Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Skip to main content
ScienceDaily
Your source for the latest research news
New! Sign up for our freeemail newsletter.
Science News
from research organizations

Ancient wolves could only have reached this island by boat

Ancient wolves brought by boat to a remote island may reveal that humans once lived with wolves long before dogs fully emerged.

Date:
December 29, 2025
Source:
Stockholm University
Summary:
Scientists have uncovered ancient wolf remains on a small Baltic island where wolves could only have been brought by humans. These animals weren’t dogs, but true wolves that ate the same marine food as the people living there and showed signs of isolation and possible care. One even survived with an injured limb that would have made hunting difficult. The findings suggest humans once kept and managed wolves in ways far more complex than previously imagined.
Share:
FULL STORY

Ancient Wolves Crossed the Sea With Humans
View from the cave Stora Förvar on the island of Stora Karlsö in Sweden. Credit: Jan Storå/Stockholm University

Researchers have uncovered ancient wolf remains on a small, isolated island in the Baltic Sea, a location the animals could not have reached without human help. The findings point to a surprising possibility that prehistoric people deliberately brought grey wolves to the island and may have kept or managed them. The research was published inProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences and led by scientists from the Francis Crick Institute, Stockholm University, the University of Aberdeen, and the University of East Anglia.

The remains, dated to between 3,000 and 5,000 years old, were discovered in the Stora Förvar cave on the Swedish island of Stora Karlsö. Archaeological evidence shows the site was heavily used by seal hunters and fishers during the Neolithic and Bronze Ages. Covering just 2.5 square kilometres, the island has no native land mammals, which means any wolves found there must have been transported by people.

Genetic Evidence Confirms They Were Wolves

DNA analysis of two canid bones confirmed the animals were wolves rather than early dogs, with no signs of dog ancestry. Despite this, several features suggested close contact with humans. Chemical analysis of the bones showed the wolves ate large amounts of marine food, including seals and fish, matching the human diet on the island and indicating they were likely fed by people. The wolves were also smaller than typical mainland wolves, and one showed unusually low genetic diversity, often seen in isolated populations or those shaped by human control.

"The discovery of these wolves on a remote island is completely unexpected," said Dr. Linus Girdland-Flink of the University of Aberdeen, a lead author of the study. "Not only did they have ancestry indistinguishable from other Eurasian wolves, but they seemed to be living alongside humans, eating their food, and in a place they could have only have reached by boat. This paints a complex picture of the relationship between humans and wolves in the past."

Rethinking Domestication and Wolf History

The presence of wolves in a human settlement challenges traditional views of how people and wolves interacted in the past and how dogs eventually emerged. Researchers cannot yet say whether these wolves were tame, kept in captivity, or managed in another way. However, their long-term presence on an isolated island suggests intentional and ongoing human involvement.

"It was a complete surprise to see that it was a wolf and not a dog," said Pontus Skoglund of the Ancient Genomics Laboratory at the Francis Crick Institute and senior author. "This is a provocative case that raises the possibility that in certain environments, humans were able to keep wolves in their settlements, and found value in doing so."

Genetic Clues and Possible Human Care

Anders Bergström of the University of East Anglia and co-lead author, commented: "The genetic data is fascinating. We found that the wolf with the most complete genome had low genetic diversity, lower than any other ancient wolf we've seen. This is similar to what you see in isolated or bottlenecked populations, or in domesticated organisms. While we can't rule out that these wolves had low genetic diversity for natural reasons, it suggests that humans were interacting with and managing wolves in ways we hadn't previously considered."

One wolf from the Bronze Age also showed severe damage to a limb bone that would have reduced its ability to move or hunt. Its survival suggests it may have received care or lived in conditions where hunting large prey was unnecessary.

A Broader View of Human and Animal Relationships

By combining bone analysis with genetic data, researchers gained insights that would not have been possible using either method alone. "The combination of data has revealed new and very unexpected perspectives on Stone Age and Bronze Age human-animal interactions in general and specifically concerning wolves and also dogs," says Jan Storå, Professor of Osteoarchaeology at Stockholm University.

Overall, the findings suggest that relationships between humans and wolves in prehistory were far more varied than once thought. Rather than being limited to hunting or avoidance, these interactions sometimes involved close cooperation and management, hinting at early experiments with domestication that did not lead directly to modern dogs.


Story Source:

Materials provided byStockholm University.Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Linus Girdland-Flink, Anders Bergström, Jan Storå, Erik Ersmark, Jan Apel, Maja Krzewińska, Love Dalén, Anders Götherström, Pontus Skoglund.Gray wolves in an anthropogenic context on a small island in prehistoric Scandinavia.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2025; 122 (48) DOI:10.1073/pnas.2421759122

Cite This Page:

Stockholm University. "Ancient wolves could only have reached this island by boat." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 29 December 2025. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/12/251227004151.htm>.
Stockholm University. (2025, December 29). Ancient wolves could only have reached this island by boat.ScienceDaily. Retrieved February 17, 2026 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/12/251227004151.htm
Stockholm University. "Ancient wolves could only have reached this island by boat." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/12/251227004151.htm (accessed February 17, 2026).

Explore More

from ScienceDaily

RELATED STORIES

Jan. 30, 2026 — On a remote Alaskan island, gray wolves are rewriting the rulebook by hunting sea otters — a behavior few scientists ever expected to see. Researchers are now uncovering how these coastal wolves ...
Nov. 29, 2025 — Researchers studying thousands of canine genomes discovered that wolf DNA is still present in most dog breeds. This ancient genetic influence shows up in traits like body size, behavior, and ...
June 24, 2025 — Two Ice Age wolf pups once thought to be early dogs have been identified as wild wolves, thanks to detailed DNA and chemical analysis. Surprisingly, their last meals included woolly rhinoceros ...
May 17, 2024 — Horses crossed the Baltic Sea in ships during the Late Viking Age and were sacrificed for funeral rituals. Studies on the remains of horses found at ancient burial sites in Russia and Lithuania show ...
Oct. 31, 2023 — Firsthand observations of a wolf hunting and killing a harbor seal and a group of wolves hunting and consuming a sea otter on Alaska's Katmai coast have led scientists to reconsider assumptions ...
Aug. 4, 2022 — Social isolation and loneliness are prevalent in the U.S., and they have harmful effects on heart and brain health. Older adults and people in socially vulnerable groups, such as individuals from ...

TRENDING ATSCITECHDAILY.com

The Oldest Minerals on Earth Are Rewriting the Planet’s Origin Story

Prehistoric Victory Celebrations Were Far More Brutal Than We Thought

A Massive Star Suddenly Vanished and Left a Black Hole Behind

This Unexpected Ingredient Makes Bread Much Healthier

 Print  Email  Share

Breaking

this hour

Trending Topics

this week

PLANTS & ANIMALS
New Species
Biotechnology
Biotechnology and Bioengineering
EARTH & CLIMATE
Climate
Earthquakes
Ecology
FOSSILS & RUINS
Ancient Civilizations
Human Evolution

Strange & Offbeat

 

PLANTS & ANIMALS
Life May Have Started as Sticky Goo Clinging to Rocks
A Bonobo’s Pretend Tea Party Is Rewriting What We Know About Imagination
Gut Bacteria Can Sense Their Environment and It’s Key to Your Health
EARTH & CLIMATE
Scientists Uncover the Climate Shock That Reshaped Easter Island
750-Year-Old Indian Poems Reveal a Landscape Scientists Got Wrong
Scientists Turn Carrot Waste Into Protein People Prefer
FOSSILS & RUINS
Ancient DNA Solves 12,000-Year-Old Mystery of Rare Genetic Growth Disorder
These 773,000-Year-Old Fossils May Reveal Our Shared Human Ancestor
A Century-Old Stonehenge Mystery May Finally Be Solved


[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2026 Movatter.jp