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Overview: This interactive web activity lets students compare the number of mutations in the mitochondrial genomes of Neandertals, humans, and chimps to determine ancestry and relatedness.Author/Source: Dolan DNA Learning Center Grade level: 9-12 Time: 20-30 minutes Teaching tips: To access this activity, click on media/animation at the top of the screen and then select "Solving the Mystery of the Neandertals." This activity requires Shockwave or Flash Player. Concepts: Correspondence to the Next Generation Science Standards is indicated in parentheses after each relevant concept. See our conceptual framework for details. - Present-day species evolved from earlier species; the relatedness of organisms is the result of common ancestry. (LS4.A)
- An organism's features reflect its evolutionary history.
- The fossil record documents the biodiversity of the past.
- The fossil record documents patterns of extinction and the appearance of new forms.
- All life forms use the same basic DNA building blocks. (LS4.A)
- Scientists can test ideas about events and processes long past, very distant, and not directly observable.
- Our knowledge of the evolution of living things is always being refined as we gather more evidence.
- Scientists use the similarity of DNA nucleotide sequences to infer the relatedness of taxa. (LS4.A)
- Scientists use fossils (including sequences of fossils showing gradual change over time) to learn about past life.
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