Recently the New York Times reported the following:
Humans Had Dogs Before They Had Farming, Ancient DNA
Confirms (2/2)
New research pushes the first genetic evidence of dogs
back by 5,000 years and suggests that hunter-gatherer groups may have acquired
dogs from one another.
The NTY - By Emily Anthes - Emily Anthes is a science
reporter, writing primarily about animal health and science. She also covered
the coronavirus pandemic.
March 25, 2026, 12:00 p.m. ET
(continue)
Paleolithic pups
Overall, the researchers found evidence of genetically
similar Paleolithic dogs at five different archaeological sites that were
associated with people from three different hunter-gatherer cultures: the
Magdalenian, Anatolian and Epigravettian peoples.
These are “utterly different cultures,” said Ian Barnes, a paleogeneticist at the Natural History Museum in London and an author of one of the studies. “Presumably linguistically different, completely culturally different, ecologically different, with the same animal. So how does that square up? How does that happen?”
One possibility, the researchers proposed, is that dogs spread through Europe as the Epigravettian culture expanded across the continent roughly 16,000 years ago, and Epigravattian people passed dogs along to other hunter-gatherer populations they encountered.
How these dogs slotted into these societies remains unclear. “What these animals were doing for them, or whether they were just following them, this we don’t really know,” said Laurent Frantz, a paleogeneticist at Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich and an author of both studies. But given the varied human cultures and environments, it’s possible that these genetically similar dogs were performing different jobs in different human populations.
That means that while humans would later turn dogs into highly specialized tools, optimized to pull sleds or wriggle into badger holes, these Paleolithic dogs might have been more like “a Swiss army knife,” Dr. Larson said. “The dogs might be doing different things, but the dogs themselves are all the same color, same height, same genomic ancestry.”
These hunter-gatherer societies did appear to have close relationships with the dogs, the researchers reported. At some sites, for instance, there was evidence that humans had perhaps provided these early dogs with food and, in death, had treated their bodies like human ones.
“That indicates to us a very, very close interaction,” said William Marsh, a paleogeneticist at the Natural History Museum and an author of one of the studies.
And the legacy of these Paleolithic dogs most likely lives on. When the first farmers began to arrive in Europe — migrating from southwestern Asia roughly 9,000 years ago — they brought their own dogs with them. “There was basically a mixing of all the different dogs from both hunter-gatherer groups and farming groups,” said Pontus Skoglund, a paleogeneticist at the Francis Crick Institute in London who was an author of both studies.
Europe’s farmers thus ended up with dogs that still carried a lot of ancestry from the dogs that had once lived alongside the continent’s hunter-gatherers. Modern European dogs can also probably trace much of their ancestry back to those canines, the researchers said.
Still, the biggest questions surrounding the origins of the dog remain unanswered.
“It’s very exciting that we have this first view of Paleolithic, really early dog ancestry,” Dr. Skoglund said.
“But the question of where dogs come from, and who were these people that domesticated them or started to build this bond,” he added, “we’re still trying to find out.”
Translation
古DNA證實,人類在發展農業前就擁有狗隻(2/2)
一項新研究將最早發現狗基因的證據推前5000年前,並顯示狩獵採集群體可能彼此之間傳播了狗
(繼續)
舊石器時代的幼犬
總體而言,研究人員在五個不同的考古遺址中發現了基因相似的舊石器時代犬類的證據,這些遺址與三種不同的狩獵採集文化有關:馬格德林文化、安納托利亞文化和埃皮格拉維特文化。
倫敦自然歷史博物館的古遺傳學家、研究的作者之一Ian Barnes表示,這些是「截然不同的文化」; 「以常理推測,語言是不同、文化迥異、生態環境也截然不同,卻都養著同一種動物。那麼,這又該如何解釋呢?這究竟是怎麼發生的?」
研究人員提出了一種可能性:大約16,000年前,隨著埃皮格拉維特文化在歐洲大陸的擴張,狗也隨之傳播開來,而埃皮格拉維特人又將狗帶給了他們遇到的其他狩獵採集群體。
這些狗是如何融入這些社會的,目前尚不清楚。慕尼黑路德維希-馬克西米利安大學的古遺傳學家、也是這兩項研究的作者之一Laurent Frantz說道: 「這些動物為他們做了什麼,或者它們只是跟隨他們,我們真的不知道」。但考慮到人類文化和環境的多樣性,這些基因相似的狗在不同的人類群體中可能扮演不同的角色。
Larson博士說這意味著,雖然人類後來將狗改造成高度專業化的工具,使其能夠拉雪橇或鑽進獾洞,但這些舊石器時代的狗可能更像是 “瑞士軍刀” 。 “這些狗可能從事不同的工作,但它們是有相同毛色、相同身高和相同基因組譜。”
研究人員報告稱,這些狩獵採集社會似乎與狗有著密切的關係。例如,在一些遺址中,有證據表明人類可能曾為這些早期犬隻提供食物,並在它們死後像對待人類屍體一樣地對待它們。
自然歷史博物館的古遺傳學家、該研究的作者之一William
Marsh說:「這表明人類與狗之間存在非常密切的互動」。
這些舊石器時代狗的遺產很可能延續至今。大約9,000年前,第一批農民從西南亞遷徙到歐洲時,他們也帶了自己的狗。也是這兩項研究的作者之一的倫敦弗朗西斯·克里克研究所的古遺傳學家Pontus Skoglund說道: 「基本上,來自狩獵採集群體和農業群體的各種犬種都混雜在一起」。
因此,歐洲的農民最終擁有的犬隻,仍然保留著許多來自曾經與歐洲大陸狩獵採集者共同生活的犬隻的血統。研究人員表示,現代歐洲犬的祖先很可能也大多可以追溯到這些犬類。
然而,關於犬類起源的最大疑問仍然沒有答案。
Skoglund博士說: 「我們首次得以了解舊石器時代,也就是非常早期的犬類祖先,這令人非常興奮」。
他補充道:“但是,關於犬類的起源,以及馴化它們或開始與它們建立聯繫的人,我們仍在努力尋找答案。”
So, roughly 14,000 years ago hunter-gatherer societies across Europe had discovered dogs. Recent studies have provided the first definitive genetic evidence that dogs existed during the Paleolithic period, before humans developed agriculture. The researchers have identified Paleolithic dogs at five different archaeological sites in Europe and Western Asia. The oldest of these dogs lived about 15,800 years ago, pushing back the oldest known genetic evidence of dogs by nearly 5,000 years. Apparently, we still do not know where these dogs came from, and who were the people that domesticated them.