<p>Debunking the theory that lighter skin gradually arose in Europeans nearly 40,000 years ago, new research has revealed that it evolved much recently -- only 7,000 years ago.<br /><br /></p>.<p>An ancient male European hunter-gatherer, who lived in modern-day Spain only about 7,000 years ago, had dark skin and blue eyes, the researchers said.<br /><br />"The findings also hint that light skin evolved not to adjust to the lower-light conditions in Europe as compared to Africa, but instead to the new diet that emerged after the agricultural revolution," said Carles Lalueza-Fox, a paleogenomics researcher at the Pompeu Fabra University in Spain.<br /><br />"It was assumed that the lighter skin was something needed in high latitudes, to synthesise vitamin D in places where UV light is lower than found in the tropics," Lalueza-Fox was quoted as saying.<br /><br />The new discovery, however, shows that latitude alone did not drive the evolution of Europeans' light skin, said the study published in the journal Nature.<br /><br />Analysing two male skeletons found in a labyrinthine cave in the Cantabrian Mountains of Spain in 2006, researchers found the skeletons were about 7,000 years old.<br /><br />The bodies were covered with red soil, characteristic of Paleolithic burial sites, Lalueza-Fox said.<br /><br />Several years later, the team revisited the skeletons and extracted DNA from a molar tooth in one of them.<br /><br />The DNA analysis shows the man had the gene mutation for blue eyes but not the European mutations for lighter skin.<br /><br />The DNA also shows that the man was more closely related to modern-day northern Europeans than to southern Europeans.<br /></p>
<p>Debunking the theory that lighter skin gradually arose in Europeans nearly 40,000 years ago, new research has revealed that it evolved much recently -- only 7,000 years ago.<br /><br /></p>.<p>An ancient male European hunter-gatherer, who lived in modern-day Spain only about 7,000 years ago, had dark skin and blue eyes, the researchers said.<br /><br />"The findings also hint that light skin evolved not to adjust to the lower-light conditions in Europe as compared to Africa, but instead to the new diet that emerged after the agricultural revolution," said Carles Lalueza-Fox, a paleogenomics researcher at the Pompeu Fabra University in Spain.<br /><br />"It was assumed that the lighter skin was something needed in high latitudes, to synthesise vitamin D in places where UV light is lower than found in the tropics," Lalueza-Fox was quoted as saying.<br /><br />The new discovery, however, shows that latitude alone did not drive the evolution of Europeans' light skin, said the study published in the journal Nature.<br /><br />Analysing two male skeletons found in a labyrinthine cave in the Cantabrian Mountains of Spain in 2006, researchers found the skeletons were about 7,000 years old.<br /><br />The bodies were covered with red soil, characteristic of Paleolithic burial sites, Lalueza-Fox said.<br /><br />Several years later, the team revisited the skeletons and extracted DNA from a molar tooth in one of them.<br /><br />The DNA analysis shows the man had the gene mutation for blue eyes but not the European mutations for lighter skin.<br /><br />The DNA also shows that the man was more closely related to modern-day northern Europeans than to southern Europeans.<br /></p>