In a groundbreaking study published in Nature, researchers have unveiled new insights into the intricate genetic relationships among late Neanderthal populations in northwestern Europe. Utilizing a combination of high-coverage shotgun sequencing and targeted hybridization capture techniques, the team dissected the nuclear genomic affinities among Neanderthals from key archaeological sites in Belgium, France, and beyond, revealing a complex web of ancestral connections that reshape our understanding of Neanderthal population dynamics during their final millennia.
At the heart of this inquiry lies the GN1 Neanderthal specimen, which, due to its unusually high genomic coverage, provided a robust comparative framework. GN1 exhibited the closest genetic ties to Vindija 33.19, contemporaneous Neanderthals from Croatia, with divergence estimates suggesting these lineages shared a common ancestor approximately 10,000 years prior to their existence. This finding underscores a temporal and possibly migratory continuity within Neanderthals inhabiting Europe during the Late Pleistocene.
Delving deeper, the study applied advanced population genetics tools, including D-statistics and outgroup f₃-statistics, to interrogate the affinities of other southern European Neanderthals with varying data quality. Remarkably, Neanderthals from Fonds-de-Forêt, Spy, Goyet, and Trou Magrite consistently exhibited closer genetic proximity to GN1 than to Vindija 33.19, indicating a geographically clustered population structure in northwestern Europe. These results not only strengthen the geographic-genomic correlation but also highlight a shared genetic identity within these late hunter-gatherers.
Further molecular scrutiny revealed a broader pattern where late Neanderthals preferentially shared more alleles with Vindija 33.19 than with Neanderthals from Chagyrskaya or D5 lineages. The implications of this allele sharing suggest that Vindija 33.19 represents a pivotal genetic reference point, emblematic of a dominant Neanderthal lineage persisting in parts of Europe during the terminal phases of their existence. This nuanced genetic stratification provides compelling evidence for regional population variances shaped by isolation and sporadic gene flow.
The researchers estimated population split times using sophisticated f(A|B)-statistical models that incorporate inferred demographic histories. The northwestern Neanderthal populations analyzed appeared to diverge from Vindija 33.19 roughly 54,000 years ago, with confidence intervals spanning 51,000 to 58,000 years before present. Such timing not only aligns with previous temporally resolved genetic events but also corroborates the notion of a dynamic yet regionally confined Neanderthal gene pool during this period.
Contrasting with these findings is the AR-30 Neanderthal from Arcy-sur-Cure, dated to approximately 42,000 years ago, which genetically clusters closer to Vindija 33.19 than to Chagyrskaya 8. However, AR-30’s lineage exhibits an earlier divergence, estimated around 131,000 years ago, suggesting a deep-rooted ancestral lineage persisting independently of other Late Neanderthal groups. This divergence signals potential past population structure or admixture events that defy simplistic models of Neanderthal demography.
Importantly, the AR-30 genome’s elevated proportion of ancestral alleles could not be satisfactorily explained by methodological artifacts such as contamination or misassignment of faunal DNA, as rigorous metagenomic filters confirmed the specimen’s genomic integrity. The possibility emerges that AR-30 may harbor genetic contributions from a yet unidentified Neanderthal lineage that diverged after the splits shaping Chagyrskaya 8 and D5 individuals, raising intriguing prospects about undiscovered complexity in Neanderthal evolution.
The study’s comprehensive model proposes a scenario in which late Neanderthals in northwestern Europe formed a genetically coherent cluster, distinct from their contemporaries in the Balkans or the Altai region. This is consistent with archaeological and climatic evidence indicating localized refugia and intricate population movements as Neanderthals faced environmental and possibly competitive pressures from anatomically modern humans. Consequently, the genetic mosaic documented here reflects a tapestry woven from isolation, migration, and interbreeding over tens of millennia.
Methodologically, this research benefits from combining shotgun sequencing with hybridization capture methods, allowing for comprehensive coverage even in specimens otherwise constrained by DNA preservation challenges. This dual approach augments statistical power for population genetic analyses and enables fine-grained reconstructions of evolutionary timelines, surpassing earlier efforts that relied predominantly on mitochondrial DNA or low-coverage nuclear sequences.
The implications of these findings extend beyond tracing Neanderthal genealogies; they challenge simplified narratives of a homogenous Neanderthal population replaced uniformly by modern humans. Instead, they suggest a layered demographic history involving regionally distinct populations with varying degrees of connectivity and genetic exchange. This complexity likely influenced Neanderthal adaptive trajectories and their resilience to ecological shifts at the twilight of the Pleistocene.
Moreover, the observed divergence times and allele-sharing patterns compel reconsiderations of the timing and geography of Neanderthal-modern human interactions. Understanding the genetic landscape of late Neanderthals sheds light on potential windows of interbreeding and cultural contact, refining models of how the human lineage emerged amidst the backdrop of archaic hominin diversity.
Future directions will undoubtedly focus on expanding high-coverage sequencing efforts to include more regional specimens, especially those like AR-30 with ambiguous genetic signals. Integrating paleogenomic data with climatic modeling and archaeological contexts will further unravel how Neanderthal populations navigated environmental challenges and population dynamics in their final chapters. Such holistic approaches promise richer, multidimensional portraits of our closest evolutionary relatives.
In summary, this study represents a significant leap in elucidating the genetic diversity and population structure of late Neanderthals, particularly those inhabiting northwestern Europe. The intricate genetic affinities and estimated divergence times not only enhance our knowledge of Neanderthal biogeography but also pave the way for reconceptualizing the evolutionary processes that shaped the emergence of modern humans and the fate of Neanderthals.
Subject of Research: Genetic diversity and population structure of late Neanderthals in northwestern Europe.
Article Title: Genetic diversity of late Neanderthals in northwestern Europe.
Article References:
Bossoms Mesa, A., Essel, E., Peyrégne, S. et al. Genetic diversity of late Neanderthals in northwestern Europe. Nature (2026). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-026-10625-1
Image Credits: AI Generated
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-026-10625-1
Tags: ancient DNA sequencing NeanderthalsD-statistics Neanderthal genetic analysisGN1 Neanderthal specimen genomehybridization capture ancient DNALate Neanderthal genetic diversityNeanderthal migration patterns EuropeNeanderthal nuclear genomic affinitiesNeanderthal population dynamics Late PleistoceneNeanderthal population structure Belgium Francenorthwest Europe Neanderthal genomesshotgun sequencing Neanderthal genomesVindija 33.19 Neanderthal genetics
