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posted by martyb on Friday March 23 2018, @10:11AM   Printer-friendly
from the bad-to-the-bone? dept.

I'm not saying it was aliens. Not any more:

Tests on a six-inch-long mummified skeleton from Chile confirm that it represents the remains of a newborn with multiple mutations in key genes.

Despite being the size of a foetus, initial tests had suggested the bones were of a child aged six to eight.

These highly unusual features prompted wild speculation about its origin.

Now, DNA testing indicates that the estimated age of the bones and other anomalies may have been a result of the genetic mutations.

Details of the work have been published in the journal Genome Research.

In addition to its exceptionally small height, the skeleton had several unusual physical features, such as fewer than expected ribs and a cone-shaped head.

The remains were initially discovered in a pouch in the abandoned nitrate mining town of La Noria. From there, they found their way into a private collection in Spain.

Some wondered whether the remains, dubbed Ata after the Atacama region where they were discovered, could in fact be the remains of a non-human primate. A documentary, called Sirius, even suggested it could be evidence of alien visitations.

[...] "What was striking and caused us to speculate early on that there was something strange about the bones was the apparent maturity of the bones (density and shape)," said Garry Nolan, a professor of microbiology and immunology at the Stanford University School of Medicine in California.

[...] Prof Nolan says further research into Ata's precocious bone aging could one day benefit patients. "Maybe there's a way to accelerate bone growth in people who need it, people who have bad breaks,"

Atacama skeleton.

Also at NYT and CNN.

Whole-genome sequencing of Atacama skeleton shows novel mutations linked with dysplasia (open, DOI: 10.1101/gr.223693.117) (DX)


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 24 2018, @02:52AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 24 2018, @02:52AM (#657350)

    Brain-Computer interfaces expanding the neocortex a la expansion cards seem a more likely path to human superintelligence than genetic engineering.

    Once we have the interface (ol' musky is on it), cheap radios (check), and the ability to simulate a chunk of neocortex (probably doesn't need to match a human brain too closely, just function effectively as an adjunct so possibly we already have this) we can effectively start expanding our brains into nearby computers (phones w/specialist hardware? I sure as fuck wouldn't trust Google) without concern for skull size, bloody supply, straining other systems, &c. The bandwidth of the connection and avoiding scarring degrading it over time seem likely to be the biggest hurdle to non-artificial superintelligence, that and connecting the fucker to the ridiculously tiny neurons.