Tag Archives: history

Paleogenomics: humans and dogs spread across Eurasia together

Dogs have been part of human societies across Eurasia for at least 20,000 years, accompanying us through many social and cultural upheavals. A new study by an international team, published in the journal Science, and led by Laurent Frantz, paleogeneticist at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich (LMU) and Queen Mary University of London (QMUL) shows that the spread of new cultures across Eurasia, with different lifeways, was often associated with the spread of specific dog populations.

A comparison of ancient dog and human genomes reveals a striking concordance between genetic shifts in both species across time. | © IMAGO/NurPhoto/xSubaasxShresthax

Scientists from LMU, QMUL, the Kunming Institute of Zoology and Lanzhou University in China, and the University of Oxford, sequenced and analyzed the genomes of 17 ancient dogs from Siberia, East Asia, and the Central Asian Steppe – including, for the first time, specimens from China. Important cultural changes occurred in these regions over the past 10,000 years, driven by the dispersal of hunter-gatherers, farmers, and pastoralists. The specimens came from archaeological sites between 9,700 and 870 years old. In addition, the researchers included publicly available genomes from 57 ancient and 160 modern dogs in their analyses.

Dogs followed metalworkers across the Eurasian Steppe over 4,000 years ago

A comparison of ancient dog and human genomes reveals a striking concordance between genetic shifts in both species across time and space, most notably during periods of population turnover. This link is especially evident during China’s transformative Early Bronze Age (~4,000 years ago), which saw the introduction of metalworking. The research shows that the expansion of people from the Eurasian Steppe, who first introduced this transformative technology to Western China, also brought their dogs with them.

This pattern of human-dog co-movement extends back far beyond the Bronze Age. The research traces signals of co-disperal back at least 11,000 years, when hunter-gatherers in northern Eurasia were exchanging dogs closely related to today’s Siberian Huskies.

“Traces of these major cultural shifts can be teased out of the genomes of ancient dogs,” says Dr. Lachie Scarsbrook (LMU/Oxford), one of the lead authors of the study. “Our results highlight the deeply rooted cultural importance of dogs. Instead of just adopting local populations, people have maintained a distinct sense of ownership towards their own dogs for at least the past 11,000 years.”

“This tight link between human and dog genetics shows that dogs were an integral part of society, whether you were a hunter-gatherer in the Arctic Circle 10,000 years ago or a metalworker in an early Chinese city,” says Prof. Laurent Frantz. “It’s an amazing, enduring partnership and shows the sheer flexibility of the role dogs can play in our societies, far more than with any other domestic species.”

Source: Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München

Paddy the Wanderer, Wellington NZ

Whenever I travel for work, I love to share information on dogs from those locations.  Having been in Wellington this week, I took the time to visit a favourite site of mine:  Paddy the Wanderer’s drinking fountain.

Located on the Wellington waterfront in front of the Academy of Fine Arts building, this memorial was erected in 1945 in the memory of an Airedale Terrier who was nicknamed Paddy the Wanderer.

The drinking fountain for people and dogs erected as a memorial for Paddy the Wanderer in Wellington, New Zealand

Paddy’s original name was believed to have been Dash and he was owned by a little girl named Elsie whose father was a seaman and, for this reason, he was a frequent visitor to the wharves.  Elsie passed away at the tender age of 3 1/2 years from pneumonia and the dog began to wander the foreshore area, some saying it was in search of the little girl.  And somewhere along the line he was given the nickname of Paddy.

Paddy was a celebrity of sorts on the Wellington waterfront during the Depression years.  Harbour board workers, seamen, watersiders  and taxi drivers took turns at paying his annual dog license.  His fame grew as he joined ships that traveled to various port cities in New Zealand and Australia.  In December 1935 he even took an airplane ride in a gypsy moth.

The Wellington Harbour Board gave him the title of Assistant Night Watchman with responsibility for keeping an eye out for pirates, smugglers and rodents.  As he aged, Paddy did less wandering and  he grew ill.  He was given a sickbed in a shed on the wharves and he had many visitors who were concerned for his welfare.

When Paddy died on 17 July 1939, obituary notices were placed in the local papers; a radio tribute was also  broadcast.   Paddy’s body was accompanied to the city council yards for cremation by a funeral procession of black taxis.

Paddy’s memorial fountain was built using stones taken from Waterloo Bridge in London and paid for with funds raised by his friends and admirers.  Its design includes two drinking bowls at the bottom for dogs, much like the designs for fountains we see today in our dog parks.

Paddy’s story is also told in a children’s book written by Dianne Haworth and published by Harper Collins.

Kathleen Crisley, specialist in dog massage, rehabilitation and nutrition/food therapy, The Balanced Dog, Christchurch, New Zealand