Willerslev Eske, Hansen Anders J, Binladen Jonas, Brand Tina B, Gilbert M Thomas P, Shapiro Beth, Bunce Michael, Wiuf Carsten, Gilichinsky David A, Cooper Alan
Department of Evolutionary Biology, Zoological Institute, University of Copenhagen, Universitetsparken 15, Denmark DK-2100 Ø.
Science. 2003 May 2;300(5620):791-5. doi: 10.1126/science.1084114. Epub 2003 Apr 17.
Genetic analyses of permafrost and temperate sediments reveal that plant and animal DNA may be preserved for long periods, even in the absence of obvious macrofossils. In Siberia, five permafrost cores ranging from 400,000 to 10,000 years old contained at least 19 different plant taxa, including the oldest authenticated ancient DNA sequences known, and megafaunal sequences including mammoth, bison, and horse. The genetic data record a number of dramatic changes in the taxonomic diversity and composition of Beringian vegetation and fauna. Temperate cave sediments in New Zealand also yielded DNA sequences of extinct biota, including two species of ratite moa, and 29 plant taxa characteristic of the prehuman environment. Therefore, many sedimentary deposits may contain unique, and widespread, genetic records of paleoenvironments.
对永久冻土和温带沉积物的基因分析表明,即使没有明显的大化石,动植物DNA也可能长期保存。在西伯利亚,五个年龄在40万年至1万年之间的永久冻土岩芯包含至少19种不同的植物分类群,包括已知最古老的经鉴定的古代DNA序列,以及包括猛犸象、野牛和马在内的大型动物序列。遗传数据记录了白令海植被和动物群在分类多样性和组成上的一些巨大变化。新西兰的温带洞穴沉积物也产生了已灭绝生物群的DNA序列,包括两种平胸恐鸟,以及29种人类出现之前环境特有的植物分类群。因此,许多沉积物可能包含独特且广泛的古环境基因记录。