The ancient remains of a hunter-gatherer girl who died over 7,000 years ago in Indonesia, has revealed clues to a mysterious group of humans from the past. The discovery, made in 2015, in the Leang Panninge cave on Indonesia’s Sulawesi Island is the first discovery of ancient human DNA in the region, known as Wallacea. In a study published on Wednesday, Griffith University archaeology professor and study co-author Adam Brumm, said the girl, nicknamed Bessé,’ belonged to a mysterious group of modern humans from the Holocene era who archaeologists have named the Toaleans. It is the first time an intact skeleton of the Toalean people had been found. “We’ve got ancient DNA from the bones of this woman, but we could only reconstruct about 2 percent of her complete genome,” Brumm told the ABC. “So that’s how degraded it was and it took a lot of work to get even that.” …