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WED · 2026-03-25 · 16:23 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0325-35483
News/New studies of old dogs help scientists understand where the…
NSR-2026-0325-35483News Report·EN·Technology

New studies of old dogs help scientists understand where they came from

Two new studies published in Nature analyze ancient dog and wolf DNA to better understand the origins of dogs. Researchers examined the genes of over 200 canine remains, some dating back 15,800 years, pushing back the estimated origin of dogs by at least 5,000 years.

By  ADITHI RAMAKRISHNANAssociated Press (AP)Filed 2026-03-25 · 16:23 GMTLean · CenterRead · 3 min
New studies of old dogs help scientists understand where they came from
Associated Press (AP)FIG 01
Reading time
3min
Word count
725words
Sources cited
1cited
Entities identified
12entities
Quality score
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Briefing Summary

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Two new studies published in Nature analyze ancient dog and wolf DNA to better understand the origins of dogs. Researchers examined the genes of over 200 canine remains, some dating back 15,800 years, pushing back the estimated origin of dogs by at least 5,000 years. Scientists believe dogs descended from gray wolves in Europe or Asia tens of thousands of years ago. By isolating and studying ancient canine DNA, researchers aim to determine what the earliest dogs looked like and where they originated. The findings provide further evidence of the long-standing relationship between humans and dogs.

Confidence 0.90Sources 1Claims 5Entities 12
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Article analysis

Model · rule-based
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Technology
Human Interest
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Key claims

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The oldest dog genes dated back to about 15,800 years ago.

statisticAP
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Researchers pushed the timeline back, establishing a new way to study ancient canine DNA.

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Scientists are studying DNA from ancient dog and wolf remains to figure out what the earliest dogs looked like.

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Scientists are finding more evidence that dogs have been companions for thousands of years.

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Dogs descended from an ancient population of gray wolves somewhere in Europe or Asia.

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Full report

3 min read · 725 words
New studies of old dogs help scientists understand where they came from 1 of 2 | A researcher holds a 14,300 year-old dog jawbone found at Gough’s Cave in the United Kingdom, on Tuesday, March 24, 2026, in London. (AP Photo/Mustakim Hasnath) 2 of 2 | This July 2019 image provided by the Cantonal Archaeological Service of Schaffhausen shows an ancient dog jawbone that was found in the Kesserloch cave in Switzerland. (Ivan Ivic/Cantonal Archaeological Service of Schaffhausen via AP) 1 of 2 A researcher holds a 14,300 year-old dog jawbone found at Gough’s Cave in the United Kingdom, on Tuesday, March 24, 2026, in London. (AP Photo/Mustakim Hasnath) Add AP News on Google Add AP News as your preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. 2 of 2 This July 2019 image provided by the Cantonal Archaeological Service of Schaffhausen shows an ancient dog jawbone that was found in the Kesserloch cave in Switzerland. (Ivan Ivic/Cantonal Archaeological Service of Schaffhausen via AP) Add AP News on Google Add AP News as your preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Updated [hour]:[minute] [AMPM] [timezone], [monthFull] [day], [year] NEW YORK (AP) — Using the oldest dog genes studied so far, scientists are finding more evidence that our furry friends have been our companions for thousands of years.Scientists think dogs descended from an ancient population of gray wolves somewhere in Europe or Asia. Tens of thousands of years ago, those wolves got used to living with people and became less aggressive. As they became domesticated, their genes shifted along with their behavior, giving rise to the pups we know today.But exactly when and where this happened remains a mystery. Scientists are studying bits of DNA found in ancient dog and wolf remains to figure out what the earliest dogs may have looked like and where they came from.In two separate studies published Wednesday in the journal Nature, researchers pushed the timeline back. They established a new way to study ancient canine DNA — which is often contaminated and tough to extract — by isolating just the doggy bits. They examined ancient genes from the remains of over 200 dogs and wolves. The oldest dated back to about 15,800 years ago, moving the origin of dogs back by at least 5,000 years. “This unique relationship between people and dogs has existed for such a long time and is continuing on today,” said University of Michigan dog genomics expert Jeffrey Kidd, who was not involved with the new research.The genes showed that dogs were already spread out across Western Europe and Asia 14,200 years ago, at a time before agriculture and farming. These dogs lived with hunter-gatherer humans who were constantly on the move. The dawn of agriculture — a major shift in human history — brought new people to Europe from southwest Asia. They mixed and mingled with Europeans, leaving a lasting and varied imprint on their genes.But the dog genes studied by the scientists, stretching from the United Kingdom all the way to Turkey, stayed more consistent. They were less impacted by the arrival of new humans during the development of agriculture, and more by interactions between different hunter-gatherer groups and their dogs thousands of years before. That’s different from dogs in Asia and the Americas, whose genes more closely reflect the movement patterns of their owners.Scientists don’t know exactly what the first dogs looked like, but they have some ideas.“We’re suspecting they would have resembled smaller wolves,” said study co-author Lachie Scarsbrook with the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich.It’s also not clear how these ancient dogs lived alongside their humans. They could have stood guard or helped them hunt, but probably also played with young children.There’s still more work to go to pinpoint exactly when dogs emerged — the first few pages of a storied relationship that’s still going strong.“They are humanity’s best friend, alongside our societies for the last 16,000 years and will continue to in the future,” Scarsbrook said.___The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content. Ramakrishnan is a science reporter for The Associated Press, based in New York. She covers research and new developments related to space, early human history and more.
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Entities

12 identified
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Keywords & salience

8 terms
dog origins
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ancient dogs
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canine dna
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dog domestication
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ancient genes
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gray wolves
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dog genomics
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evolution
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