Does red hair come from Neanderthals?

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Due do the comment made here, I tried to find the original article in hope to get a study referenced. For now, I will link to a different post I have found about that original 2001 article. If you know of an actual study, please let it in the comment section.

https://forums.skadi.net/threads/142-Red-Haired-Genes-From-Neanderthals

“If the mutation for red hair was inherited from Neanderthal, it would
have been from a Central Asian Neanderthal, perhaps from modern
Uzbekistan, or an East Anatolian/Mesopotamian one. The mutation
probably passed on to some other (extinct?) lineages for a few
millennia, before being inherited by the R1b tribe. Otherwise, it
could also have arisen independently among R1b people as late as the
Neolithic period (but no later).”

Forum post:

Red-Haired Genes From Neanderthals?

Here is an old, but interesting story. The famous American anthropologist Carleton S. Coon argued that some Europeans descend from the Neanderthals, could this help prove it?

Redheads ‘are Neanderthal’.

RED hair may be the genetic legacy of Neanderthals, scientists believe. Researchers at the John Radcliffe Institute of Molecular Medicine in Oxford say that the so-called “ginger gene” which gives people red hair, fair skin and freckles could be up to 100,000 years old.

They claim that their discovery points to the gene having originated in Neanderthal man who lived in Europe for 200,000 years before Homo Sapien settlers, the ancestors of modern man, arrived from Africa about 40,000 years ago.

Rosalind Harding, the research team leader, said: “The gene is certainly older than 50,000 years and it could be as old as 100,000 years. “An explanation is that it comes from Neanderthals.” It is estimated that at least 10 per cent of Scots have red hair and a further 40 per cent carry the gene responsible, which could account for their once fearsome reputation as fighters. Neanderthals have been characterised as migrant hunters and violent cannibals who probably ate most of their meat raw. They were taller and stockier than Homo Sapiens, but with shorter limbs, bigger faces and noses, receding chins and low foreheads.

The two species overlapped for a period of time and the Oxford research appears to suggests that they must have successfully interbred for the “ginger gene” to survive. Neanderthals became extinct about 28,000 years ago, the last dying out in southern Spain and southwest France.

© Times Newspapers Ltd, 2001.

Source: THE TIMES UK 16/04/2001


Scots may be directly descended from Neanderthal man.

By Tom Peterkin.

FROM William Wallace to the goalposts at Wembley, Scots have a fearsome reputation for causing trouble.

Now, a team of scientists may have discovered the explanation-we inherited Neanderthal genes.

Experts in evolution from Oxford say the key lies in the red hair for which Celts are famous.

The team studied the origins of the gene which causes red hair and discovered it is older than the first Homo Sapien settlers to come to Europe from Africa around 30,000 years ago.

This strongly suggests the gene must have been present in Neanderthal man, who was living in Europe long before the arrival of Homo Sapiens. The Oxford team says this points to interbreeding between Neanderthals and the new settlers, an idea which has previously been dismissed. It was originally believed that Homo Sapiens, because they were more sophisticated, simply drove out the Neanderthals to the point where they became extinct. The conclusion the team draws is that the red hair, freckles and pale skin which characterise Scots are most likely the genetic legacy of a long-dead species, known for being hairy and having prominent brows and receding foreheads. Around 10% of Scots are redheads, while an additional 40% of the population with other hair colourings carry the gene responsible for red hair.

Dr Rosalind Harding, of the Institute of Molecular Medicine at the John Radcliffe Hospital, in Oxford, calculated the age of the ginger version of the gene, known as the melanocortin 1 receptor (MC1R), by using a complex model that looked at its mutation rate.

She found that the gene was present 100,000 years ago-at least 70,000 years before Homo Sapiens’ migration into Europe from Africa. Harding maintains that the gene could not have originated in the sweltering heat of Africa, because natural selection would not have allowed the survival of a trait that predisposes humans to skin cancer.

Studies have revealed that carriers of the gene are five times more sensitive to ultraviolet light than others and therefore far more likely to contract skin cancer. Given that the gene is so much older than the earliest anthropological records of Stone Age Homo Sapiens, who were responsible for the spectacular cave paintings produced around 30,000 years ago, Harding believes that MC1R must have originated in the Neanderthals.

“The gene is certainly older than 50,000 years and it could be as old as 100,000 years,” she said. “An explanation is that it comes from the Neanderthals-the other people that were here before modern man came out of Africa.”

Harding believes that the prevalence of the ginger gene in so many of today’s population provides evidence that early Homo sapiens bred with the Neanderthals and that many of today’s humans are descended from unions between the two species.

So does that mean it is possible that Scottish redheads are directly descended from the Neanderthals? “It seems to be the logical conclusion to what I am saying,” said Harding. “But I don’t know if people are going to like me for saying that.”

© The Scotsman Publications Ltd.

Source: SCOTLAND ON SUNDAY 15/04/2001

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2 Comments

  1. Helmut Grassinger February 10, 2021
    • Ken February 10, 2021

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