Toxic pigment that causes red hair discovered in 10 million-year-old frog fossil

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Paleontologists have discovered the earliest molecular evidence of the toxic pigment that causes red hair in the fossil record — in 10 million-year-old frog fossils.

The ancient amphibians had preserved fragments of pheomelanin (also spelled phaeomelanin), a yellowish-red pigment that produces ginger-colored hair in animals, including humans, according to a study published Oct. 6 in the journal Nature Communications.



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