This ancient mosaic, likely Roman,
shows a large dog with a collar hunting
a lion.
The relationship between humans and
dogs have deep roots.
Wolf remains have been found in
association with human remains dating
from 400,000 years ago. Converging
archaeological and genetic evidence
indicate a time of domestication in the
late Upper Paleolithic close to the
Pleistocene/Holocene boundary, between
17,000 and 14,000 years ago. Fossil
bone morphologies and genetic analysis
of current and ancient dog and wolf
populations have not yet been able to
conclusively determine whether all dogs
descend from a single domestication
event, or whether dogs were
domesticated independently in more than
one location. Domesticated dogs may
have interbred with local populations
of wild wolves on several occasions
(so-called introgression).
The earliest dog fossils, two crania
from Russia and a mandible from
Germany, date from 13,000 to 17,000
years ago. Their likely ancestor is the
large northern Holarctic wolf, Canis
lupus lupus. Remains of smaller dogs
from Mesolithic (Natufian) cave
deposits in the Middle East, dated to
around 12,000 years ago, have been
interpreted as descendants of a lighter
Southwest Asian wolf, Canis lupus
arabs. Rock art and skeletal remains
indicate that by 14,000 years ago, dogs
were present from North Africa across
Eurasia to North America. Dog burials
at the Mesolithic cemetery of
Svaerdborg in Denmark suggest that in
ancient Europe dogs were valued
companions.







