They examined the genetic remains of four modern humans from the Sunghir burial site in Russia and found that the closest relatives they bred with were their second cousins. This has led the researchers to argue that early humans must have actively looked to mate with people outside their family circle.
Senior author Eske Willerslev remarked:
If small hunter-gatherer bands were mixing at random, we would see much greater evidence of inbreeding than we have here.
Their remains also suggest they may have had ceremonies and rituals to exchange mates between groups, and used ornaments to distinguish between different groups and to know who was a relative.
Each group was organised around single-sex families, where one of the sexes remains locally, while the others go to a different group to minimise inbreeding, the researchers go on to explain.
Willerslev said:
When you put the evidence together, it seems to be speaking to us about the really big questions; what made these people who they were as a species, and who we are as a result.
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