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Genetic clues tell the story of Neanderthals' decline

The Neanderthal population shrank during a cold spell around 75,000 years ago, and the loss of genetic diversity may have contributed to their eventual extinction

By Michael Marshall

23 March 2026

Reconstructions of a Neanderthal man and woman at the Neanderthal Museum in Mettmann, Germany

AP Photo/Martin Meissner/Alamy

An analysis of Neanderthal DNA has helped piece together the story of many millennia of hard times that finally led to the demise of our ancient human relatives.

Faced with a cooling climate, their population shrank and they wound up confined to what is now south-west France. Later, the climate warmed and the Neanderthals began roaming more widely. But most of their genetic diversity had been lost, so even widely dispersed groups had very similar DNA.

This situation 鈥 small, isolated groups with little genetic diversity 鈥 may have contributed to their eventual extinction.

The Neanderthals lived in Europe and Asia for hundreds of thousands of years, disappearing from the archaeological record about 40,000 years ago. Previous studies of their DNA had pointed to a drastic shift in their genetics towards the end. Late Neanderthals, meaning those who lived after about 60,000 years ago, were genetically similar to each other and different from those who came before. 鈥淭here must have been a population turnover towards the end of the Neanderthal history,鈥 says at the University of T眉bingen in Germany.

To find out how this played out, Posth and his colleagues obtained DNA from 10 Neanderthals, from six sites in Belgium, France, Germany and Serbia. In each case they sequenced the mitochondrial DNA, which is only inherited from the mother. They compared the new mitochondrial genomes to 49 that had already been read.

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Neanderthals who lived between 60,000 and 40,000 years ago almost all belonged to the same lineage, which originated about 65,000 years ago. Other lineages that were present in earlier periods were absent. 鈥淭his is a very strong indication that it鈥檚 indeed population turnover,鈥 says Posth.

The team also looked at a database of Neanderthal archaeological sites. 鈥淏etween 80,000 and 70,000 years ago, there is a major geographical contraction towards south-western Europe, and particularly the very high density of sites in south-western France,鈥 says Posth.

Climatic shifts may explain why. 鈥淭here is a major glaciation starting around 75,000 years ago,鈥 says Posth. 鈥淲e think that this is the event that triggered the contraction of Neanderthals towards south-western Europe.鈥

Entrance to Pe拧turina Cave in Serbia, where a Neanderthal tooth genetically analysed in this study was discovered

Luc Doyon and Du拧an Mihailovi膰

The new lineage seems to have arisen in south-western France, and subsequently expanded from there after 60,000 years ago, when the climate warmed again. While the new lineage became widespread, showing up as far east as the Caucasus, the population does not seem to have grown significantly.

One of the only exceptions to this trend is an individual called Thorin, found in Grotte Mandrin in France. Despite being dated to just 50,000 years ago, Thorin鈥檚 DNA indicates he belonged to one of the older lineages 鈥 at least one of which seems to have survived the population contraction. Posth says Thorin is 鈥渢he only specimen that doesn鈥檛 fit into the story鈥.

Being able to reconstruct the Neanderthals鈥 movements in this way is a significant addition, says at the University of California, Berkeley, who was involved in the Thorin studies.

Previous studies have also identified contractions and expansions in the Neanderthal population, in which some lineages were lost, says Vimala. For instance, a 2021 study found evidence of . 鈥淭hat was also explained by the climate,鈥 she says.

The Neanderthals鈥 habit of living in small, isolated groups may have put them at greater risk of extinction. 鈥淭hey migrated around in small groups,鈥 says Vimala, with studies estimating Neanderthal group sizes to be . Posth says this may have allowed harmful genetic variants to accumulate, and also made each group more vulnerable to chance events.

Journal reference:

PNAS

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