Haplotype hints
Hammer and his colleagues gathered DNA samples from the Center for the  Study of Human Polymorphisms in Paris and sequenced about 60 regions of  the human genome that apparently have no function. These genes are less  subject than functional DNA to change as a result of recent evolutionary  pressures driving the survival of the fittest; in such a way, they can  give a clearer view of how populations might have mixed or not in the  past.
The investigators focused on three populations that presented a good  sample of the geographic and cultural diversity of sub-Saharan Africa —  Mandenka farmers in western Africa, Biaka Pygmies in west-central  Africa, and San Bushmen of southern Africa — looking for unusual  patterns that suggested ancient interbreeding with other lineages. This  included a hunt for long haplotypes, or sets of DNA sequences, not seen  in other modern human groups, the idea being that while short haplotypes  could potentially be explained by a few chance mutations within these  modern human populations, comparatively long haplotypes were instead  likely inherited from a significantly different lineage.

 "If interbreeding occurs, it's going to bring in a whole chromosome,"  Hammer explained. Although this genetic contribution would have dwindled  over time, remnants would still exist as shorter, unusual fragments,  and "by looking at how long they are, we can get an estimate of how far  back the interbreeding event happened." (The longer these odd haplotypes  are, the more recently they occurred, having less time to get  diminished by other genetic inputs.) 
The researchers discovered especially strong evidence for such genetic  mixing in the Biaka and San, in the form of a trio of unusual  haplotypes. By comparing these sets of genes with those from comparable  modern human ones, the investigators estimated the unusual genes may  have come from a lineage that first diverged from the ancestors of  modern humans about 700,000 years ago. For context, the Neanderthal  lineage diverged from ours within the past 500,000 years, while the  first signs of anatomically modern human features appeared only about  200,000 years ago.
"The populations that interbred in Africa were on a similar scale of  divergence as the expanding modern population and Neanderthals were  outside of Africa," Hammer said. "They were similar enough biologically  so that they were able to produce fertile offspring, thus allowing genes  to flow from one population to the other."
The length of the exotic haplotypes from this extinct lineage suggests  interbreeding might still have occurred until as recently as 35,000  years ago.
"We think there were probably thousands of interbreeding events," Hammer  said. "It happened relatively extensively and regularly."
Homeland of extinct lineage
A broader survey of where this trio of exotic haplotypes from this  extinct lineage might now be found revealed they could be seen in modern  human groups across sub-Saharan Africa, but apparently just one central  African population of Pygmies, the Mbuti, had all three. Since this  group is relatively isolated from other modern human populations,  including other Pygmies, the scientists conjecture that central Africa  may have been the homeland of this extinct lineage.
In the future, Hammer's team wants to look at the entire genome  sequences of several modern human groups in Africa to get a better  picture of how interbreeding might have occurred.
"Did it occur in a single burst in a single locale, or was admixture an  ongoing process such that genes were flowing over large geographic  distances and long periods of time?" Hammer asked. "This has many  implications for how modern humans acquired the features that make them  unique."
The researchers also want to look for ancient DNA from this extinct  lineage that might have conferred some evolutionary advantage to hybrids  with modern humans. This process of modern humans interbreeding with  other lineages as they expanded across the world "may have accelerated  the evolutionary process by allowing genes that are beneficial in one  locale to spread to a new population that has not yet had time to adapt  to those new conditions," Hammer said. "This may be a major mode of  acquiring novel characteristics and one of the ways that we became the  species that we are today."
So far no traces of the haplotypes from this newfound lineage have been  seen in modern human groups outside of Africa. However, "we can't be  sure until we do a better job of searching for them," Hammer said.  "Another question for the future."
by "environment clean generations"  
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