Dogs and people bonded in the Americas earlier than thought



Connections in the Americas between dogs and people began 12,000 years ago, researchers report.

“Dog is man’s best friend” may be an ancient cliché, but when that friendship began is a longstanding question among scientists.

The new study is one step closer to an answer on how Indigenous people in the Americas interacted with early dogs and wolves.

The study appears in the journal Science Advances and is based on archaeological remains in Alaska. It shows that people and the ancestors of today’s dogs began forming close relationships as early as 12,000 years ago—about 2,000 years earlier than previously recorded in the Americas.

“We now have evidence that canids and people had close relationships earlier than we knew they did in the Americas,” says lead author François Lanoë, an assistant research professor in the University of Arizona School of Anthropology in the College of Social and Behavioral Sciences.

“People like me who are interested in the peopling of the Americas are very interested in knowing if those first Americans came with dogs,” Lanoë adds. “Until you find those animals in archaeological sites, we can speculate about it, but it’s hard to prove one way or another. So, this is a significant contribution.”

Lanoë and his colleagues unearthed a tibia, or lower-leg bone, of an adult canine in 2018 at a longstanding archeological site in Alaska called Swan Point, about 70 miles southeast of Fairbanks. Radiocarbon dating showed that the canine was alive about 12,000 years ago, near the end of the Ice Age.

Another excavation by the researchers in June 2023—of an 8,100-year-old canine jawbone at a nearby site called Hollembaek Hill, south of Delta Junction—also shows signs of possible domestication.

The smoking gun

Chemical analyses of both bones found substantial contributions from salmon proteins, meaning the canine had regularly eaten the fish. This was not typical of canines in the area during that time, as they hunted land animals almost exclusively. The most likely explanation for salmon showing up in the animal’s diet? Dependence on humans.

“This is the smoking gun because they’re not really going after salmon in the wild,” says study coauthor Ben Potter, an archaeologist with the University of Alaska Fairbanks.

The researchers are confident that the Swan Point canine helps establish the earliest known close relationships between humans and canines in the Americas. But it’s too early to say whether the discovery is the earliest domesticated dog in the Americas.

That is why the study is valuable, Potter says: “It asks the existential question, what is a dog?”

The Swan Point and Hollembaek Hill specimens may be too old to be genetically related to other known, more recent dog populations, Lanoë says.

“Behaviorally, they seem to be like dogs, as they ate salmon provided by people,” Lanoë says, “but genetically, they’re not related to anything we know.”

He notes that they could have been tamed wolves rather than fully domesticated dogs.

‘We still had our companions’

The study represents another chapter in a longstanding partnership with tribal communities in Alaska’s Tanana Valley, where archaeologists have worked since the 1930s, says study coauthor Josh Reuther, an archaeologist with the University of Alaska Museum of the North.

Researchers regularly present their plans to the Healy Lake Village Council, which represents the Mendas Cha’ag people indigenous to the area, before undertaking studies, including this one. The council also authorized the genetic testing of the study’s new specimens.

Evelynn Combs, a Healy Lake member, grew up in the Tanana Valley, exploring dig sites as a kid and taking in what she learned from archaeologists. She’s known Lanoë, Potter, and Reuther since she was a teenager. Now an archaeologist herself, Combs works for the tribe’s cultural preservation office.

“It is little—but it is profound—to get the proper permission and to respect those who live on that land,” Combs says.

Healy Lake members, Combs says, have long considered their dogs to be mystic companions. Today, nearly every resident in her village, she says, is closely bonded to one dog. Combs spent her childhood exploring her village alongside Rosebud, a Labrador retriever mix.

“I really like the idea that, in the record, however long ago, it is a repeatable cultural experience that I have this relationship and this level of love with my dog,” she says.

“I know that throughout history, these relationships have always been present. I really love that we can look at the record and see that thousands of years ago, we still had our companions.”

Source: University of Arizona

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