Wynne can't say for sure whether the domestication process happened at multiple villages at different times, or if it happened just once, as indicated by another recent study that looked at DNA from
ancient dog fossils.
Not exact matches
A
fossil found in Maryland was identified by a University of Pennsylvania doctoral student as belonging to a new species of
ancient dog.
Fossil dogs and wolves from Palaeolithic sites in Belgium, the Ukraine and Russia: osteometry,
ancient DNA and stable isotopes.
ANCIENT RIFT DNA from a wolf (
fossil jaw shown) that lived in Siberia some 35,000 years ago indicates
dogs and wolves split earlier than thought.
Dogs from this group are found in
ancient Bronze Age
fossils in the Middle East and southern Europe.