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NOT SO NICE NITS!

Experts are using an unusual method to find out about our ancestors - nits! Yes, studying the remains of hair lice is revealing secrets about the DNA of ancient humans. Scientists studying mummified remains from South America from around 1,500-2,000 years ago, say they have recovered ancient human DNA from the cement that head lice use to stick their eggs to hair.


This cement is made when lice attach eggs, known as nits, to the hair, and at the same time, some skin cells from the scalp also become trapped in the glue-like sticky stuff. "In addition to genetics, lice biology can provide valuable clues about how people lived and died thousands of years ago," Dr Perotti, Associate Professor in Invertebrate Biology at the University of Reading, UK explained.


In the new study, published in the journal Molecular Biology and Evolution, researchers extracted DNA from nit cement on mummified remains of people who reached the Andes mountains of the San Juan province in central west Argentina.

Scientists also studied ancient nits on human hair used in textile from Chile as well as nits from a shrunken head originating from the ancient Jivaroan people of Amazonian Ecuador. Using the new method, researchers found a genetic link between three of the mummies and other human remains, showing for the first time that the original population of the San Juan province migrated from the land and rainforests of the Amazon in the north of the continent, south of current Venezuela and Colombia.




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