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Scientists identify ‘ghost’ of a long-extinct relative in humans today

Kraig Pakulski 0 12 Article rating: No rating

By Katie Hunt, CNN

(CNN) — A prehistoric human known as Homo erectus was the first of our forerunners to leave Africa, crossing continents and ultimately roaming the planet for almost 2 million years. But with scarce genetic material available to study, the species remains a major mystery in human origins.

Now, scientists have retrieved ancient proteins from six teeth unearthed in China that, for the first time, reveal a molecular link between Homo erectus and later human species, including our own: Homo sapiens.

“This is a major step forward in tying together the broken branches of our human evolutionary tree,” said Ryan McRae, a paleoanthropologist at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History in Washington, DC, who was not involved in the study. “Homo erectus has long been a bit of an enigma.”

Homo erectus remains have been found in Africa, Asia and Europe; however, obtaining informative molecular data such as DNA has proved challenging given the fossils’ age and poor preservation.

In a study published Wednesday in the scientific journal Nature, Chinese geneticist Fu Qiaomei and her colleagues successfully extracted and analyzed ancient enamel proteins from the teeth unearthed at three sites in China. All the teeth date from around 400,000 years ago.

Proteins, which are made up of sequences of amino acids, are more robust than ancient DNA, a fragile molecule that degrades relatively easily. Proteins contain far less detailed information, but they can still shed some light on a specimen’s evolutionary history.

Fu, a professor at the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology, part of the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing, and her team used what they described as a new, less invasive technique to study fossils without damaging their morphology.

Rather than drilling, they used acid etching to remove a small sample of enamel from the teeth. The team did not try to recover DNA from the fossils after failing to extract DNA from animal fossils of the same age from the same sites. Fu said it was hard to get DNA, but she would never give up.

Unknown variant discovered

The researchers found that the specimens from the three sites in China shared two amino acid variants, one of which was previously unknown. This finding, the researchers reasoned, suggested the teeth all belonged to the same species.

The second variant had previously been identified in Denisovans, another shadowy species of ancient human, and also in some modern human populations.

That other human species shared this variant suggested that Denisovans had once interbred with Homo erectus, and then, at some later point, Denisovans mated with Homo sapiens, according to the study.

As a result, traces of Denisovan DNA live on in some humans today — something interbreeding geneticists call admixture.

Similarly, modern human populations have some Neanderthal ancestry — a legacy of past interactions with that species that went extinct about 40,000 years ago. Denisovans also interbred with Neanderthals.

Modern human populations in Southeast Asia have the highest Denisovan ancestry, suggesting the two groups once crossed paths there.

‘Ghost lineage’

Geneticists knew that Denisovans had some ancestry from an unknown “ghost lineage” with no DNA match, and Homo erectus was one possible candidate, said Eduard Pop, a research scientist at Naturalis Biodiversity Center in Leiden, Netherlands, via email.

“This study strengthens

El FBI ofrece US$ 200.000 por información sobre una exagente de inteligencia de la Fuerza Aérea acusada de espiar para Irán

Kraig Pakulski 0 8 Article rating: No rating

Por Kaanita Iyer, CNN

El FBI ofrece US$ 200.000 por información que pueda conducir al arresto de una exagente de inteligencia de la Fuerza Aérea acusada en 2019 de espiar para Irán.

En un comunicado emitido este jueves, el FBI informó que continúa buscando a Monica Witt, quien, según cree, desertó a Irán en 2013. La agencia indicó que cree que “probablemente sigue apoyando las actividades ilícitas” de ese país.

“El FBI no la ha olvidado y cree que, en este momento crítico de la historia de Irán, (puede) que haya alguien que sepa algo sobre su paradero”, declaró Daniel Wierzbicki, agente especial a cargo de la División de Contrainteligencia y Ciberseguridad de la Oficina del FBI en Washington, en un comunicado, probablemente refiriéndose a las tensiones actuales entre Estados Unidos e Irán.

“El FBI quiere hablar con usted para que nos ayude a detener a Witt y llevarla ante la justicia”, decía el comunicado.

Witt era una exoficial de contrainteligencia de la Oficina de Investigaciones Especiales de la Fuerza Aérea. Entre 2003 y 2008, su trabajo consistió en misiones de contrainteligencia que la llevaron a Medio Oriente.

En 2019, el entonces fiscal general adjunto John Demers alegó que Irán había reclutado a Witt y que, tras su deserción, supuestamente reveló a Irán la existencia de un “programa de recopilación de inteligencia altamente clasificado” y la identidad de un oficial de inteligencia estadounidense, “poniendo así en riesgo la vida de esta persona”.

En la acusación, la fiscalía alegó que, desde enero de 2012 hasta mayo de 2015, en Irán y otros lugares fuera de Estados Unidos, Witt conspiró con los iraníes para proporcionar “documentos e información relacionados con la defensa nacional de Estados Unidos, con la intención y la creencia fundada de que se utilizarían en perjuicio de Estados Unidos y en beneficio de Irán”.

Tras su deserción, funcionarios del gobierno iraní le proporcionaron a Witt “bienes y servicios, incluyendo vivienda y equipo informático”, para facilitar su trabajo, según la acusación. Se desconoce si cuenta con un abogado en Estados Unidos que la represente.

La acusación también imputó a cuatro iraníes los cargos de conspiración, intento de intrusión informática y robo de identidad agravado.

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The post El FBI ofrece US$ 200.000 por información sobre una exagente de inteligencia de la Fuerza Aérea acusada de espiar para Irán appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

Oxnard woman arrested in connection with February thefts from The Collection’s fountain

Kraig Pakulski 0 9 Article rating: No rating

OXNARD, Calif. (KEYT) – A 45-year-old Oxnard woman was arrested Wednesday in connection with parts of the custom copper fountain at The Collection being removed and stolen.

On two separate occasions, February 3 and 15 of this year, parts of the fountain handcrafted by a local artists were dismantled to make them easier to transport and removed detailed the Oxnard Police Department in a press release.

The custom copper fountain is valued at around $35,000 added the local law enforcement agency.

During an investigation into the thefts, officers learned that a 45-year-old Oxnard woman had taken portions of the fountain to a local recycling center where the copper was later processed noted the Oxnard Police Department.

According to Oxnard Police, members of the Neighborhood Policing Team alongside investigators with the Violent Crime Unit took the 45-year-old into custody and she was booked on charges of grand theft, possession of stolen property, and conspiracy to commit a crime.

The investigation into the thefts remains open and anyone with more information is asked to contact the Oxnard Police Department at 805-385-7600 or online here.

You can also report information while remaining anonymous by calling the Ventura County Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477 or visiting their website.

The post Oxnard woman arrested in connection with February thefts from The Collection’s fountain appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

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