Ancient DNA rewrites the tale of when and how cats left Africa

Like a toy on a string, the timing of cat domestication has been a moving target. Now researchers have pounced on a new timeline suggesting that tame descendants of African wildcats left the continent more recently than thought.

DNA from dozens of ancient cat remains in Europe and Turkey reveals that “domesticated” felines from as early as 6,000 years ago were, in fact, wild cats. Instead, the first domesticated cats left Africa no earlier than around 2,000 years ago, researchers report November 27 in Science. Yet these felines still had plenty of time to achieve world domination, with hundreds of millions now kept as pets.

Related News

How to Overcome Imposter Syndrome and Launch Your First Product with Confidence

Intel was on the brink of downfall. A twist in the AI race could boost its revival

Incident involving suspect with a knife closes Hwy. 101 in San Jose

Scott Pelley speaks: ‘CBS News is on fire’ and Bari Weiss should be removed

5 vehicles stolen from Alameda County parking garage in Oakland

Video footage shows large groups of people fighting in Oakland