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But there's one more problem. DNA sequencing of the remains

But there's one more problem. DNA sequencing of the remains of the Neanderthal cave revealed that the exact ancestor of the modern humans who lived in Siberia was Denisovan. He was Denisovan, which means that the present day Neanderthals who lived in Russia and Siberia were Denisovan. The same DNA that we now know traces the ancestry to three other human groups.

So we have two options:

1) We can ignore the Neanderthal evidence and try to believe the modern humans were Denisovan and have no other lineage back in history. We can try to think back to the early days of humanity when Neanderthals went in search of new tools and the people who were there to start with. Or we can try to go back in time and look to just the Neanderthal and see if it could be the result of some other genetic event.

However, the results from both of those approaches are inconclusive.

And if we look to the future, there's one final caveat.

The evidence presented by the Neanderthal remains can't be taken as definitive, so the Neanderthal remains in Siberia could be treated as evidence that the DNA of the modern humans was Neanderthal. The Neanderthal DNA may have been the original owner, and the Neanderthals may have been the ancestors of modern humans.

The fact that modern humans are now living in Siberia, even if they're different from the Neanderthals, is simply not evidence that we are living among the humans we know. We were only there for a few generations but the first humans there have no evidence of interbreeding.

However, in an article published in Nature last year, Dr. Mark Lecky from the University of California, Berkeley, found a number of new human ancestors. They were the earliest of the Neanderthal population that was present in the region around the time that we're talking about.

And while there's no evidence that Neanderthals came from Siberia, it's important that we have more evidence to support this idea that the Neanderthal DNA is from Eurasian ancestry. It's just not the case.

The first thing you need to know about this is that there is no evidence of interbreeding in the archaeological record of Siberia. The first Neanderthal is from Siberia, not from Africa.

The second Neanderthal is from Africa, not from Asia.

And so now, there may be more evidence of interbreeding in the archaeological record of Siberia. What we have in the archaeological record suggests that there was more interbreeding between the

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