science

In a 1st, ancient proteins reveal sex of human relative from 3.5 million years ago



In a first, scientists have used ancient proteins to determine the sex of an archaic human relative that lived up to 3.5 million years ago, a new study reports.

An international team of scientists examined a set of proteins called the proteome. They collected this material from the tooth enamel of an Australopithecus africanus individual whose remains were found in a South African cave decades ago. The method they used, called paleoproteomics, has never successfully worked on such an old hominin (modern humans along with their ancient relatives and ancestors), the researchers said in a study published in the South African Journal of Science on Friday (Feb. 7).



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