Alaska Science Forum
March 6, 2003Article #1636
by Ned Rozell
This column is provided as a public service by the Geophysical Institute, University of Alaska Fairbanks, in cooperation with the UAF research community. Ned Rozell is a science writer at the institute.
When people first walked across the Bering Land Bridge thousands of years
ago, dogs were by their sides, according to a recent study published in the
journal Science.
Researchers from Washington, D.C., and Los Angeles used dog DNA material-some
of it unearthed by miners in interior Alaska-to conclude that today's domestic
dog originated in Asia and accompanied the first humans to the New World
about 10,000 to 15,000 years ago. One of the study's coauthors suggests that
man's best friend may have enabled the arduous journey from Asia into North
America.
"
Dogs may have been the reason people made it across the land bridge," said
Robert Wayne of the University of California, Los Angeles, who worked on
the study. "They can pull things, carry things, defend you from nasty
carnivores, and they're useful to eat."
Researchers have agreed that today's dog is the result of the domestication
of wolves thousands of years ago. Before the recent study, authored by Jennifer
Leonard, an evolutionary biologist at the Smithsonian Institution, a common
thought about the precise origin of North America's domestic dog was that
Natives tamed local wolves, the descendents of which now live in Alaska,
Canada, and the Lower 48. Leonard and Wayne's study suggests that domestic
dogs predate humans' arrival in the New World.
Frozen dog remains from a Fairbanks-area gold mine helped the scientists
reach their conclusion. Leonard extracted DNA from 11 bones of ancient dogs
that were locked in permafrost until Fairbanks placer miners uncovered them
in the 1920s. The miners donated the preserved bones to the American Museum
of Natural History in New York City, where they remained untouched for more
than 70 years.
Leonard and her colleagues borrowed the bones from the museum, and used radiocarbon
techniques to find the age of the Alaska dogs. They found the dogs all lived
between the years of 1450 and 1675 A.D., before the first known Europeans
to view Alaska in 1741.
Along with the Fairbanks samples, the researchers also extracted DNA from
bones of 37 dog specimens from archeological sites in Mexico, Peru, and Bolivia
that predated the arrival of Columbus. In the case of both the Alaska dogs
and the dogs from Latin America, the researchers found that the dogs shared
the most genetic material with gray wolves of Europe and Asia, which supports
the idea of domestic dogs entering the New World with the first human explorers
who wandered east over the land bridge.
Leonard and Wayne envision dogs of different genetic lineages joining the
first humans that ventured across the Bering Land Bridge to slowly populate
the Americas. Wayne thinks the dogs that made the trip must have provided
some excellent service to their human companions or they wouldn't have made
the trip.
"
Dogs must have been useful because they were expensive to keep," Wayne
said. "They didn't feed on mouse pellets; they fed on meat, which
was a very guarded resource."