple of days, Scher says. “We’ve made and screened over 50,000 catalysts at last count,” he says. “And I haven’t been counting in a while.”
Nonetheless, some seasoned chemists are skeptical that Siluria can succeed. Siluria’s process is a version of one that chemists pursued in the 1970s and 1980s known as oxidative coupling, which involves reacting methane with oxygen. The problem with this approach is that it’s hard to get the reaction to stop at ethylene and not keep going to make carbon dioxide and water. “The reaction conditions you need to convert methane to ethylene do at least as good a job, if not better, of converting ethylene into carbon dioxide, which is useless,” says Jay Labinger, a chemist at the Beckman Institute at Caltech.
In the late 1980s, Labinger wrote a paper that warned researchers not to waste their time working on the process. And history seems to have borne him out. The process “hasn’t been, and doesn’t appear at all likely to be” an economically viable one, he says.
Yet in spite of the challenging chemistry, Siluria says the performance of its catalysts at its pilot plant have justified building two larger demonstration plants—one across San Francisco Bay in Hayward, California, that will make gasoline, and one in Houston that will only make ethylene. The plants are designed to prove to investors that the technology can work at a commercial scale, and that the process can be plugged into existing refineries and chemical plants, keeping down capital costs. The company hopes to open its first commercial plants within four years.
Wednesday, January 15, 2014
Strange Metal Asteroid Targeted in Far-Out NASA Mission Concept
By Mike Wall, Senior Writer | January 15, 2
014 07:49am ET
Artist's concept of a spacecraft studying the huge metal asteroid Psyche from orbit. Credit: JPL/Corby Waste |
One of the strangest objects in the solar system may get its first closeup in the coming years.
A team of scientists is mapping out a mission to the huge metallic asteroid Psyche, which is thought to be the exposed iron core of a battered and stripped protoplanet. The proposed mission would reveal insights about planet formation processes and the early days of the solar system, its designers say, and would also afford the first-ever good look at an odd class of celestial objects.
"This is the first metal world humankind will have ever seen," team member Lindy Elkins-Tanton, director of the Carnegie Institution for Science's Department of Terrestrial Magnetism, told SPACE.com last month at the American Geophysical Union's annual fall meeting in San Francisco. "I think this is an opportunity to do some fundamental science that hasn't been done before."
The 155-mile-wide (250 kilometers) Psyche, which lies in the main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter, consists largely of iron. Scientists think the object is the nearly naked core of a protoplanet whose overlying rock layers were blasted off by massive collisions long ago.
Psyche thus offers a unique opportunity to learn more about the interiors of planets and large moons, whose cores are hidden beneath many miles of rock, Elkins-Tanton said.
"This is absolutely the only core-like object that we know about in the entire solar system," she said.
A robotic mission to Pysche would also help astronomers take the measure of metal worlds, a type of solar system object that scientists know very little about. The project would beam home the first photos and information ever gathered at such a body.
"We know a lot about stony and icy bodies, but what about metal ones?" Elkins-Tanton said. "What does the surface of a metal world look like?"
For example, she added, it's possible that material melted and blasted out by large impacts on Psyche solidifies in a sheet before being lost to space, causing metallic curtains of ejecta to jut from the rims of impact craters.
Asteroid Basics: A Space Rock Quiz
Asteroids are fascinating for lots of reasons. They contain a variety of valuable resources and slam into our planet on a regular basis, occasionally snuffing out most of Earth's lifeforms. How much do you know about space rocks?
0 of 10 questions complete
The researchers' Psyche probe would orbit the huge asteroid for about six months, studying the object's topography, surface features, gravity and magnetic field, among other characteristics, Elkins-Tanton said.
This simulation shows a "hit-and-run" collision between two large asteroids, the kind of impact that could have stripped the rocky layers from the big metal asteroid Psyche, exposing the protoplanet's iron core.
Credit: M. Jutzi and E. Asphaug (U.Bern/ASU)
Credit: M. Jutzi and E. Asphaug (U.Bern/ASU)
The team has been working on the concept for about a year and a half and plans to submit it during the next call for NASA Discovery-class missions, which is expected to come in 2015. Discovery missions are lower-cost efforts capped at $425 million in 2010 dollars, excluding launch-vehicle expenses.
If selected, the Psyche mission could be ready to launch relatively quickly because it requires no new technology development, Elkins-Tanton said. The spacecraft would be based to a large degree on NASA's Dawn probe, which is currently on its way to the dwarf planet Ceres after wrapping up a 14-month campaign at another giant body in the asteroid belt, the protoplanet Vesta.
Follow Mike Wall on Twitter @michaeldwall and Google+. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook or Google+. Originally published on SPACE.com.
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AUTHOR BIO
Mike Wall
Michael was a science writer for the Idaho National Laboratory and has been an intern at Wired.com, The Salinas Californian newspaper, and the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory. He has also worked as a herpetologist and wildlife biologist. He has a Ph.D. in evolutionary biology from the University of Sydney, Australia, a bachelor's degree from the University of Arizona, and a graduate certificate in science writing from the University of California, Santa Cruz. To find out what his latest project is, you can follow Mike on Google+.SUBSCRIBE TO SPACE.COM
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Sunday, January 12, 2014
Seriously, how susceptible are we to this today?
Flashback Friday: the mysterious dancing epidemic of 1518. - Seriously, Science? | DiscoverMagazine.com
In their free time, some scientists and doctors like to try to figure out causes of medically-related historical events. For example, the authors of this study investigate what may have caused the crazy dancing “epidemic” of 1518 in Strasbourg: “Some time in mid-July 1518 a lone woman stepped into one of its narrow streets and began a dancing vigil that was to last four or even 6 days in succession. Within a week another 34 had joined the dance. And by the end of August, one chronicler asserts, 400 people had experienced the madness, dancing wildly, uncontrollably around the city.” And this wasn’t a sedate affair; the dancers’ feet often ended up bruised and bloody. The authors were not able assign a biological cause to the epidemic (it seems unlikely that hallucinogenic compounds from the rye fungus ergot were involved), but they suggest that hunger and psychological stress were the likely culprit, with a healthy dose of religious belief thrown in: “In times of acute hardship, with physical and mental distress leaving people more than usually suggestible, a fear of St Vitus could rapidly take hold. All it then took was for one or a few emotionally frail people, believing themselves to have been cursed by St.Vitus, to slip into a trance. Then they would unconsciously act out the part of those who had incurred his wrath: dancing wildly, uncontrollably for days on end.” The description of the events, and the government’s (likely unhelpful) response, is fascinating. We have included our favorite bits from the full text below. Enjoy!
In a spin: the mysterious dancing epidemic of 1518.
“In 1518, one of the strangest epidemics in recorded history struck the city of Strasbourg. Hundreds of people were seized by an irresistible urge to dance, hop and leap into the air. In houses, halls and public spaces, as fear paralyzed the city and the members of the elite despaired, the dancing continued with mindless intensity. Seldom pausing to eat, drink or rest, many of them danced for days or even weeks. And before long, the chronicles agree, dozens were dying from exhaustion. What was it that could have impelled as many as 400 people to dance, in some cases to death?”
“As the dance turned epidemic, troubled nobles and burghers consulted local physicians. Having excluded astrological and supernatural causes, the members of the medical fraternity declared it to be a ‘natural disease’ caused by ‘hot blood’ 2, 4 and 5. This was orthodox physic, consistent with Galen’s view that bloody fluxes could overheat the brain, causing anger, rashness and madness. But the response of the authorities was neither to bleed nor to provide cooling diets. Instead they prescribed ‘more dancing’. To this end they cleared two guildhalls and the outdoor grain market and they even had a wooden stage constructed opposite the horse fair. To these locations the dancers were taken so they could dance freely and uninterrupted. The victims would only recover their minds, said the authorities, if they persisted both day and night with their frantic movements. And to facilitate this supposed cure, the authorities next paid for musicians and professional dancers to keep the afflicted moving.
Every time the sick flagged, fainted, stumbled or slowed, the musicians raised the tempo of their playing and hired dancers held them firm and quickened their pace (Figure 2). ‘They danced day and night with those poor people’, one eye-witness recalled 1, 2 and 4. In grain market and horse fair, the elites had created spectacles every bit as grotesque as a Hieronymous Bosch canvas portraying human folly or the torments of Hell.
Only after those with weak hearts or prone to strokes began to die did the governors rethink their strategy. Deciding that the dance had nothing to do with putrefying blood cooking normally moist and cool brains, they now saw it as a curse sent down by an angry saint. Hence, a period of organised contrition was instituted: gambling, gaming and prostitution were banned and the dissolute driven beyond the city gates. Soon after the dancers were despatched to a mountaintop shrine in the Vosges mountains to pray for divine intercession. There they were led around an altar, wearing red shoes provided for the ceremony, upon which stood a bas-relief carving of St. Vitus, the Virgin and Pope Marcellus. In the following weeks the epidemic abated. Most of the dancers, we are told, regained bodily control…”
Flashback Friday: the mysterious dancing epidemic of 1518.
By Seriously Science | January 10, 2014 7:00 am
In their free time, some scientists and doctors like to try to figure out causes of medically-related historical events. For example, the authors of this study investigate what may have caused the crazy dancing “epidemic” of 1518 in Strasbourg: “Some time in mid-July 1518 a lone woman stepped into one of its narrow streets and began a dancing vigil that was to last four or even 6 days in succession. Within a week another 34 had joined the dance. And by the end of August, one chronicler asserts, 400 people had experienced the madness, dancing wildly, uncontrollably around the city.” And this wasn’t a sedate affair; the dancers’ feet often ended up bruised and bloody. The authors were not able assign a biological cause to the epidemic (it seems unlikely that hallucinogenic compounds from the rye fungus ergot were involved), but they suggest that hunger and psychological stress were the likely culprit, with a healthy dose of religious belief thrown in: “In times of acute hardship, with physical and mental distress leaving people more than usually suggestible, a fear of St Vitus could rapidly take hold. All it then took was for one or a few emotionally frail people, believing themselves to have been cursed by St.Vitus, to slip into a trance. Then they would unconsciously act out the part of those who had incurred his wrath: dancing wildly, uncontrollably for days on end.” The description of the events, and the government’s (likely unhelpful) response, is fascinating. We have included our favorite bits from the full text below. Enjoy!
In a spin: the mysterious dancing epidemic of 1518.
“In 1518, one of the strangest epidemics in recorded history struck the city of Strasbourg. Hundreds of people were seized by an irresistible urge to dance, hop and leap into the air. In houses, halls and public spaces, as fear paralyzed the city and the members of the elite despaired, the dancing continued with mindless intensity. Seldom pausing to eat, drink or rest, many of them danced for days or even weeks. And before long, the chronicles agree, dozens were dying from exhaustion. What was it that could have impelled as many as 400 people to dance, in some cases to death?”
“As the dance turned epidemic, troubled nobles and burghers consulted local physicians. Having excluded astrological and supernatural causes, the members of the medical fraternity declared it to be a ‘natural disease’ caused by ‘hot blood’ 2, 4 and 5. This was orthodox physic, consistent with Galen’s view that bloody fluxes could overheat the brain, causing anger, rashness and madness. But the response of the authorities was neither to bleed nor to provide cooling diets. Instead they prescribed ‘more dancing’. To this end they cleared two guildhalls and the outdoor grain market and they even had a wooden stage constructed opposite the horse fair. To these locations the dancers were taken so they could dance freely and uninterrupted. The victims would only recover their minds, said the authorities, if they persisted both day and night with their frantic movements. And to facilitate this supposed cure, the authorities next paid for musicians and professional dancers to keep the afflicted moving.
Every time the sick flagged, fainted, stumbled or slowed, the musicians raised the tempo of their playing and hired dancers held them firm and quickened their pace (Figure 2). ‘They danced day and night with those poor people’, one eye-witness recalled 1, 2 and 4. In grain market and horse fair, the elites had created spectacles every bit as grotesque as a Hieronymous Bosch canvas portraying human folly or the torments of Hell.
Only after those with weak hearts or prone to strokes began to die did the governors rethink their strategy. Deciding that the dance had nothing to do with putrefying blood cooking normally moist and cool brains, they now saw it as a curse sent down by an angry saint. Hence, a period of organised contrition was instituted: gambling, gaming and prostitution were banned and the dissolute driven beyond the city gates. Soon after the dancers were despatched to a mountaintop shrine in the Vosges mountains to pray for divine intercession. There they were led around an altar, wearing red shoes provided for the ceremony, upon which stood a bas-relief carving of St. Vitus, the Virgin and Pope Marcellus. In the following weeks the epidemic abated. Most of the dancers, we are told, regained bodily control…”
Saturday, January 11, 2014
Black hole's 'big meal' could spark fireworks
10 January 2014 by James Morgan Science reporter, BBC News, Washington DC
"Fireworks" will flare if it gobbles up a giant gas cloud which is drifting perilously close.
A collision is now likely in spring, according to scientists at the American Astronomical Society meeting.
Stargazers will be able to see the climax on a new public monitoring website.
"This could be our black hole's biggest meal in hundreds of years," said Leo Meyer, of the University of California, Los Angeles. "It might bring spectacular fireworks - and we want everybody to watch."
The collision could give astronomers a unique window on one of the universe's great enigmas. Black holes are so dense that not even light can escape them, once it passes their event horizon (point of no return).
They can only be observed indirectly - from brief flashes of radiation released by matter falling in.
The giant gas cloud G2 is three times the mass of Earth. It was first spotted in 2011 hurtling towards Sagittarius A* - the black hole in our galactic core. Impact is now just a few months away. If the gas drifts close enough it will heat up, releasing great flares of X-rays, which shed light on the black hole's properties.
Astronomers have already secured front row seats. Dr Meyer's team is tracking the cloud's approach using the Keck Observatory in Hawaii.
They can see it "stretching like spaghetti" as the black hole tugs at its head, now moving much faster than its tail.
And while Keck watches the cloud, Swift is watching the black hole. Nasa's X-Ray space telescope is poised and primed to catch the first glimmers of an encounter.
"Everyone wants to see the event happening because it's so rare," said Nathalie Degenaar, Swift's principal investigator.
Sagittarius A* lurks 26,000 light years away in the Milky Way's innermost region. Viewed from Earth, it is in the southern summer sky near the constellations Sagittarius and Scorpius.
"Currently it's not easy to see at all. But if the gas cloud suddenly feeds it with much more mass, you might get fireworks. And with that, you can test all sorts of theories," said Dr Meyer.
Black holes are thought to play a crucial role in the life cycles of galaxies. They eat matter from their surroundings and blow matter back. This influences how stars are formed, how the galaxy grows, and how it interacts with other galaxies.
To get a sense of the typical feeding habits of Sagittarius A*, the Swift team has been making regular observations since 2006. Every few days, their spacecraft turns toward the galaxy's core and takes a 17-minute-long exposure. To date, they have detected six strong flares where the black hole was 150 times brighter for a couple of hours. But these are mere flickers compared to the jets that could erupt from G2 - the display could last for years. Exactly how dramatic it transpires to be depends on what's inside the cloud.
If it is mostly hydrogen gas, the X-rays will glow for years to come as the black hole slowly swallows it.
But there is another possibility - the cloud could be hiding an old star. In which case, the big dinner date could be an anticlimax.
The black hole may slurp a little from the cloud while the star slips on by at a safe distance, dense enough to escape its gravity.
"I would be delighted if Sagittarius A* suddenly became 10,000 times brighter. However it's possible it will not react much - like a horse that won't drink when led to water," said Jon Miller, of the University of Michigan.
"Will there be fireworks or not? We have to wait and see. There is no smoking gun that can tell us yet," said Dr Meyer.
"But even if the odds are against it, you still have to look, because if you do see something it could be spectacular."
Astronomers are getting ready for
their best ever glimpse of the mysterious black hole at the heart of our
galaxy.
"Fireworks" will flare if it gobbles up a giant gas cloud which is drifting perilously close.
A collision is now likely in spring, according to scientists at the American Astronomical Society meeting.
Stargazers will be able to see the climax on a new public monitoring website.
"This could be our black hole's biggest meal in hundreds of years," said Leo Meyer, of the University of California, Los Angeles. "It might bring spectacular fireworks - and we want everybody to watch."
The collision could give astronomers a unique window on one of the universe's great enigmas. Black holes are so dense that not even light can escape them, once it passes their event horizon (point of no return).
They can only be observed indirectly - from brief flashes of radiation released by matter falling in.
The giant gas cloud G2 is three times the mass of Earth. It was first spotted in 2011 hurtling towards Sagittarius A* - the black hole in our galactic core. Impact is now just a few months away. If the gas drifts close enough it will heat up, releasing great flares of X-rays, which shed light on the black hole's properties.
Astronomers have already secured front row seats. Dr Meyer's team is tracking the cloud's approach using the Keck Observatory in Hawaii.
They can see it "stretching like spaghetti" as the black hole tugs at its head, now moving much faster than its tail.
And while Keck watches the cloud, Swift is watching the black hole. Nasa's X-Ray space telescope is poised and primed to catch the first glimmers of an encounter.
"Everyone wants to see the event happening because it's so rare," said Nathalie Degenaar, Swift's principal investigator.
Sagittarius A* lurks 26,000 light years away in the Milky Way's innermost region. Viewed from Earth, it is in the southern summer sky near the constellations Sagittarius and Scorpius.
Black holes
- Black holes are incredibly dense objects with gravity strong enough to trap even light
- A 'medium' black hole could have the mass of 1,000 Suns but be no bigger than Earth
- Supermassive black holes are thought to be at the centre of most large galaxies - including ours
Even for a black hole it is dim - about a billion times
fainter than others of its "supermassive" type.
And this makes it something of a mystery."Currently it's not easy to see at all. But if the gas cloud suddenly feeds it with much more mass, you might get fireworks. And with that, you can test all sorts of theories," said Dr Meyer.
Black holes are thought to play a crucial role in the life cycles of galaxies. They eat matter from their surroundings and blow matter back. This influences how stars are formed, how the galaxy grows, and how it interacts with other galaxies.
To get a sense of the typical feeding habits of Sagittarius A*, the Swift team has been making regular observations since 2006. Every few days, their spacecraft turns toward the galaxy's core and takes a 17-minute-long exposure. To date, they have detected six strong flares where the black hole was 150 times brighter for a couple of hours. But these are mere flickers compared to the jets that could erupt from G2 - the display could last for years. Exactly how dramatic it transpires to be depends on what's inside the cloud.
If it is mostly hydrogen gas, the X-rays will glow for years to come as the black hole slowly swallows it.
But there is another possibility - the cloud could be hiding an old star. In which case, the big dinner date could be an anticlimax.
The black hole may slurp a little from the cloud while the star slips on by at a safe distance, dense enough to escape its gravity.
"I would be delighted if Sagittarius A* suddenly became 10,000 times brighter. However it's possible it will not react much - like a horse that won't drink when led to water," said Jon Miller, of the University of Michigan.
"Will there be fireworks or not? We have to wait and see. There is no smoking gun that can tell us yet," said Dr Meyer.
"But even if the odds are against it, you still have to look, because if you do see something it could be spectacular."
Thursday, January 9, 2014
Global Climate Change | Source of NASA Data
For more information, go to Global Climate Change | MY NASA DATA. Below is only part of the introduction to the source.
Global Climate Change: An Excellent Source of NASA Data
Ancient European genomes reveal jumbled ancestry
Mysterious peoples from the north and Middle Easterners joined prehistoric locals.
De Agostini Picture Library/Getty Images
Newly released genome sequences from almost a dozen early human inhabitants of Europe suggest that the continent was once a melting pot in which brown-eyed farmers encountered blue-eyed hunter-gatherers.
Present-day Europeans, the latest work shows, trace their ancestry to three groups in various combinations: hunter-gatherers, some of them blue-eyed, who arrived from Africa more than 40,000 years ago; Middle Eastern farmers who migrated west much more recently; and a novel, more mysterious population whose range probably spanned northern Europe and Siberia.
That conclusion comes from the genomes of 8,000-year-old hunter-gatherers — one man from Luxembourg and seven individuals from Sweden — as well as the genome of a 7,500-year-old woman from Germany. The analysis, led by Johannes Krause of the University of Tübingen, Germany, and David Reich of Harvard Medical School in Boston, Massachusetts, was posted on the biology preprint website bioRxiv.org on 23 December 20131. The results have not yet been published in a peer-reviewed journal.
A second team, led by Carles Lalueza-Fox at the University Pompea Fabra in Barcelona, Spain, will soon publish the genome of a 7,000-year-old hunter-gatherer from northwest Spain, the palaeogenomicist said at a recent talk. In 2012, his team released preliminary genomic data from the same sample, suggesting that this hunter-gatherer bore little relationship to modern Spaniards2. The two papers describe what are thought to be the oldest human genomes from Europe found so far.
Milk or grain
The new studies sketch a portrait of early Europeans based on variations in DNA that are known to be linked to traits in modern humans.The authors' gene sequencing suggests that the individuals from Luxembourg and Spain, although dark-skinned, probably had blue eyes and belonged to groups known to be hunter-gatherers. The German woman, meanwhile, had brown eyes and lighter skin, and was related to Middle Eastern groups known to have developed farming. However, both the Luxembourg hunter-gatherer and the German farmer had multiple copies of a gene that breaks down starches in saliva, a feature that has been proposed to be an adaptation to the grain-laden diets characteristic of agricultural life. On the other hand, neither of them had the ability to digest the sugar lactose, found in milk, a trait that emerged in the Middle East after the domestication of cattle and that later spread to Europe.
Related stories
The work also adds a few twists to the prehistory of Europe. Previous archaeological and genetic studies suggested that most of today’s Europeans are descended from Middle Eastern farmers who interbred with local hunter-gatherers in some regions and displaced these early residents in others. Krause’s team concludes that a third population contributed to the gene pool of contemporary Europeans.
This group, which the authors call ancient northern Eurasians, may have lived at high latitudes between Europe and Siberia until a few thousand years ago. Traces of this population were also detected in the genome of a 24,000 year-old Siberian child. Published online last month, the boy’s genome suggests that northern Eurasians interbred with the ancestors of Native Americans as well as with Europeans3.
Diverse migrations
A comparison of the new data with genetic sequencing of present-day individuals shows that the current residents of various European countries are composites of these three groups. Scots and Estonians, for instance, have more northern Eurasian ancestry than any other modern European population sampled, whereas Sardinians are more closely related to Eastern farmers than are other Europeans.The new European ancient genomes also hint at early human forays out of Africa. Middle Eastern farmers, Krause’s team discovered, split off from African ancestors earlier than did European and Asian groups. One possible explanation for this pattern is that the farmers are descended from humans who inhabited 100,000–120,000-year-old settlements in Israel and the Arabian Peninsula.
Many researchers assumed that these sites represented failed migrations out of Africa, because other evidence suggested that humans left Africa less than 100,000 years ago.
“I don’t think anybody saw that coming,” says Eske Willerslev, a palaeogeneticist at the University of Copenhagen. But he says that the population’s existence will be tough to prove conclusively. “It’s super interesting — if it’s correct,” Willerlsev adds.
“What would be really nice is to find some individual that is a direct observation of this population,” says Pontus Skogland, an evolutionary geneticist at Uppsala University in Sweden. Ancient DNA does not last long in hot climates, and so finding DNA from this population in the Middle East may require technological advances, as well as a bit of luck.
Lalueza-Fox declined to discuss his team’s work, but he cautions against making too many assumptions about the peopling of Europe using just a handful of ancient genomes from a single time period. “It’s going to be lots of different migrations and movements,” he says. “There’s going to be plenty of room for investigation in the next few years.”
- Journal name: Nature
- DOI: doi:10.1038/nature.2014.14456
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