The Prague Post - Scientists find 2-million year-old DNA in Greenland

EUR -
AED 4.323227
AFN 81.800407
ALL 97.102407
AMD 450.94111
ANG 2.107348
AOA 1079.331534
ARS 1725.54712
AUD 1.763887
AWG 2.118644
AZN 2.008817
BAM 1.958011
BBD 2.369777
BDT 143.220542
BGN 1.957445
BHD 0.443766
BIF 3466.336797
BMD 1.177024
BND 1.507903
BOB 8.148203
BRL 6.260829
BSD 1.176629
BTN 103.699122
BWP 16.621773
BYN 3.9841
BYR 23069.677837
BZD 2.366373
CAD 1.62211
CDF 3363.935378
CHF 0.934592
CLF 0.028554
CLP 1120.16295
CNY 8.379248
CNH 8.378807
COP 4599.905437
CRC 592.669385
CUC 1.177024
CUP 31.191146
CVE 110.905117
CZK 24.308555
DJF 209.18109
DKK 7.464118
DOP 74.093467
DZD 152.581253
EGP 56.699488
ERN 17.655366
ETB 169.365048
FJD 2.630301
FKP 0.868624
GBP 0.864895
GEL 3.174621
GGP 0.868624
GHS 14.394477
GIP 0.868624
GMD 82.984101
GNF 10193.031755
GTQ 9.019187
GYD 246.168032
HKD 9.15639
HNL 30.814533
HRK 7.533546
HTG 153.963893
HUF 389.312228
IDR 19265.535043
ILS 3.943668
IMP 0.868624
INR 103.732748
IQD 1541.440966
IRR 49493.875036
ISK 143.36313
JEP 0.868624
JMD 188.973434
JOD 0.834533
JPY 173.314546
KES 152.427205
KGS 102.930813
KHR 4716.336698
KMF 492.588884
KPW 1059.326273
KRW 1630.720322
KWD 0.35946
KYD 0.980507
KZT 635.888198
LAK 25506.118409
LBP 105402.533464
LKR 355.401405
LRD 209.716314
LSL 20.44498
LTL 3.475447
LVL 0.71197
LYD 6.36753
MAD 10.622626
MDL 19.573107
MGA 5267.183852
MKD 61.609584
MMK 2471.30169
MNT 4231.186816
MOP 9.427548
MRU 46.992727
MUR 53.542264
MVR 18.00688
MWK 2044.491586
MXN 21.611768
MYR 4.949365
MZN 75.223777
NAD 20.445245
NGN 1769.373584
NIO 43.231656
NOK 11.560963
NPR 165.918395
NZD 1.970433
OMR 0.452565
PAB 1.176629
PEN 4.109583
PGK 4.926437
PHP 67.201045
PKR 331.391131
PLN 4.248993
PYG 8400.487854
QAR 4.302423
RON 5.063089
RSD 117.176318
RUB 97.696364
RWF 1705.526291
SAR 4.414923
SBD 9.659697
SCR 16.766679
SDG 707.927604
SEK 10.915195
SGD 1.506644
SHP 0.924956
SLE 27.512916
SLL 24681.617038
SOS 672.459503
SRD 46.069317
STD 24362.028251
STN 24.527703
SVC 10.295541
SYP 15303.440669
SZL 20.412054
THB 37.423483
TJS 11.124865
TMT 4.131356
TND 3.427972
TOP 2.756713
TRY 48.593445
TTD 7.98602
TWD 35.537924
TZS 2908.076461
UAH 48.479343
UGX 4123.657427
USD 1.177024
UYU 47.222934
UZS 14636.297976
VES 186.829492
VND 31055.788251
VUV 140.741595
WST 3.234407
XAF 656.698702
XAG 0.027623
XAU 0.00032
XCD 3.180967
XCG 2.120595
XDR 0.818379
XOF 656.193481
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.956434
ZAR 20.422962
ZMK 10594.627862
ZMW 27.797396
ZWL 379.00137
  • RBGPF

    -1.2700

    76

    -1.67%

  • CMSC

    -0.0600

    24.3

    -0.25%

  • BCC

    -0.3300

    85.35

    -0.39%

  • NGG

    0.0400

    71.64

    +0.06%

  • CMSD

    0.0600

    24.46

    +0.25%

  • AZN

    -1.6100

    77.95

    -2.07%

  • RIO

    1.0000

    63.44

    +1.58%

  • GSK

    -0.4050

    40.425

    -1%

  • SCS

    0.1000

    16.91

    +0.59%

  • RELX

    0.3350

    46.835

    +0.72%

  • RYCEF

    0.2600

    15.68

    +1.66%

  • JRI

    0.0235

    14.12

    +0.17%

  • BP

    0.2450

    34.135

    +0.72%

  • VOD

    -0.0600

    11.79

    -0.51%

  • BCE

    -0.5300

    23.63

    -2.24%

  • BTI

    -0.4700

    56.12

    -0.84%

Scientists find 2-million year-old DNA in Greenland
Scientists find 2-million year-old DNA in Greenland / Photo: Handout - SVEND FUNDER/AFP

Scientists find 2-million year-old DNA in Greenland

Scientists in Greenland announced Wednesday they had found DNA dating back two million years -- the oldest ever extracted -- in sediment from the Ice Age, opening a new chapter in paleogenetics.

Text size:

"We are breaking the barrier of what we thought we could reach in terms of genetic studies," said Mikkel Winther Pedersen, co-author of a new study published in science journal Nature.

"It was long thought that one million years was the boundary of DNA survival, but now we are twice as old" as that, told AFP.

They found the DNA fragments in sediment from the northernmost part of Greenland known as Kap Copenhagen, said the University of Copenhagen lecturer.

The fragments "come from an environment that we do not see anywhere on Earth today," he added. Frozen in a remote unpopulated area, the DNA had been very well preserved.

New technology enabled the scientists to determine that the 41 fragments were more than a million years older than the oldest known DNA, from a Siberian mammoth.

They had to first determine whether there was DNA hidden in the clay and quartz, then see whether it could be removed from the sediment to examine it.

The method used "provides a fundamental understanding of why minerals, or sediments, can preserve DNA", said Karina Sand, who heads the geobiology team at the University of Copenhagen and who took part in the study.

"It's a Pandora's box we're just about to open up", she added.

- Species adaptability -

The "rivers running through the environment transported minerals and organic material into the marine environment and this was where these terrestrial sediments were deposited", said Winther Pedersen.

Then, at some point around two million years ago, "this land mass beneath the water was raised up and became a part of North Greenland", he explained.

Today, Kap Copenhagen is an Arctic desert, where different types of deposits, including plant and insect fossils preserved in excellent condition, have already been discovered.

But scientists hadn't tried to establish the fossils' DNA, and very little was known about the presence of animals at the time.

The research team, which began its work in 2006, has now made it possible to paint a picture of what the region looked like two million years ago.

"We had this forested environment with mastodons and reindeer and hares running around in the landscape together with a lot of different plant species", he said, they had found 102 different kinds of plant.

The presence of mastodons was particularly noteworthy, he added, never having been found so far north before. The discovery has also given researchers more information about the adaptability of species.

Two million years ago, Greenland had temperatures 11 to 17 degrees warmer than today, but at its latitude, the sun doesn't set in summer nor rise in winter.

"We don't see this environment anywhere, this mix of species anywhere on Earth today", said Winther Pedersen.

"The plasticity in species, how species are actually able to adapt to different types of climate, might be different than what we previously thought.

"And obviously, it makes us look for newer and older sites.

"There are several different sites across the world that actually have geological deposits that go this far back. And even further back," ha added.

B.Svoboda--TPP